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A CONCORDANCE 



WORKS OF ALFRED TENNYSON. 



; For deeds doe die, how ever noblie donne, 
And thoughts of men do as themselves decay : 
But wise wordes taught in numbers for to runne, 
Recorded by the Muses, live for ay ; 
Ne may with storming showers be washt away, 
Ne bitter-breathing windes with harmfull blast, 
Nor age, nor envie shall them ever wast." 

— Spenser. 




Facsimiled from a. Photograph by W. Jeffrey Esq of G* Russell S 1, 









CON CO RDANCE 



ENTIRE WORKS 



OF 



ALFRED TENNYSON, 



P.L., D.G.L., F.B.S. 



BY 

D. BARRON BRIGHTWELL. 




LONDON : 
E. MOXON, SON, & CO., DOVER STREET, W. 

1869. 












< 






s~ 



^13S1 



PREFACE. 



The qualifications essential for the production of such a work as that 
which is here offered to the admirers of our Laureate are of no very- 
high order. Prominently stand patience, accuracy, and a certain knack 
of arrangement. To the first of these requisites, I think I may lay some 
claim. I have full confidence that the public will decide with justice how 
far I may be credited with the others. 

It is, perhaps, advisable to say one or two words as to the principle 
which has been adopted. Probably it would not be easy to find half-a- 
dozen persons, who would arrive at precisely the same conclusion as to the 
words which should be included in a Concordance, but it is tolerably 
safe to predicate that there are few who consult such a volume in vain, 
without a feeling of irritation, and even a sense of personal wrong. I 
judged, therefore, that the error of including too much would be more 
venial than that of including too little, and that the increase of bulk 
consequent upon the admission of a few words of doubtful importance 
would be a less serious defect than the omission of any key-word necessary 
for verifying a quotation. Under the influence of this impression, I origin- 
ally designed to omit only the particles, and had made considerable 
advance towards the completion of this scheme, when it became evident 
that some condensation would be necessary. To accomplish this without 
impairing the utility of the book, a selection had to be made of those 
words least likely to occur to the mind without their context. Adjectives 
and adverbs, in immediate contact with the words they modify, have been 
thus rejected, but they will be found quoted in all cases where they form 
part of a predicate, or where, by the structure of the sentence, they are 
divorced from their respective better-halves. Compound forms of the 
adjective and derivatives from proper names have been uniformly retained. 
The titles King, Queen, Prince, Princess, Earl, Lord, Lady, Sir, Aunt, etc., 
when used simply as affixes ; some verbs of very frequent occurrence 
such as make, made, seem, etc., in passages otherwise and sufficiently repre- 



PREFACE. 



sented ; answered, asked, said, replied, etc., when introducing a direct quota- 
tion ; the nouns hand, times, haste, etc., in the phrases at hand, at times, 
in haste, etc., and some other words — have been omitted. When all deduc- 
tions have been made, however, if that, at which I aimed, has been accom- 
plished, it should be found that there is no clause in Tennyson's Works to 
which reference is not given under one or more of its prominent words. 

It appeared desirable, if possible, to adopt some plan of reference which 
should be uniform, and at the same time applicable to all editions. To 
attain this end there seemed no way better than that of giving the poem 
and line, and although this makes the reference to some of the longer 
poems apparently awkward, I trust that the Tables which have been pre- 
fixed will obviate any serious difficulty, and render the use of the volume 
easy to those in whose ears there yet lasts the echo of those measured 
strains which, for the last quarter of a century, have enjoyed so unprece- 
dented a share of popular favour. 

A few poems have no distinct titles; several are addressed, "To ;" 

and the heading, " Song," is common to one or two others. To avoid 
confusion, these are referred to in the following pages by the first word 
or two of each poem. 

A plan of the work was first submitted to Messrs Moxon in the spring 
of 1868, and received from them the most prompt and courteous consi- 
deration. A specimen which had been prepared met with their approval, 
and I was requested by them to undertake the completion of the scheme. 
This date, which under ordinary circumstances would have been a matter 
of trivial importance, may possibly, in the light of more recent events, 
possess a certain interest. 

The execution of my project has been to me a labour of love, and with- 
out professing indifference to those "possibilities" which, as that acute 
observer, Sir Hugh Evans, has justly remarked, " is good gifts," no other 
fruit that my undertaking may yield will be so grateful to me as the 
approval, should I be so fortunate as to win it, of those to whom " lucky 
rhymes 1 " are 

"scrip and share, 
And mellow metres more than cent for cent." 

D. BARRON BRIGHTWELL. 

5 Gower Street, Bedford Square. 



A COMPLETE INDEX 



OF 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



POEM. VOLUME, 

Adeline . . . Poems 
Alexandra, Welcome to EnochArden,etc, 
Amphion . . . Poems 
Arabian Nights . 
"A spirit haunts," etc, 
Audley Court 
Aylmer's Field . 



PAGE. 

33 

164 

326 

19 

3i 

221 

EnochArden,etc. 51 



B 



Beggar Maid, The 
Blackbird, The 
Boadicea . 
" Break, break," etc. 



Poems . . 365 

11 . . 166 

Enoch Arden,etc. 169 

Poems . . 378 



Selections 



EnochArden,etc. 
Poems 



Captain, The 
Cautcretz, In the Val 

ley of 
Character, A 
Circumstance 
Claribel 
"Clear-headed friend, "etc.n 
"Come not when I am 

dead," etc. . . n 
Coquette, Sonnets to a Selections 



37 

'Si 

36 

57 

3 

13 

376 
196 



Daisy, The . j 

Day-Dream, The 
Death of the Old Year, 

The 
Dedication, A . 
Dedication (Idylls) 
Deserted House, The 
Dirge, A . 
Dora 

Dream of Fair Women, A 
Dying Swan, The 



Maud, and other 



Poems 
Poems 



iS3 
312 



11 . . 168 

Enoch Arden,etc. 166 
Idylls of the King, iii. 
Poems . . 45 

• 49 
. 214 
. 150 

• 47 



Eagle, The 
Edward Gray 
Edwin Morris ; or, the 

Lake 
1865-1866 . 
Elaine 
Eleanore . 
Enid 

Enoch Arden 
Epic, The . 



Poems . . 376 
• 337 

1, . . 230 

Good Words, ix. 144 
Idylls of the King 147 
Poems . .78 
Idylls of the King I 
Enoch Arden, etc. 1 
Poems . 189 



Farewell, A 
Fatima 
Flower, The 



Gardener's Daughter, 

The 
Godiva 

Golden Year, The 
Goose, The 
Grandmother, The 
Guinevere 



Poems . . 364 

11 . . 96 

Enoch Arden,etc. 152 



Poems . . 203 

. 285 

11 . . 262 

n . . 184 

Enoch Arden,etc. 114 

Idylls of the King 225 



H 

"Home they brought 

him slain," etc. . Selections . . 207 
Hendecasyllabics . Enoch Arden, etc. 175 



Iliad, Specimen of 
Translation of the 
In Memoriam . 
Isabel 
Islet, The . 



Enoch Arden,ctc. 177 

In Memoriam . I 

Poems . . 7 

Enoch Arden, etc. 157 



Lady Clara VcredeVerePoems 



. 126 



INDEX. 



Lady Clare . . Poems . . 354 
"Lady, let the rolling 

drums," etc. . . Selections . . 207 

Lady of Shalott, The . Poems . . 65 
Letters, The . Maud,andother Poems 131 
Light Brigade, The 

Charge of the . 11 . 167 

Lilian . . . Poems . . 5 

Locksley Hall . . 11 . . 268 

Lord of Burleigh, The .1 . . 358 

Lotos-Eaters, The . ,11 . 142 

Love and Death .it . 52 

Love and Duty n . . 258 

"Love thou thy land," etc. n . . 179 
Lucretius . . Macmillari 's Mag.xvm. 1 

M 

Madeline . . . Poems . • 15 

Margaret . . .11 . .163 

Mariana . . .11 . . ' 9 

Mariana in the South " 11 . -73 
Maud . . Maud, andother Poems I 

May Queen, The . Poems . .130 

Mermaid, The . . 11 . . 60 

Merman, The . . n . 58 

Miller's Daughter, The n . . 85 
Milton . . . Enoch Arden,etc. 174 

Morte d' Arthur . . Poems . .191 

Mourner, On a . . Selections . . 220 

"Move Eastward, "etc. Poems . . 377 

" My life is full, " etc. Selections . .191 

N 
Northern Farmer, The Enoch Arden,etc. 128 

O 

Ode on the Duke of 

Wellington . Maud, andother Poems 137 

Ode to Memory . Poems . . 26 

(Enone . . . 11 . . 98 

"Ofoldsat Freedom," etc. n . . 177 

Oriana, The Ballad of n . .53 

Owl, The, I. . . n . . 17 

Owl, The, II. . . 11 . . 18 



Palace of Art, The 
Poet, The 
Poet's Mind, The 
Poet's Song, The 
Princess, The 



Poems 



The Princess 



112 

38 

4i 

379 

1 



R 



Requiescat 
Ringlet, The 



VOLUME. PAGE. 

Enoch Arden,etc. 154 
11 . 160 



Sailor Boy, The 

St Agnes' Eve . 

St Simeon Stylites 

Sea Dreams 

Sea-Fairies, The 

Sir Galahad 

S ir Launcelot and Queen 

Guinevere 
Sisters, The 



Enoch Arden,etc. 155 

331 

236 

96 

43 

333 

362 
109 



Poems 

ti 
Enoch Arden,etc. 
Poems 



Spiteful Letter, On a Once-a-Week,^ .S.,i. 13 



Talking Oak, The 
Tithonus . 
To E. L. . 
To J. M. K. 
To J. S. . 

To Rev. F.D.Maurice 

To the Queen . 

To (with the 

Palace of Art) 
Two Voices, The 



Poems 

Enoch Arden,etc. 

Poems 

11 . . 


245 

139 

352 

62 


n . 
Maud, andother 

Poems . 
Poems 


171 

161 

v. 


11 


in 


11 


289 



u 



Ulysses 



Victim, The 
Vision of Sin, The 
Vivien 
Voyage, The 



Poems 



. 265 



V 



Good Words, ix. 17 
Poems . . 366 
Idylls of the King IOI 
Enoch Arden,etc. 144 



W 



Wages . Macmillari 's Mag. xvii. 271 
Walking to the Mail . Poems . . 225 
Will . . . Maud, and other Poems 165 
Will Waterproofs 

Monologue . . Poems . . 339 
Window, The . . (Privately printed.) 



"Youaskmewhy,"etc. Poems . . 175 
"Youmighthavewon,"etc.n . . 350 



II. 



DATES OF PUBLICATION. 



Poems 

11 2 vols. . 
Princess . 
In Memoriam . 
Ode to the Queen 



. 1830 

. 1842 

September 23d 1847 

June 1st . 1850 

March . . 1 85 2 



Maud . . . Jidyz<,th . 1855 

Idylls of the King . July nth . 1859 

Address to Alexandra March nth . 1863 

Enoch Arden, etc. . August 1st . 1864 

Selections . . January 24th 1865 



IIL 

TABLE OF LINES AND PAGES OF THE 
LONGER POEMS. 



POEM. 


LINES. 


PAGE 


VOLUME. 


POEM. 


LINES. 


PAGE VOLUME. 


Ay liner's 


I to 12 


51 


Enoch Arden, 


Aylmer's 


808— 826 


93 


Enoch Arden, 


Field 






&c. 


Field 






etc. 


ii 


13— 3i 


52 


It 


11 


827— 846 


94 


11 


ii 


32— 50 


53 


II 


M 


847- 853 


95 


11 


ii 


51— 69 


54 


II 


Brook, The 


I II 


117 


Maud, and 


ii 


70 — 89 


55 


II 








other Poems. 


ii 


90 — 109 


56 


'1 




1 


12— 30 


118 


11 


ii 


no— 129 


57 


II 




1 


31— 50 119 


11 


ii 


130— 147 


58 


II 




1 


51— 69'i2o 


ti 


ii 

ii 
ii 


148 — 167 

168— 187 
188— 206 


59 
60 
61 


II 

II 




1 

1 
1 


70— 88121 
89 — 105 122 

I06— I23 ! I23 


it 
11 
11 


ii 


207 — 225 


62 


II 




1 


124— 142124 


it 


ii 


226 — 244 


63 


If 




1 


143— 161 125 


11 


it 


245— 263 


64 


It 




1 


162 — 181 


126 


11 


n 


264 — 282 


65 


II 




1 


l82 — 200 


127 


11 


it 


283— 301 


66 


II 




1 


20I — 2l6 


128 


11 


ii 


302— 321 


67 


II 




1 


217 — 22S 129 


11 


ii 


322— 340 


68 


II 


Elaine 


I— 13 147 


Idylls of the 


ii 


341— 360 


69 


II 








King. 


ii 


361— 379 


70 


II 






14— 32 


148 


II 


ii 


380— 399 


7i 


II 






33— 5i 


149 


If 


ii 


400 — 418 


72 


II 






52— 70 


150 


II 


ii 


419— 437 


73 


II 






71— 88 


•5i 


II 


it 


43 8 — 457 


74 


II 






89 — 107 


152 


I! 


ii 


45 8 — 477 


75 


M 






108 — 126 


153 


II 


ii 


478— 496 


76 


It 






127— 145 


i54 


II 


ii 


497— 516 


77 


II 






145— 163 155 


II 


ii 


5i7— 535 


78 


II 






164— 183 156 


II 


n 


53 6 — 555 


79 


II 






184 — 201 


i57 


II 


ii 


55 6 — 575 
57 6 — 594 


80 
81 


II 

II 






202 — 220 
221 — 239 


.58 
'59 


II 
II 


II 


595- 613 


82 


I) 






240 — 258 


160 


;i 


It 


614— 632 


83 


II 






259— 277 


161 


11 


It 


633— 650 


84 


II 






278 — 296 


162 


n 


II 


651— 670 


85 


II 






297— 316 


163 


11 


II 


671 — 690 


86 


II 






3J7— 335 


164 


it 


II 


691 — 710 


87 


II 






336— 355 


165 


If 


II 


711 — 729 


88 


II 






356— 375 


166 


If 


II 


730— 748 


89 


tl 






376— 395 


167 


ir 


II 


749— 768 


90 


II 






396— 413 


1 68 


11 


II 


769— 7S8 


9i 


II 






414— 432 


169 


/1 


'1 


789— 807 


92 


II 








433— 452 


170 


11 



TABLE OF LINES. 



POEM. 


LINES. 


PA&E 


VOLUME. 


POEMS. 


LINES. 


PAGE 


VOLUME. 


Elaine 


453— 47i 


171 


Idylls of the 
King 


Enid 


150— l69 


9 


Idylls of the 
King. 


it 


472— 489 


172 


it 


11 


170— 188 


10 


11 


ii 


490— 508 


173 


11 


tt 


I89 208 


11 


it 


ii 


509— 527 


174 


11 


it 


209 226 


12 


11 


ii 


528— 547 


175 


ti 


ti 


227 245 


13 


11 


ii 


548- 566 


176 


11 


tt 


246 264 


14 


11 


ii 


567- 586 


177 


11 


it 


265 284 


15 


ti 


ii 


586 — 604 


I 7 8 


11 


11 


285— 303 


16 


11 


ii 


605— 623 


179 


n 


tt 


304— 322 


17 


11 


ii 


624— 643 


180 


it 


tt 


323— 341 


18 


11 


ii 


644— 663 


l8l 


tt 


it 


342— 355 


19 


11 


ii 


664— 683 


182 


11 


11 


356— 374 


20 


11 


ii 


684 — 701 


l8 3 


it 


it 


375— 393 


21 


n 


ii 


702 — 719 


I84 


11 


it 


394— 412 


22 


it 


ti 


720— 739 


185 


11 


11 


413— 431 


23 


n 


IT 


740- 758 


186 


tt 


it 


432— 45i 


24 


11 


It 


759— 777 


187 


11 


tt 


452— 47i 


25 


11 


II 


778— 797 


188 


11 


11 . 


472— 489 


26 


it 


II 


798- 817 


I89 


n 


tt 


490— 507 


27 


it 


II 


818- 837 


I90 


tt 


tt 


508— 526 


28 


11 


If 


838- 856 


191 


ti 


ti 


527— 545 


29 


tt 


It 


857- 875 


192 


n 


ti 


546— 565 


30 


tt 


tt 


876- 895 


193 


tt 


11 


566- 585 


3i 


11 


tl 


896 — 914 


194 


it 


11 


586 — 604 


32 


11 


It 


9i5— 934 


195 


11 


11 


605 — 623 


33 


ti 


II 


935— 954 


I96 


11 


11 


624 — 642 


34 


it 


II 


955— 97i 


197 


11 


n 


643 — 662 


35 


11 


II 


972— 990I198 


it 


it 


663— 681 


36 


11 


tl 


991 — 1006 


199 


tt 


it 


682 — 700 


37 


11 


It 


1007— 1023 


200 


it 


it 


701 — 720 


38 


it 


tl 


1024 — 1043 


201 


n 


tt 


721— 738 


39 


it 


II 


1044 — 1061 


202 


11 


it 


739— 757 


40 


11 


II 


1062 — 1078 


203 


11 


it 


758— 777 


4i 


11 


II 


1079 — 1097 


204 


it 


tt 


778- 796 


42 


11 


II 


1098 — 1117 


205 


it 


tt 


797 — 816 


43 


ti 


tl 


1118 — 1135 


206 


11 


11 


817- 834 


44 


11 


II 


1136— 1155 


207 


it 


11 


835- 851 


45 


it 


II 


1156—1174 


208 


n 


it 


852— 870 


46 


n 


II 


1175—1193 


209 


it 


11 


871— 890 


47 


11 


II 


1 194 — 1212 


210 


11 


tt 


891 — 909 


48 


ti 


II 


1213 — 1230 


211 


tt 


tt 


910 — 926 


49 


n 


tl 


1231— 1249 


212 


11 


it 


927— 945 


5o 


11 


It 


1250 — 1267 


213 


it 


it 


946— 964 


5i 


11 


II 


1268— 1285 


214 


ti 


it 


965- 983 


52 


11 


II 


1286 — 1304 


215 


11 


11 


984 — 1000 


53 


tt 


II 


i3°4— 1321 


2l6 


it 


ti 


1001 — 1019 


54 


tt 


II 


1322— 1 341 


217 


ti 


ti 


1020 — 1037 


55 


tt 


II 


1342— 1360 


2l8 


11 


ti 


1038 — 1056 


56 


it 


II 


1361— 1377 


219 


11 


it 


1057 — 1076 


57 


it 


II 


1378— 1397 


220 


11 


11 


1077— 1093 


58 


11 


II 


1398— 1417 


221 


ti 


11 


1094— 1 1 13 


59 


11 


II 


1418 — 1419 


222 


it 


11 


1 1 14 — 1 132 


60 


11 


Enid 


1— 13 


I 


tt 


tt 


"33— "5 1 


61 


ti 


it 


14— 33 


2 


11 


11 


1152— 1170 


62 


11 


it 


34— 53 


3 


11 


11 


1171 — 1190 


63 


11 


it 


54— 72 


4 


tt 


it 


1 191 — 1207 


64 


11 


ii 


73— 9i 


5 


it 


tt 


1208 — 1226 


65 


11 


n 


92 — lie 


6 


11 


ti 


1227 — 1246 


66 


11 


ii , 


hi — 13c 


7 


11 


tt 


1247 — 1266 


67 


11 


ti 


131— 149 


8 


11 


it 


1267 — 1284 


68 


n 



TABLE OF LINES. 



POEM. 


LINES. 


PAGE 


VOLUME. 


POEM. 


LINES. 


PACE 


VOLUME. 


Enid 


1285— 1304 


69 


Idylls of the 


Enoch Arden, 














King. 


etc. 


555— 572 


3' 


Enoch Arden, 


>t 


I3°S- '324 


70 


ti 


11 


573— 592 


32 


etc. 


ti 


1325 — 1343 


71 


11 


11 


593— 611 


33 


ti 


11 


1344— I 36 1 


72 


11 


n 


612 — 629 


34 


11 


it 


1362— 1380 


73 


u 


if 


630— 649 


35 


11 


M 


I38I-I398 


74 


n 


n 


650- 668 


36 


tt 


II 


1399— Hi 7 


75 


11 


11 


669— 687 


37 


11 


II 


1418— 1436 


76 


11 


11 


688— 705 


38 


ti 


II 


1437— 1455 


77 


11 


ti 


706— 724 


39 


ti 


fl 


1456— 1475 


78 


n 


11 


725— 742 


40 


11 


TI 


1476— 1493 


79 


11 


tt 


743— 761 


4i 


11 


II 


1494— 15 10 


80 


11 


11 


762 — 779 42 


ti 


II 


1511— 1528 


81 


11 


11 


780— 797 


43 


tt 


II 


1529— 1545 


82 


11 


ti 


798— 816 


44 


11 


II 


1546— 1564 83 


ii 


t! 


817- 835 


45 


11 


II 


1565— 1582 


84 


11 


II 


836- 855 


46 


it 


II 


1583 — 1601 


85 


11 


II 


856— 874 


47 


it 


II 


1602 — 1620 


86 


tt 


II 


875- 894 


48 


n 


II 


1 62 1 — 1640 


87 


n 


II 


895 — 910 


49 


n 


II 
II 


1641 — 1659 88 
1660— 1678 89 


11 
11 


. tl 

Gardener's 


911 — 916 


50 


11 


II 


1679—1698 


90 


11 


Daughter, 


1— 15203 


Poems 


II 


1699 — 1718 


9i 


11 


11 


16— 43 204 


11 


II 


17 19— 1736 


92 


11 


11 


44— 70205 


11 


II 


1737— 1756 


93 


11 


11 


71 — 98206 


ti 


II 


1757— 1775 


94 


11 


tt 


99 — 126207 


ti 


II 


1776—1793 95 


n 


11 


127 — 152208 


u 


II 


1794— 1813 


96 


11 


it 


«53— 179,209 


n 


II 


1814-1818 


97 


n 


tt 


1S0 — 206 210 


ti 


Enoch Arden, 


1 — 11 


1 


Enoch Arden, 


ti 


207— 234 21 1 


it 


etc. 






etc. 


11 


235 — 262 212 


tt 


it 


12— 30 


2 




11 


263— 273213 


11 


ii 


3'— 49 3 




Guinevere 


1— I3|225 


Idylls of the 


ii 


50— 68! 4 








King. 


ii 


69- 87 


5 




it 


14 — 32,226 


' II 


ii 


88— 106 


6 




n 


33— 52I227 


t! 


ii 


107 — 126 


7 




11 


53— 71228 


It 


ii 


127— 145 


8 




11 


72 — 91 229 


It 


ii 


146— 163 


9 




ti 


92 — 1 1 1 230 


II 


ii 


164 — 181 


10 




11 


112 — 131231 


II 


it 


182 — 200 


11 




11 


132— 149232 


II 


ii 


201 — 217 


12 




tt 


150— 16S233 


II 


it 


218— 235 


13 




tt 


169— 184234 


tl 


ii 


2 36— 253 


14 




tt 


185— 204235 


II 


it 


254— 271 


15 




it 


205— 221 236 


II 


ii 


272— 289 


16 




11 


222 — 240237 


II 


it 


290— 309 


17 




11 


241 — 260238 


II 


it 


310— 324 


18 




11 


261— 278239 


It 


ii 


325— 342 


19 




11 


279 — 298 240 


II 


ii 


343— 361 


20 




11 


299— 317241 


11 


ii 


362— 380 


21 




it 


318— 335242 


It 


ti 


3 8 '— 399 


22 




11 


336— 352 243 


tl 


it 


400— 418 


23 




it 


353— 372244 


II 


ii 


4'9— 437 


24 




11 


373— 39' 245 


tl 


ti 


438— 456 


25 




it 


392— 410246 


II 


it 


457— 475 


26 




it 


411— 429247 


II 


it 


476— 493 27 




n 


430— 449 24S 


II 


it 


494 — 5' 2 28 




n 


450— 469249 


II 


it 


513— 53', 29 




11 


470— 4S9250 


II 


it 


532— 554 


3° 




11 


490— 509 


251 


II 



TABLE OF LINES. 



POEM. 


LINES. 


PAGE 


VOLUME. 


POEM. 


LINES. 


PAGE 


VOLUME. 








Enoch Arden, 








Idylls of the 
King 


Sea Dreams 


264 278 


I'll 


etc. 


Vivien 


547— 563 


130 


ii 


279 ■ 296 


112 


11 




564— 581 


r 3 I 


11 


tt 


297— 304 


113 


11 




582 — 600 


132 


11 








Idylls of the 




601— 618 


J 33 


ti 


Vivien 


I 12 


IOI 


King. 




619 — 636 


J 34 


11 


ii 


13- 32 


I02 






637— 654 


13S 


11 


ii 


33— 52 


IO3 






655— 674 


136 


11 


ii 


53— 7i 


IO4 






675— 693 


137 


1! 


11 


72— 91 


105 






694 — 712 


138 


II 


ii 


92^- in 


106 






713— 73i 


!39 


II 


n 


112 — I30 


I07 






732— 75o 


140 


11 


ii 


131— 149 


108 






751- 769 


141 


II 


n 


150— l68 


109 






770- 788 


142 


II 


M 


169— 188 


no 






789— 808 


H3 


II 


11 


189 — 207 


III 






809 — 823 


144 


II 


II 


208 — 226 


112 




Wellington, 








11 


227— 243 


113 




Ode on the 






Maud, and 


11 


244— 259 


114 




Duke of, 


1- 7 


137 


other Poems. 


II 


260 — ■ 279 


115 






8— 20 


138 


11 


11 


280 — 297 


Il6 






21— 39 


!39 


11 


11 


298— 3l6 


117 






40— 56 


140 


11 


II 


3i7— 335 


Il8 






57— 76 


141 


11 


II 


336— 355 


119 






77— 92 


142 


11 


II 


356— 375 


I20 






93— 112 


J 43 


n 


11 


376— 394 


121 






113— 132 


144 


11 


II 


395— 413 


122 






133— 150 


H5 


11 


II 


414— 433 


I23 






151— 168 


146 


11 


II 


434— 45 2 


I24 






169— 188 


J 47 


11 


II 


453— 470 


125 






189— 205 


148 


11 


II 


471— 490 


126 






206 — 225 


149 


11 


11 


491— 509 


127 






226 — 242 


150 


11 


II 


510— 527 


128 






243 — 262 


151 


11 


i; 


528— 546 


129 






263 — 281 


152 


11 



A CONCORDANCE 



WORKS OF ALFRED TENNYSON. 



a. Poem. Line. 

Mouthing out his hollow oes and aes T lie Epic . 50 

'aaportk. 
Joanes, as 'ant a 'a 0' sense . . N. Farmer 49 

'adste. 
summun said it in 'a . . N. Farmer 27 

Abaddon. 
A and Asmodeus caught at me . St S. Slyliles 169 

abase. 
A those eyes that ever loved . Princess, ii. 405 

abas/ted. 
all a she knew not why . . Enid . . 765 

A Lavaine, whose instant reverence Elaine . 417 

so forlorn As I am !' half« him . En. Arden 287 

abate. 
A the stride, which speaks of man Princess, ii. 407 

Abbess. 
Oursimplc-seeming/1 andhcrnuns Guinevere . 307 
till in time their A died . . ti . 684 

Was chosen A, there, an A lived . 11 . 688 

and there, an A, past ... 11 . 689 

Abbey. 
' Come out,' he said, ' To the A . Princess, Pro. 51 



But we went back to the A . 

Abbey-ruin. 
Carved stones of the A-r 

Abbey-wall. 
I sec the moulder'd A -w's . 
Abbot. 
An a on an ambling pad 

Abdiel. 
Titan angels, Gabriel, A 

abear. 
I couldn a to see it 

a-begging. 
never came a for myself 

abeyance. 
winters of a all worn out 

abhor. 
I hate, a, spit, sicken at him 

abhorr'd. 
fell and made the glen a 

abhorrent. 
A of a calculation crost 



w Con. 106 
Princess,Pro. 14 
Talking O. 3 
L.o/Shalott ,ii.20 
Milton. . 5 
N. Farmer . 64 
Dora. . . 138 
Princess, iv. 420 

. Lucretius . 196 
Elaine . 43 

. En. Arden . 470 



abide. 
Trust me, in bliss I shall a . 
Tho* much is taken, much a's 
In whose least acts's the nameless 
charm . . . . . 

you failing, I a What end soever 
A : thy wealth is garnered in 
A a little longer here . 
bid her a by her word ? 
shalt a her judgment on it . 
will a the coming of my lord 
the wife Whom he knows false a . 
hate me not, but a your lot . 

abidest. 
a lame and poor, Calling thyself . 

abiding. 
A with me till I sail 

able-bodied. 
Grew plump and a-b 

abler. 
A quarter-sessions chairman,^ none; 

abode. 
at the farm a William and Dora . 
those four a Within one house 
Wherein the younger Charles a . 
a his coming, and said to him 
stately Queen a For many a week 
mightiest of my knights, a with me 
Clave to him, and a in his own land 

abodest. 
while thou a in the bud 

abolish. 
Caught at the hilt, as to a him . 

abominable. 
The A, that uninvited came . 
shatter it, hold it a 
shapes of lust, unspeakable, A 
abruptly. 
broke the sentence in his heart A . 

absence. 
mourn'd his a as his grave . 

absolution. 
A sort of a in the sound 

absorb. 
in its onward current it a's . 

abstraction. 
They do so that affect a here 



Poem. Line. 
Pal. of Art. 18 

Ulysses . 65 

Princess, v. 67 

11 . 395 

In Mem. Ii. 15 

ir lvii. 11 

Maud, I. xvi. 25 

Enid . . 584 

it .980 

Gitincvere . 511 

Spittful Let. 11 

Two Voices 197 

In Mem. exx i v. 1 3 

The Goose . 18 

Princess, Con. 90 

Dora . . 1 

11 . . 164 

Talking O. 297 

Enid. . . 9S8 

Guinevere . 144 

11 • 4 2 7 

" • 437 

Two Voices. 158 

Enid . . 210 

(Enone . 220 
Bo&dicea . 65 
Lucretius . 158 

Enid . .891 

En. Arden 246 

Sea Dreams 61 

Isabel . . 31 

Princess, ii. . 338 

A 



CONCORDANCE TO 



abuse (s.) Poem. Line. 

lest from the a of war . . . Princess, v. 120 
bore without a The grand old name In Mem. ex. 21 

abuse (verb. ) 
wayward grief a The genial hour In Mem. civ. 9 

abused. 
God's great gift of speech a . . A Dirge . 44 

abyss. 
the waste wide Of that a . . Two Voices izo 
to sound the a Of science . . Princess, ii. 159 
lighten thro' The secular a to come In Mem. lxxv. 6 
from the distance of the a . . ir xcii. 11 

acacia. 
Was lispt about the a's . . . Princess, vii. 235 
The slender a would not shake . Maud, I. xxii. 45 

Academe. 
The softer Adams of your A . Princess, ii. 180 

this your A Whicheverside be victor ir . 212 

aca?ithus-wreath. 
many a wov'n a-w divine . . Lotos-E's. . 142 

accent. 
an a very low In blandishment . Isabel . . 19 
She replies in a's fainter . . L. of Burleigh 5 
With nearing chair and lower'd a Aylmer's F. 267 

accept. 
do a my madness and would die . Maud,\. xviii. 44 
God a him, Christ receive him. . OdeonWell. 281 

acceptance. 
Blithe would her brother's a be . Maud, I. x. . 27 

access. 
closed her a to the wealthier farms Aylmer's F. 503 

acclaim. 
the tumult of their a is roll'd . DyingSwan 33 

And follow'd with a's . . . Will Water. 138 
wrought with tumult of a . In Mem. Ixxiv. 20 

let a people's voice In full a . . OdeonWell. 143 

accompa?iied. 
oft a by Averill .... Aylmer's F. 137 

accompanying. 
brethren slowly with bent brows A Elaine 11 33 

accomplice. 
The a of your madness unforgiven Princess, vi. 259 

accojuplish. 
Which did a their desire . . Two Voices^ 217 
A thou my manhood and thyself . Princess, vii. 344 

accomplished. 
Who thro' their own desire a . Aylmer's F. 776 

accomplishment. 
win all eyes with all a . . . Coquette, ii. 4 

accorded. 
A with his wonted courtesy . . Elaitie . 635 

according. 
mind and soul, a well . . .In Mem.Pro. 27 

account (s.) 
of the crowd you took no more a . Elaine . 106 
dodged me with a long and loose a Sea Dreams 145 
a hard friend in his loose a's . 11 . 158 

account (verb.) 
Eat and be glad, for I a you mine Enid . 1495 

accounted. 
Is thy white blamelessnessa blame Vivien, . 648 

accoutremen t. 
Among piled arms and rough a's . Princess, v. 52 

accrue. 
Delight a hundredfold a . .In Mem. cxvi. 8 

accurate. 
your fine epithet Is a too . . Vivien . 383 

accurst. 
Thro' you, my life will be accurst The Letters 36 

accusation. 
Like bitter a ev'n to death . Love and Duty 79 
people's talk And a of uxoriousness Enid . . 83 



Poem. 
Vivien 



Line. 
• 55i 



breathe but a vast and vague 
accuse. 
sent for Blanche to a her . . Princess, iv. 220 
A her of the least immodesty . Enid . . 960 

acJie (s.) 
In coughs, a's, stitches, . . StS. Stylites 13 

ache (verb.) 
would not let your little finger a . Godiva . 22 

achievable. 
if our end were less a . . . Princess, iii. 266 

achieving. 
some have striven, A calm, . . Two Voices 209 

Achilles. 
see the great A, whom we knew . Ulysses . 64 

acknowledge. 
in my heart of hearts I did a nobler Elaine 1203 

acorn. 
An a in her breast . . . Talking O. . 228 

nor yet Thine a in the land . . 11 . 260 

acorn-ball. 
wear Alternate leaf and a-b . . Talking O. . 287 






Maud, I. xx. 32 



acre. 
dinner To the men of many a's 
acreage. 
No coarse and blockish God of a . Aylmer's F. 651 

acrimo?iy. 
flowed in shallower acri?nonies . Aylmer's F. 563 

act (s.) 
saying hard to shape in a 'Love thou thy land' etc. 49 
swift mind In a to throw . . M.d' Arthur 61 
king demand An a unprofitable . 11 . 96 

In a to render thanks . . . Gardener VO.159 
which I clothed in a . . Princess,!. . 192 

a tiger cat In a to spring . . » ii. . 428 

by single a Of immolation . . ti iii.. 267 

all creation is one a at once 11 . 308 

One a a phantom of succession . rr . 312 

makes Such head from a to a . 11 iv. . 432 

least a abides the nameless charm ir v. . 67 

creatures native unto gracious a . ir vii. . 12 

How much of <i at human hands In Mem.lxxxiv. 38 
dream she could be guilty of foul a Enid . . 120 
hearts who sees but a's of wrong 11 438 

So splendid in his a's and his attire ti . . 620 

act (verb.) 
up and a, nor shrink For fear . Princess, iii. 248 
For who can always a ? . . I7L Mem. ex. 9 

be born and think, And a and love 11 Con. 127 

acted. 
If more and a on, what follows . Princess, ii. 211 
weaker grows thro' a crime . . Will. . .12 
after madness a question asked . Enid . 1661 

acting. 
A the law we live by without fear CEnone . 146 

action. 
in all a is the end of all . . CEiione . 120 

until endurance grow sinew'd with a 11 . 162 

enough of a, and of motion we . Lotos-E's. . 150 
I myself must mix with a . . Locksley H. 98 
A life of civic a warm . . .In Mem. cxii. 9 
shape His a like the greater ape . 11 cxix. 11 

Adair (v. Ellen A.) 

Adam. 
when A first embraced his Eve . Day-Dm. _ . 233 
The softer A's of your Academe . Princess, ii. 180 
Since A left his garden yet . . In Mem. xxiv. 8 

add. 
a A crimson to the quaint Macaw Day-Dm. . 15 
Nor a and alter many times . . Will Water. 13 
a my diamonds to her pearls . Elaine . 1218 

months will a themselves . . Guinevere . 618 

added. 
set the words and a names I knew Audley Ct. . 60 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



Poem. Line. 
In Mem. xxxi. 8 
526 



Had surely a praise to praise 

weight is a only grain by grain . Enid 

a of her wit A border fantasy . Elaine 

a wound to wound And ridd'n away if 

Were a mouths that gaped . 11 

a to the griefs the great must bear Guinevere . 

address. 
Eegan to a us, and was moving on Princess, ii. 

address 'd — addrest. 
faces toward us and a Their motion Princess, iv. 
now a to speak — Who spoke few 

words " Con. 



. 566 
1242 
. 203 

167 



Enid . 



Adeline 



Margaret . 48 

LoveaudDulySi 

In Aleut, lvi. r6 

i> exxii. 11 

The Daisy . 85 



. Talking 0. 182 

Vision of Sin 185 
Maud, I. iv. 41 

Aylmer's F. 231 



Enid . 



suddenly a the hoary Earl . 

Adeline. 
Faintly smiling A 
Shadowy, dreaming, A (rep.) 
Spiritual A . . (rep.) 
Who talketh with thee, A '! . 
Thou faint smiler, A 
Than your twin-sister A 

adieu. 
uttered it And bade a for ever 
'A, <t for evermore 
tho' my lips may breathe a . 
What more? we took our last a 

adit. 
yourself and yours shall have Free a Princess, vi. 283 

adjust. 

a My vapid vegetable loves . 

admire. 

a Joints of cunning workmanship 

not to desire or a, if a man . 

admired. 
when now a By Edith . 

admiring. 
sat beside the couch, A him . 
the two Were turning and a it 

admission. 
beat a in a thousand years. . 
admit. 
No other thought her mind a's 
The time a's not flowers or leaves 

ado. 
why make we such a ? . 

adoration. 
Meet a to my household gods 
shaken voice And flutter' d a 
adore. 
How may measured words a 
To stand apart, and to a 
on the meadow grass and a . 
the power that all men a 

adored. 
A her, as the stateliest . 
was a ; He, loved for her 

a -drooping. 
locks a twined Round thy neck 
adulation. 
golden eloquence And amorous a Elahie 

adultery. 
mother of the foul adulteries . Aylmer's F. 376 

advance (s.) 
these are the days of a . . Maud, I. i. 25 

advance (verb.) 
The years with change a , . Two Voices . 52 
Let all my genial spirits a . . In Mem. Con. 77 
gain in life, as life a's . . ToF. D. Maurice 39 
A and take as fairest of the fair . Enid . . 553 
A and take yourprize The diamond Elaine . 502 

advanced. 

Something far a in State . . Odeon Well. 275 

I i' h growling like a dog , Enid . 1406 

the King himself A to greet them 11 . 1727 



Princess, iii. 139 

luMem.xxxu. 2 
ii cvi. s 

May Queen, iii. 56 



. Ulysses 
. Vivien 


42 
'4 


. Elednore 


45 


. Maud, I. v. 


vy 
26 


II X. 


14 


. Enid . 

. Aylmer's F. 


20 

178 



Adeline 



57 



647 



advantage. Poem. Line. 

He took a of his strength . . Princess, ii. 136 

Forbore his own a (rep.) . . Guinevere . 329 

advent. 

Wink at our a : help my prince . Princess, iii. 144 

dividing clove An a to the throne n iv. 265 

Expecting still his a home . . In Mem. vi. 21 

adventure, 
battle, bold a, dungeon, wreck . Aylmer's F. 98 

adversary. 
robbers mock at a barbarous a . Boadicea . 18 
hearing her tumultuous adversaries 11 , 78 

advice. 
he wouldn't take my a . . . Grandmother 4 

a-dyiug. 
the old year lies a . . . D. oj 'the O. Year 5 

JEolian. 
JE harp that wakes No certain air Tiuo Voices . 436 

sEon. 
the great SE sinks in blood . . In Jlf em. cxxvi.jQ 

JEonian. 
Draw down SE hills . . . InMem.xxxv. 11 
sE music measuring out The steps 11 xciv. 41 

aSrially. 
less a blue ..... Margaret . 51 
a murmur heard a . . . . Boadicea . 24 

affair. 
I never whisper'd a private a . Maud, II. v. 47 
kinsman travelling on his own a . Vivien . 567 

affect. 
They do so that a abstraction 



. Princess ii. 338 

affection. 

The still a of the heart . . Miller's D. 225 
Thus he spoke, Part banter, part a Princess, Pro. 1C6 

old and strange a of the house . n i. . 13 

cared not for the a of the house . 11 .26 

like a flash the wierd a came . 11 v. . 466 

wingM a's dipt with crime . 11 vii. . 297 

My old a of the tomb (rep.) luMemAxxxlv. 75 

With what divine a's bold . . 11 xciii. 2 

a mood Of overstrained a . . Vivien . 372 

Stabb'd through the heart's a's . u . . 717 

with full a flung One arm . . Elaine 1345 

affiance. 
dwelt upon your old a . . . Princess, iii. 123 
inwhomlhaveMostloveandmosta Elaine 1348 

affianced, 
a years ago to the Lady Ida . Princess, ii. 107 

A, Sir? love whispers may not . ir . 203 

with Melissa Florian, I With mine « 11 iii. 338 

affirm. 
A 'syour Psyche thieved her theories Princess, iii. 76 

affirmed. 
she a not, or denied . . . Princess, iv. 215 

affirming. 
A that his father left him gold . Enid . . 451 
A each his own philosophy . . Lucretius . 213 

affright. 
nothing there her maiden grace a! Maud,\.xvm. 71 

affrighted. 
Round a Lisbon drew. . . Ode on Well. 103 

after-beauty. 
that a-b makes Such head . . Princess, iv. 431 

after-days. 
It grows to guerdon a-d 'Love thou thy land' etc. 27 

after-dinner. 
It seems in a-d talk . . . Miller's D. 31 
'Twas but an a-d's nap . . . Day-Dm. . 156 

after-hands. 
whence a-h May move the world . Princess, iii. 24O 



CONCORDANCE TO 



after-heat. poem. line. 

might have drawn from a-h . . In Mem. lxxx. 12 

after-life, 

she will pass me by in a-l . . Princess, v. 88 

my dead face would vex her a-l . En. Arde?i . 892 

after-love. 

A-Vs of maids and men . . TJie Window 130 

after?nath. 

meadow smooth from a . . Audley Ct. 13 

after-morn. 
left my a-m content . . .In Man. cii. 4 

afternoon. 
In the a they came unto a land . Lotus E's. . 3 
it seemed always a ... if 4 

That a the Princess rode . . Princess, hi. 153 
all That a a sound arose . . n vi. . 358 

in the all-golden a A guest . In iIiV;;z.lxxxviii.25 
in the falling a returned . . Enid . 1439 

made the laughter of an a . . Vivien . 19 

brief repast or a repose . . Gui?ievere . 392 

Bright was that a, Sunny but chill En. Arden . 670 
Half-sickening of his pensioned a . Aylmer's F. 461 

after-time. 
sung or told In a . . . . M. d' Arthur 35 
relic of my lord Should be to a . ?r -99 

some old man speak in the a . w . 107 

a And that full voice which circles Princess, ii. 30 
men we shall prize in the a . ir v. 402 

agape. 
A rabbit mouth that is ever a . Maud, I. x. 31 

agaric. 
learned names of a, moss and fern Ed. Morris 17 

agate. 
Turkis and a and almondine . The Mei'man 32 

bottom ds seen to wave and float . Princess, ii. 306 

Agavb. 
One tall A above the lake . . The Daisy . 84 

age. 
makes me talk too much in a . Miller's D. . 194 
the great ds onward roll . . To % S. . 72 
most blessed memory of mine a . Gardeners D. 273 
thrifty too beyond her a . . Dora . . 14 
until he grows Of a to help us ir . 125 

old sore breaks out from a to a Walkg.to the M 71 
Of different ds, like twin sisters . Ed. Morris 32 
suffer'd long For a's and for a's . St S. Stylites 98 
float about the threshold of an a . Golden Year 16 
an a, when every hour Must sweat 11 . 67 

Old a hath yet his honour . . Ulysses . 50 
thro' the a's one increasing purpose Locksley H. 137 
I the heir of all the a's . n . 178 

know that a to a succeeds . . Two Voices 205 
As all were ordered, a's since . Day-Din. . 74 

'Tis vain ! in such a brassy a . Amphio?t . 65 
found My spirits in the golden a . To E. L. . 12 
every clime and a Jumbled together Princess, Pro. 16 
' The climax of his a ! . . . ?i ii. 36 

emblematic of a nobler a it . in 

Some a's had been lost v . 137 

second-sight of some Astra^an a . it . 420 

reasons drawn from a and state . it v. . 347 

got a friend of your own a . . » vi. . 234 

left for human deeds In endless a? InMem.haai. 12 
take the print Of the golden a . Maud, I. i. 30 
many a million of a' s have gone . 11 iv. 35 

Wretchedest a, since Time began 11 II. v. 21 
A tonsured head in middle a . The Brook . 200 
To such a name for a's long . Ode on Well. 76 

For many and many an a proclaim u . 226 

tho' the Giant A's heave the hill . u . 259 

suffering thus he made Minutes an a Enid. . . 964 
his own wish in a for love . . Vivien . 41 
Who paced it, a's back . . it . 403 

more fitly yours, not thrice your a Elaine . 949 

when this Aylmer came of a . Aylmer's F. 407 

huge cathedral fronts of e ery« . Sea Dreams 211 



at your a, Annie, I could have poem. line. 
wept (rep.) .... GrandmotJter 20 
a is a time of peace ... 11 . 97 

Immortal a beside immortal youth Titho?ius . 22 
Milton, a name to resound for ds . Milton . 4 
I hear the roll of the ds . . Spiteful Let. 8 
palsy, death-in-life, And wretched^ L?e'cretite>s . 155 
to-morrow, And that's an a away . TJie Window 175 

agent. 
Thro* many ds making strong 



f c Love tJwu thy 
\ laitdj etc. 



39 

aghast, 
a The women stared at these . Princess, vi. 341 
not a word ! ' and Enid was a . Enid . . 867 
men and women staring and a . w 1652 

a the maiden rose, White as her veil Guinevere . 360 

Agiucourt. 
'this/ he said, 'was Hugh's at A . Princess, Pro. 25 

agitated. 
around the royal chariot a . . Boddicea . 73 

Agla'ta. 
a double April old, A slept . . Princess, ii. 96 
my sweet A, my one child . n v. 98 

Came Psyche, sorrowing for A . 11 vi. 13 

Agned Cathregonian. 
And up in A C too . . . Elai?ie . 300 

agoan. 
whoy, Doctor's abean an' a . . N". Farmer 2 

agony. 
melody Of an inward a . . Claribel . 7 

an a Of lamentation, like a wind . M. d'Arth?ir 200 
killed with some luxurious a . Vision of Sin 43 

With agonies, with energies . In Mem. cxii. 18 

into wastes and solitudes For a . Elaine . 253 

up the side, sweating with a . n . . 493 

Brain-feverous in his heat and a . 11 . 850 

modest bosom prest In a . . Aylmer's F. 417 
as cried Christ ere His a . . ir . 793 

wail of women and children, multi- 
tudinous agonies . . . Boddicea . 26 
Roman slaughter, multitudinous 

agonies tr .84 

a-gooin 7 . 
beant a to break my rule . . iV. Farmer 4 

agreed. 
so it was a when first they came . Princess, iii. 20 
A to, this, the day fled on 11 . 160 

his wish, whereto the Queen a . Elaine 1163 

I then they were a upon a night . Gtiinevere 96 
a That much allowance must be . Aylmer's F. 409 



agrin. 
visage all a as at a wake 

Agrippina. 
the Roman brows Of A 



. Princess, v. 510 



Princess, ii. 71 
aid(s.) 
for lack of gentle maiden's a . Elaine . 761 

aid (verb.) 
O Lord, A all this foolish people StS. Stylites 219 
a me Heaven when at mine . Enid . . 502 

<7 me, give me strength Not to tell her En. Arden . 786 

aiding. 
serve them both in a her . . Princess, vii. 252 

aidless. 
leave thee thus, A, alone . . M. d* Arthur 41 

ail. 
mother thought, What ds the boy? Miller* s D. 93 
What ds us, who are sound, Walkg.to tlieM. 95 

ail'd. 
told his gentle wife What a him . Enid . 1353 

What a her then, that ere she enter'd En. A rden . 514 

aileth. 
What a thee? whom waitest thou Adeline . 45 

aim (s.) 
Embrace our dsi work out your 
freedom Princess, ii. 75 



TEXXYSOX'S IVOAA'S. 



fear our solid a be dissipated 
works Without a conscience or an a 
so I wake to the higher as . 
kept his mind on one sole a . 
a's Were sharpen'd by strong hate 

aim (verb.) 
one would a an arrow fair 

ainfd. 
A at the helm, his lance en^d 
fairy arrows a All at one mark 
Nay, but she a not at glory . 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, iii. 249 
In Mem.xxxiv. 8 
Maud.lll.vi. 38 
Vivien . 476 

Guinevere . 20 



InMcm. Ixxxvi. 25 

Enid . 1006 

Aylmer's F. 94 
Wages . 4 

aiming. 
near storm, and a at his head . Aylmer's F. 727 

air (atmosphere.) 
living a's of middle night . . Arabian IT s. 69 
<zisdamp,andhush'dand close 'A spirit hauuts,'etc. 13 
when little a's arise How the merry Adeline . 33 
With melodious a's lovelorn tt • 55 

Life in dead stones, or spirit in a . A Character 9 
Wide, wild and open to the a . Dying Swan 1 
revcal'd themselves to English a . Elednore . 2 
a SIcepeth over alt the heaven . if -38 

The very a about the door . . Miller's D. . 103 



earth and a seem only burning fire OS/tone . 264 

the summer a's blow cool 

the languid a did swoon 

Falls and floats adown the a . 

warm a's lull us, blowing lowly 

no motion in the dumb dead a 



sea and a are dark 

made the a Of Life delicious 
murmur broke the stillness of that a 
Felt earth as a beneath me . 
deep a listened round her 
softened a's that blowing steal 
yearn to breathe the a's of heaven 
touch'd, are turn'd to finest a 
clouds are highest up in n 
green From draughts of balmy a 



May Queen, ii. 27 ; 

. Lotos-E's. , 5 

11 . 76 

11 . 134 

. D. of F. Worn. 65 

f ' Love thou thy 

\ land' etc. . 63 

Gardener's D. 68 

11 . 146 

11 . 207 

Godiva . 54 

Tivo Voices 406 

Sir Galahad 63 

.. .72 

Lady Clare 2 

SirL.andQ.G. 9 



sweet as English a could make her Princess, Pro.x$\ 



n XVII. 

1 XXV. 6 

1 xxxiii. 2 

1 lxxxv. I 

1 lxxxviii. 7 

1 ...- *S 

1 xciii. 11 



each light a On our niail'd heads 
for this wild wreath of a 
went The enamour* d a sighing 
with a tender foot, light as on a 
shake To the same sweet a . 
like a broken purpose waste in a 
In that fine a I tremble 
no ruder a perplex Thy sliding keel In Mem. ix 
deep peace in this wide a 
circle moaning in the a . 
W is tlie whisper of an a . 
light as carrier-birds in a 
seem to have reached a purer a 
Sweet after showers, ambrosial a 
shook to all the liberal a 
drink the cooler a, and mark 
The memory like a cloudless a 
With summer spice the humming a 
the stirring a, The life re-orient 
ruin'd woodlands drove thro' the a 
essences turn'd the live a sick 
fed With honey'd rain and delicate 
sweet half-English Neilgherry a 
breath Of tender a made tremble 
black yew gloom'd the stagnant a 
thro' the long-tormented a 
snowy dells in a golden a 
Flash'd as they turned in a 
for God's love, a little a ! 
spouting from a cliff Fails in mid a Guinevere 
could not breathe in that fine a 
a touch of light, an a of heaven 
rush of the a in the prone swing 
Bush his blood with a, . . . 
Drank the large a, and saw . 
R a fans trie cloud apart 
Like Fancy made of golden a 



II cxv. 
Maud, Li.. 

11 xiii. . 

ir xviii. . 
The Brook . 



Tlte Letters 2 
Ode on Well. 128 
The Daisy . 68 
Lt. Brigade 
Elaine 



Aylmer's F. 



Sea Dreams 
Tithonus 
Tlte Voyage 



POEM. LINE. 

Clash, ye bells.inthemerryMarchiz W.toAlexan. 18 
AH the a was torn in sunder . . Tlte Captain 43 
Bird in a, and fishes turn'd . . Tlte Victim 19 
towering o'er him in serenest a . Lucretius . 178 
flushing the guiltless a, Spout . 11 . 236 

soul flies out and dies in the a . 11 . 270 

cloud in my heart, and a storm in 

the a The Window 40 

air (strain of music. ) 
^olianharpthatwakesNocertaina Two Voices 437 
With thertofthetrumpetround him Princess, v. 155 
slightest a of song shall breathe . In Mem.xWm. 7 
singing an a that is known to me . Mattd, I. v. 3 
while I past he was humming an a 11 xiii. 17 

hum An a the nuns had taught her Guinevere . 161 

air>d. 
into the world, And a him there . Aylmer's F. 4CZ 

airing. 
A a snowy hand and signet gem . Princess, i. 120 

aisle. 
ambrosial a's of lofty lime . . Princess, Pro. 87 
' Dark porch,' I said, ' and silent a The Letters 47 
sombre, old, colonnaded a's . . Tlte Daisy . 56 
in the middle a Reel'd . . . Aylmer's F. S18 

Ajalon. 
like Joshua's moon in A . . Locksley H. 180 

akin. 
Maud to him is nothing a . . Maud, I. xiii. 38 
lawful and lawless war Are scarcely 

even a 11 II. v. 95 

Akrokeraunian. 
The vast A walls . . . . To E. L. . 4 

a-ladid. 
fun un theer a on 'is faace . . N. Farmer 33 

alarm. 
when fresh from war's a's . . D.o/F. Worn. 149 
I shook her breast with vague a's . Tlte Letters 38 

Albert. 
with him A came on his . . Talking O . 105 

Hercafter,thro' all times,/! the Good Idylls, Ded. 42 

alder. 
blowingoverMeadowyholmsandrtV^fi'. ATorris 96 
Came wet-shot a from the wave . Amphion . 41 
here will sigh thine a tree . . A Farewell 9 

ale. 
mellow* d all his heart with a . The Brook 155 

A mockery to the yeomen over a . Aylmer's F. 497 

a- leaning. 
Truth a on her crutch ' Clear-headed friend,' etc. 18 

ale-house. 
Jack on his a-h bench . . . Maud, I. iv. 9 

A lexandra. 
Sea-king's daughter from over the 

sea, A W. to Alexan. 2 

Danes in our welcome of thee, A . 11 5 

all Dane in our welcome of thee, A 11 34 

Alfred. 
was our England's A named . Ode on Well. 188 

Alice. 
My own sweet A, we must die . Miller's D. 18 
Pray? A, pray my darling wife . 11 • 23 

A, what an hour was that . . 11 -57 

Sweet A, if I told her all 11 . 120 

Go fetch your A here ... 11 . 143 

But, A, you were ill at case 11 . 146 

song, I gave you, A, on the day . 11 . 162 

none so fair as little A . . . May Queen, i. 7 
In there came old A the nurse . Lady Clare 13 
said/! the nurse .... 11 ijel/ass. 

alighted. 
Francis just a from the boat . . Audley Ct. 6 

alive. 
Joying to feel herself alive . . Pal. of Art. 178 
pass away before, and yet a I am May Queen, iii. 1 



CONCORDANCE TO 






Dora 



POEM. LINE. 

palace-front^ with fluttering scarfs Princess, v. 498 
strive To keep so sweet a thing a . In Mem.xxxv. 7 
Dark bulks that tumble half a . u lxix. 11 

at fifty Should Nature keep me a . Maud, I. vi. 32 
not always certain if they be a , Grandmother 84 
there 's none of them left a . 11 85 

all-acco77ifilisJ£ d. 
How modest, kindly, m a-a, wise . Idylls, Ded. 17 

all-aniorous. 
Brushing his instep, bow'd the a-a 

Earl Enid. . 1209 

A II an. 
"With farmer A at the farm . 
a day When A call'd his son 
bells were ringing, A call'd His niece 
said A t 'did I not Forbid you 
A said, ' I see it is a trick 
seal that hung From A's watch 
A set him down, and Marj said . 

all-armed, 
A-al ride, whate'er betide . 

all-assu7twi i 
The a-a months and years . 

a U-comPrehensive. 
might express A-c tenderness . InMem.lxxx1v.4j 

allegiance. 
from all neighbour crowns Alliance 

and a CEnone . 123 

allegory. 
send you here a sort of a 



Sir Galahad 



InMem,\xxx\v.6j 



206 



To . With 

\ Pal. of Art. 1 
Allen. 
At Francis A 's on the Christmas-eve The Epic . 1 

alley. 
From the long ds latticed shade . Arabian N's. 112 
plaited a's of the trailing rose . Ode to Mem. 106 
a's falling down to twilight grots . 11 . 107 

every hollow cave and a lone . Lotos-E's. . 148 
And a's, faded places . . . A mphion 
firefly-like in copse And linden a . Princess, i. 

all-fragrant. 
slip at once af'vsxto one . . Princess, vii 

all-generating. 
«-£" powers and genial heat Of Nature Lucretitts 

all-golden. 
in the a-g afternoon A guest . InMem.lxxxviii.25 

all-graceful. 
A-g head, so richly curl'd . . Day-Dm. . 250 

alliance. 
from all neighbour crowns A . (Efione . 123 

allied. 
However she came to be so a . Maud, I. xiii. 36 

all-in-all. 
with that mood or this Is a-i-a to all Will Water. 108 
take them a-i-a, Were we ourselves Princess, v. 192 
trust me not at all or a-i-a (rep.) . Vivien . 234 



55 



97 



much a must be made for men 
more and more a for his talk 

allow 'd. 
leave To see the hunt, a it easily . 
loyal worship is a Of all men 
Lightly, her suit a, she slipt away 
Scorn was a as part of his defect . 
thro' his cowardice a Her station . 

allowing. 
A it, the Prince and Enid rode 

all-perfect. 
A-p, finish'd to the finger-nail 

all-puissant. 
noble breast and a-p arms 

all-seeing. 
Delius, or of older use A -s Hyperion 

all-shamed. 
thence I rode a-s, hating the life . 

all-silent. 
Sigh fully, or a-s gaze upon him . 
a ll-subtilising. 
A-s intellect ..... 

all-too-full, 
a-t-fm. bud For puritanic stays 

allure. 
beacon-blaze a's The bird of passage 

allured. 
A him, as the beacon-blaze allures 

allusion. 
phrases of the hearth, And far a . 

all-weary. 
pensive tendance in the a-w noons 

ally (verb.) 
a Your fortunes, justlier balanced 

A Imesbury. 
in the holy house at A . 
she to A Fled all night long . 
when she came to A she spake 
even here they talk at A 

A Imighty. 
O God A, blessed Saviour, Thou . 
Sir Aylmer Aylmer that a man 

a Ijuond-blossotn. 
The sun-lit a-b shakes . 

almondiue. 
Turkis and agate and a 

alms. 
set himself, Scorning an a, to work 
free of a her hand — The hand that 

ahiisdeed. 
wear out in a and in prayer . 



Philip was her children's a-i-a 
her good Philip was her a-i-a 

all-kindled. 
A-k by a still and sacred fire, 
allot. 
The sphere thy fate a's . 

allotted (part. ) 
show'd an empty tent a her . . Enid. . 
quit the post A by the Gods . Lucretius 

allow. 
To one of less desert a's This laurel To the Queen 6 
our true king Will then a your pre- 
text Elaine . 153 

answer for a noble knight? A him 11 . . 202 

/-Will well allow my pretext . it . 585 

allowance. 

To make a for us all . . In Mem. 1. 16 



En. Arden . 345 
it . 521 

. En. Arden . 71 

. Will. Water. 218 



1733 
149 



FOEM. LINE. 

Aylmer s E. 410 
Sea-Dreams 75 

Enid . . 155 

Elaine . 11 1 

". • • 774 

Guinevere . 44 

n . 5 12 

Enid . . 43 

Ed. Morris 22 

E?tid . .86 

Lucretius . 126 

Enid . 1700 

Vivien . 38 

InMem. lxxxiv. 48 

Talking O. 59 

En. Arden . 729 

En. Arden . 729 

Princess, ii. 295 

Princess, vii. 87 

Princess, ii. 51 

Guinevere . 2 

tr . 126 

» • 137 

?i . 206 

En. Arden . 783 
Ay liner's P. 13 

To the Queen 16 

The Merman 32 

En. Arden . 813 
Aylmer's E. 697 

Guinevere . 679 



The Daisy 



Of olive, a, maize and vine 

alone. 
A and warming his fine wits (rep.) T/ie Owl . 6 
sure thou art not all a . . . Adeline . 25 
Death, walking all a beneath a yew Love and Death 5 
A I wander to and fro . . . Oriana , 8 
'Ah,' shesang, ' to be all ^ (rep.) Mariana in the S. n 
She thought ' My spirit is here a 
So be a for evermore 
thou shalt be a no more 
I shall cease to be all a 
you and I were all a 
Came up from reedy Simois all a 
from that time to this I am a 
And all a in crime 
Let us a. Time driveth onward . 
Let us a. What is it that will last ? 
leave thee thus, Aidless, a . 
I might be more a with thee . 
In which we sat together and a 



both' with those That loved me, and a Ulysses 



47 
68 
76 
95 
136 
51 



Pal. of Art. 272 
Lotos-Es. . 83 
tt . 90 

M. d Arthur 41 
StS.Stylites 84 
LoveandDuty 5^ 



Miller's D. 
CEnone 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



TOEM. LINE. 

About the hall, among his dogs, a Godiva . 17 
Ah, let the rusty theme a ! . . Will. Water, ijj 
A,' I said, 'from earlier than I know Princess , vii. 292 
A, a, to where he sits . . . InMem.xxiii. 3 
When I contemplate all a . . 11 Ixxxiii. 1 

light Went out, and I was all a . 11 xciv. 20 

she will let me a . Maud, I. i. 74 

am I not, am I not here a . n vi. 65 

I am here at the gate a . . .it xxii. 4 
ill and weary, a and cold . . Tlie Daisy . 96 
endured Strange chances here a . Enid . 1658 

I was all a upon the flood . . Elaine 1040 

shaped, it seems, By God for thee « 11 . 1358 

who speaks with Him, seem all a . En. Arden . 621 



. Two Voices 362 
. Princess, vii. 100 

. Tlie Daisy . 62 

. Arabian N's. 11 



Alpine. 
gazing up an A height . 
an A harebell hung with tears 

Alps. 
Sun-smitten A before me lay 

A Iraschid. 
good Haroun A (rep.) 

altar. 
Leads her to the village a . L. of Burleigh 11 

at the a the poor bride Gives . Princess, v. 367 

saw the a cold and bare . . Tlie Letters 4 
Cold a, Heaven and earth shall meet tt . S 

fire, That burn'd as on an a . . En. Arden . 72 
Burnt and broke the grove and a . Boddicea . 2 
priest in horror about his a . . The Victim 7 

altar-cloth. 
Fair gleams the snowy a-c . . Sir Galahad 33 

altar-fire. 
mounts the heavenward af . . In Mem. xl. 3 

altar-flame. 
made my life a perfum'd a-f '. . Mand,I.xviii. 24 

altar-stairs. 
Upon the great world's a-s . . In Mem. liv. 15 

altar-stone. 
To the a-s she sprang alone . . Tlie Victim 72 

alter. 
Sequel of guerdon could not a me CEnone . 151 
Nor add and a, many times . . Will Water. 15 
as the fiery Sinus a's hue . . Princess, v. 252 
Persuasion, no, nor death cou\dah<;r Aylmer's F. 418 

alter 'd (part, and verb.) 
For I was a and began . . Miller's D. 94 

tho' you have grown You scarce have a Princess,\\. 286 

alum. 
chalk and a and plaster are sold . Maud, I. i. 39 

amaracus. 
Violet, a, and asphodel . . . GSnone 95 

amaranth. 
propt on beds of a and moly . Lotos-E's. . 133 

amaryllis. 
A milky-bcll'd a blew . . . The Daisy . 16 

a-maying. 
Had been, their wont, a . . Guinevere . 24 

amaze. 
the hush'd a of hand and eye . Princess, iii. T22 
In much a he stared On eyes . The Brook . 205 
Suddenly honest, answered in a . Enid . 1259 

amazed. 
A he fled away Thro' the dark land Princess, v. 46 
A am I to hear Your Highness . 11 vi. 304 

a They glared upon the woman . ti . 340 

Enid asked a ' If Enid errs . . Enid . . 131 
the armourer turning all a 11 . 283 

plover's human whistle a Her heart 11 . . 898 
when he found all empty, was a . 11 . 1065 

A am I, Beholding how you butt . " . 1524 

more a Than if seven men had set Elaine . 349 

the Queens ' Was he not with you? 11 . . 571 
He a, 'Torreand Elaine I whyhere? 11 . . 791 
A and melted all who listen'd . En. Arden . C50 



POEM. LINE. 

Averill solaced as he might, a : . Ay inter 's F. 343 
half a half frighted all his flock . 11 .631 

amazement. 
stood Stock-still for sheer a . . Will Water. 136 

A mazon. 
Glanc'd at the legendary A . . Princess, ii. no 

ambassador. 
My father sent a's with furs . . Princess, i. 41 
Sir Lancelot went a, at first . . Vivien . 624 

A, to lead her to his lord . . Guinevere . 380 

a mbassadress. 
arc yon a'es From him to me? . Princess, iii. 187 

amber (adj.) 
lights, rose, a, emerald, blue . Pal. of Art. 169 

amber (s.) 
fans Of sandal, a, ancient rosaries Princess, Pro. 19 

ambition. 
Down with a, avarice, pride . Maud, I. x. 47 

the lawless perch Of wing'd a's . Idylls, Ded. 22 
No madness of a, avarice, none . Lucretius . 209 

ambrosia. 
Hebes are they to hand a , . Princess, iii. 97 

ambrosial. 
oak tree sigheth, Thick leav"d, a . Claribcl . 5 
her deep hair A, golden . . CEnone . 174 

ambrosially. 
fruit of pure Hesperian gold, That 
smelt a .... CEnone . 66 

ambuscade. 
In every wavering brake an a . Enid . . 900 

ambush. 
Lances in a set . . . . D. ofF. Worn. 28 

Afnen. 
yet I take it with A . . . Elaine 121 7 

amend. 
might a it by the grace of heaven Enid . . 902 

amends. 
She made me divine a . . . Aland, I. vi. 13 
// hereafter by some gaudy day . Enid . . 818 
Can thy love, Thy beauty, make a Tithonus . 24 

amiss. 
somewhat in this world a . . Miller's D. 19 
kind to Maud? That were notrt . Maud, I. xix. 82 
pray you check me if I ask a . Guinevere . 322 

my doubts and fears were all a , Tlie Ringlet 19 

amity. 
idioted By the rough a of the other Aylmer's F. 591 

Amnion. 
Hew'd A, hip and thigh . . D.ofF. Worn. 238 

A mmonite. 
Huge/l'i-,and the first bones of Time Princess,Pro. 15 

amoighty. 
The«\fataakin'oyouto'issen(rep.) N. Farmer. 10 

amorous. 
with argent-lidded eyes A . . Arabian N's. 135 
Of temper a, as the first of May . Princess, i. 2 

High nature a of the good . . In Mem. cviii. 9 

amorously. 
kiss Thy taper fingers a . . Madeline . 44 

shall we dandle it a ? . . . Boiidicea . 33 

A mphion. 
In days of old A .... Amphion . 10 

amulet. 
What a drew her down . . Aylmer's F. 507 

A my. 
I said ' My cousin A, speak . . Locksley II. 23 
O my A, mine no more . . 11 -39 

amygdaloid. 
trap and tuff, A and trachyte . Princess, iii. 34 



Ere days, that deal in a 



. Will Water. 17; 



CONCORDANCE TO 



anadem. poem. line. 

Lit light in wreaths and ds . . Pal. of Art. 186 

Anakim. 

I felt the thews of A . . .In Mem. cii. 31 

A natJie7?ia. 

Thunder ' A,' friend, at you ToF.D. Maurice 8 

a7iato7?iic. 

not found among them all One a . Princess, iii. 290 

ancestor. 

those fixt eyes of painted a's . Ay liner's F. 832 

a7icJior (s.) 
With silver a left afloat . . Arabia7i FPs. 93 

there was no a, none, . . . The Ej>ic . 20 
lay At a in the flood below . . I?i Mem. cii. 20 
A's of rusty fluke, and boats . En. Arde?i . 18 

your cares on God ; that a holds . 11 . 222 

Nor a dropt at eve or morn . . The Voyage 82 

anchor (verb.) 
To a by one gloomy thought . Two Voices 459 

anchor 9 d. 
Tho' a to the bottom, such is he . Pri7tcess, iv. 238 
A tawny pirate a in his port . Vivie7t . 408 

A7icie7its (s.) 
we are A 's of the earth . . Day-D77t. „ 231 

ancle. 
From head to a fine . . . Talking O. 224 
One praised her a's, one her eyes . Beggar Maid 12 
hook'd my a in a vine . . . Pri?icess, iv. 249 
Behind his a twined her hollow feet Vivien . 89 

a7te?none. 
burn'd The red a . . . . D. of P. Worn. 72 
Crocus, a, violet . . . To F.D.Maurice 44 

'ang y d (hanged.) 
Noaks wur y a for it oop at 'soize . N. Fanizer . 36 

a7igel (adj.) 
So sweet a face, such a grace . Beggar Maid 13 
With books, with flowers, with A 

offices ..... Princess, vii. n 

a dearer being, all dipt In A instincts it . 302 

Rings to the roar of an a onset . Miltofz . 8 

angel (s.) 
strange a which of old l Clear-headed friend? etc. 24 

temper'd with the tears of ds - L ° ; 

An a looked at her . 

ds rising and descending met 

I heard the a's call 

saw An a stand and watch me 

Is that the a there 

thyself a little lower Than ds 

Three ds bear the holy Grail 

stricken by an ds hand . 



( Pal. of Art 19 
. Pal. of Art 100 

• ■' - J 43 

. MayQ?eee7i } iu.25 
. St S. Stylites 34 
h . 200 

. Two Voices 199 
. Sir Galahad 42 

69 



lest some classic A speak In scorn Princess, iii. 54 



the woman's A guards you 
No A, but a dearer being 
My guardian a will speak out 
I found an a of the night 
An a watching an urn Wept . 
pray him send a sudden A down 
face Which then was as an a's 



1 1 v. 400 
it vii. 301 
l7i Mem. xliii. 15 
tr Ixviii. 14 
Maud, I. viii. 3 
Etai7ie 1414 

Guiiievere . 590 



been as God's good a in our house En. Arde7i . 420 



Fair as the A that said ' hail 
himself Were that great a 
devil in man, there is an a too 
His a broke his heart 
whose Titan ds, Gabriel, Abdiel 
a7tger (s.) 
Delicious spites, and darling ds 
Then wax'd her a stronger . 
his a reddens in the heavens . 
The bitter springs of a and fear 
I with as fierce an a spoke . 
vassals of wine and a and lust 
their ravening eagle rose In a 
ruth began to work Against his a 
hot, God's curse, with a 



Ayl77zer's F. 
. Sea Dreams 



Milto7i 



Madeline 
The Goose 
Pri7icess, iv. 
Maud, I. x. 
tr II. i. 



6 

30 

3 6 7 
49 

*7 

» .43 

Ode 07i Well. 120 
Enid . .951 

11 . 1509 



POEM. 


LINE. 


Vivien 


• 371 


11 


. 381 


IF 


. 541 


II 


■ 697 


II 


• 740 


Elaine 


1081 


Guiyievere 


• 359 


En. Arden 


. * 


GrandmotJier 65 


Boadicea 


• 23 


ii 


. 52 



As some wild turn of a . 

turn of a born Of your misfaith 

Vivien frowning in true a 

breaths of a pufFd Her fairy nostril 

his a slowly died Within him 

too faint and sick am I For a 

storm of a brake From Guinevere 

as with a kind of a in him _ . 

troubled, as if with a or pain 

all their a in miraculous utterances Boadicea 

an a, not by blood to be satiated , 

anger (verb.) 
A's thee most, or ds thee at all 

a7iger-char7ii 'd. 
Sat a-c from sorrow 

^^^^(adj.) 
The flush of a shame . . . Madeline . 32 
dragon eyes of a Eleanor c a D.ofF.Wo77i.i^ 

a7iger'd (verb.) 
jealousies Which sher. Who«James? Tlte Brook 100 

a7igerly. 
Again thou blushest a . 



Lucretius 



75 



Ayhner's F. 728 



Madeline 



45 



aiigle (s.) 
We rub each other's ds down /«iJ^7«.lxxxviii.4o 

angled, 
a in the higher pool . . . Miller's D. 64 
a with them for her pupil's loye . Princess, iii. 77 

angrier. 
I never ate with a appetite . . Enid . 1082 

angry. 
Hungry for honour, a for his king Princess v. . 304 
Hortensia, pleading: swasher face u vii. 117 
it makes me a now . . . Grandmother 44 

aiiguish. 
Life, a, death, immortal love . Arabian N's. 73 

down in hell Suffer endless a . Lotos-E's. . 169 

Beauty and a walking hand in hand D. ofF. W0771. 15 



loveth her own a deep 

Thine a will not let thee sleep 

that this a fleeting hence 

My deeper a also falls . 

My a hangs like shame 

in her a found The casement 

Shall I heed them in their a? 



To J. S. 
Two Voices 



42 
49 

» .. 235 

7« Mem. xix. 15 
Maud, II. iv. 74 
Gimievere . 580 
Boadicea . 9 



Lucrethis . 163 



Pri7icess, vii. 28 



a7iimal (adj.) 
a heat and dire insanity 

a7iii7ial (s.) 
The single pure and perfect a 

a7ii77ialis77i. 
Hetairai, curious in their art, Hireda^ Lucrethis 
a7ikle (v. a7icle.) 

ankle-bells. 
To make her smile, her golden a-b Vivien 

a7ikle-bo7ies. 
feet unmortised from their a-b . Vivien . 



a7ikle-deej>. 
\ a-d in flowers . 



402 



/;zi?f<?;;2.1xxxviii.49 



brushin, 

a7ikle-wi7ig. 
as it were with Mercury's a-w 

anfials. 
Holding the folded a of my youth Gardeiie^sD.^g 
with a day Blanch'd in our a . Princess, vi. 47 
Told him, with other a of the port £71. Arde7i . 703 

A 7i7ie. 
is gone, you say, little A ? 
I had not wept, little A, 

Annie. 
A Lee, the prettiest little damsel 
While A still was mistress . 
make a home For A 
a home For A, neat and nest-like . 
Enoch and A, sitting hand in hand 
set A forth in trade 



Luoetius 



Grand77iother 



63 



En. Arden 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



break his purposes To A 

A fought against his will 

Bought A goods and stores . 

A seem'd to hear her own . . 

work for A to the last . 

A's fears Save as his A's 

When A would have raised him . 

A from her baby's forehead dipt . 

same week when A buried it 

A, seated with her grief 

A with her brows against the wall 

for/4'ssake, Fearingthe lazy gossip 

Philip did not fathom A's mind . 

one evening A's children long'd . 

A would go with them . 

For was not A with them 

fearing night and chill for A 

At A's door he paused 

A weeping answered, ' I am bound 

A could have wept for pity . 

chanced That A could not sleep . 

never merrily beat A 's heart 

The babes, their babble, A . 

Where A lived and loved him 

later but a loftier A Lee 

His gazing in on A 

my daughter, A, whom I saw 

my A who left me at two 

my own little A, an A like you . 

annihilate. 
eagle's beak and talon a us . 



POEM. 


LINE. 


En. Arden 


• M9 


ii 


. 156 
. 158 
. 169 


ir 
ir 


• 174 
. 180 


ii 


• 183 


n 


- 231 


ip 


- 234 


ii 


- 270 


ii 


- 279 


ii 


- 313 


it 


• 33 1 


ii 


• 34' 


;; 


- 359 
• 3°i 
. 368 


ir 


• 44° 


II 

ii 
ti 


• 444 

• 448 

• 464 
. 486 


ii 
ii 

ii 


• 5°9 
. 607 
. 686 


"• 


• 749 
. 864 


Grandmother 77 


ti 


• 7S 


Bo'ddicea 


. II 



a should one press his hands ? 

He a's not, nor understands . 

thou canst a not again 

thou wilt a but in vain 

Scarce a to my whistle 

in gentle murmur When they a 



into many a listless a 



annulet. 



Enid. 



1 107 



announced. 

A the coming doom, and fulmin- 
ated Sea Dreams 

answer (s.) 

Not rendering true a , 

some sweet a, tho' no a came 

have an a to my wish . 

The sullen a slid betwixt 

must be a to his doubt . 

I spoke, but a came there none 

an a peal'd from that high land 

therewithal an a vague as wind 

this report, this a of a king . 

Her a was, ' Leave me to deal 

a which, half-muffled in his beard 

oozed All o'er with honcy'd a 

lagg'd in a loth to render up 

sh dl have her a by the word 

Last, Ida's a, in a royal hand 

wh.it a should I give? . 

doubts and a's here proposed 

What hope of a, or redress . 

Death returns an a sweet 

A faithful a from the breast . 

win An a from my lips , 

Make a, Maud, my bliss 

Made a sharply that she should not Enid 

moving without a to her rest 

he flung a wrathful a back . 

Made a, cither eyelid wet . 

an a for a noble knight? 

when she drew No a, by and by 

a mournful a made the Queen 

Rejoicing at that a to his prayer 

Such a voluble a promising all 

hush'd itself at last, Hopeless of a Aylmcr's F. 543 

before thine a given Dcpartcst . Tithonus . 44 

Bark an a, Britain's raven ! . . Boddicea . 13 

it seemed that an a came . . Tlie Victim 24 

answer (verb.) 
(rill she a if I call? . . . Miller's D. 118 
you dare to a thus ! Dora . . 24 

p_o that man My work shall a Love and Duty 28 
He will a to the purpose . . Locksley II. 55 



M. d 'Arthur -js, 

Gardencr'sD.156 

Dora . . 28 

Two Voices . 226 

» . 3°9 

42s 

221 

■11 

69 

1 13 
224 

2 32 
289 

:->7 
361 

yv 
3 

27 
9 

14 

» en. . 50 
. i!/aW,I.xviii. 57 

196 

530 
995 
229 
20 1 
160 

339 

127 
903 



Vision o/S. 
Princess i. . 



. InMem. xlvii. 
11 lv. . 
it lxxx. 
n lxxxiv. 



Vivien 
Elaine , 
Guinevere , 

t» 
En. Arden . 



to a, Madam, all those hard things Princess ii. . 324 

you should a, we would ask . 

told ine she would a us to-day 

a echoes, dying, dying, dying 

A each other in the mist 

whatever is as ask'd her, a's 'Death' Maud I. i. 



wilt thou not a thi 

it shall a for me . . 

a, darling, a no 

could a him, If questioned 

shall know Thy voice and a 'My 

(A, O a) We give you his life 

Is lie your dearest ? (A , O a) 

what use to a now ? 

answered. 
in that time and place she a me 
a me ; And well his words . 
plagiarised a heart And a 
She a to my call . 
Echo a in her sleep 
a sharply that I talked astray 
a nothing, doubtful in myself 
when have I a thee ? 
The "wilt thou" a 
ask'd it of him, Who a as before 
a with such craft as women use 
Enid a, harder to be moved 
truest eyes that ever a heaven 
I am a, and henceforth 
well and readily a he . 
Lancelot spoke And a him at full 
a not, Or short and coldly . 
whom she a with all calm 
Lancelot a nothing, but he went 
was a softly by the King 
should have a his farewell . 
A all queries touching those 
Doubt ye not the Gods have a 
Gods have a: We give them the wife 



POEM. LINE. 

Two Voices 245 

11 . 246 

11 . 310 

. 312 

A mphion . 68 
L. of Burleigh 50 



Vivien 



XVlll. 



11 . 332 

11 111. . 150 

" • 353 

In Mem. xxviii. 4 

4 

59 

236 

11 . . 247 

En. Arden 654 

Life is full t ' etc. 10 

The Victim 15 

11 . 55 

11 . 59 

Gardener' sD. 226 

Ed. Morris 24 

Talking O. . 20 

Will Water. 106 

Princess Pro. 66 

11 iii. 124 

11 . . 255 

11 vi. . 367 

In Mem. Con. 54 

Enid. . . 205 



J 542 
1690 
728 
269 
286 
882 
991 
1378 
45 

11 . .608 
Aylmcr's F. 465 
Boadicea . 22 
The Victim 83 



Vivien 
Elaine 



Guinevere . 



answering. 

a under crescent brows . . Princess, ii. 406 

a not one word, she led the way . Enid . 1345 

antagonism. 
in the teeth of clench'd a's . . Princess, iv. 445 
toppling over all a . . . Enid 491, 1688 

anthem, 
a sung, is charmed and tied . . D.ofF.Wom.iqr, 
sound of the sorrowing a roll'd . Ode on Well. 60 

anther. 
With a's and with dust . . Talking O. 184 

Antibabylotiianism . 
loud-lung'd A's . . . Sea Dreams 244 

antiquity. 
front of timber-crost a . . . En. Arden . 693 

Antony. 
friend, Where is Mark A 1 . . D.ofF. Worn. 140 
My Hercules, my Roman A. . 11 . 150 

anvil. 
silver hammers falling On silver a's Princess, i. 213 



a bang'd With hammers 

anything. 
Behold, we know not a 
can sec elsewhere, a so fair . 
in all the world at a 
never meant us a but good . 

apartment. 
died Of fright in far a s 

ape (s.) 
In bed like monstrous a s 



II v. . 493 

In Mem. liii. 13 

Enid. . -499 

11 . 1498 

En. Arden . 888 



Princess, vi. 331 
Sl.S.Stylites 171 



CONCORDANCE TO 



let the a and tiger die . . 
action like the greater a . * 

a P e (verb.) 
should a Those monstrous males . 
as far As I could a their treble 
Aphrodite. 
Her§ comes to-day, Pallas and A . 
Idalian A beautiful 

Apocalyptic. 
as if he held The A millstone 

Apollo. 
strange song I heard A sing 
another of our Gods, the Sun, A . 

apology. 
ended with a so sweet . 

appalVd. 
a them, and they said . 

apparel. 
in her hand A suit of bright a 
store of rich a, sumptuous fare 
a as might well beseem His princess 
clothed her in a like the day 

appeal (s.) 
She the a Brook'd not . 
makest thine a to me 
tho' it spake and made a 
lifted up A face of sad a 

appeaVd. 
a To one that stood beside . 
with a larger faith a 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem, cxvii. 28 
11 cxix. . 11 

Princess, iii. 292 
n iv. 74 



11 . . 170 

. Sea Dreams 26 

. TWionus . 62 

. Lucretius . 125 

. Enid . 1243 

. Elaine 1246 

. Enid . 



. 678 
.» . . 709 
.1 . . 758 
ii . 1796 

Princess, vi. 123 

In Mem. Iv. 5 

ti xci. 4 

Vivien . 83 

D. ofF. Worn, 99 
Talking O . 15 



A to the bolts of Heaven 

appear. 
Shadows of the world a 
made a Still-lighted 
marble bright in dark ds 
makes a the songs I made 
Shall I a, O Queen, at Camelot . 
let a the brand of John 
a the work of mighty Gods . 

appeared. 
blew and blew, but none a . 
very graves a to smile . 
work To both a so costly 
now that shadow of mischance a . 

appearing. 
A ere the times were ripe 

appeased. 
Gods, they must be a . 

appertain. 
ds to noble maintenance 

appetite. 
never ate with angrier a 

applauded. 
mildly, that all hearts A 

applause. 
might reap the a of Great 
he for whose a I strove 
and his comrades to a . 

apple. 
full-juiced a, waxing over-mellow 
swung an a of the purest gold 

apple-arbiter. 
beardless a-a Decided fairest 

apple-blossom. 
Fresh a-b. blushing for a boon 

apple-cheefcd. 
bevy of Eroses a-c 

application. 
liberal ds lie In Art 

appraised. 
A the Lycian custom . 
A his weight, and fondled 



. Princess, iv. 353 

. L. ofSnalott.il. 12 
. M. in the S. 17 
. In Mem. lxvi. 5 
11 ■ Con. 21 
. Elaine . 143 

. Aylmer*s F. 509 
. Lucretius . 102 

. Princess, v. 326 
. The Letters 45 
. Enid . . 638 
. En. Arden . 128 

. In.Mem.C0n.13Q 

. TJie Victim 49 

. Enid . . 712 

. Enid . 1082 

. Enid . 1806 

. Princess, iii. 245 
. In Mem. 1. . 5 
. Enid. . 1 145 



Lotos-E's. 
Enid . 


• 78 

I70 


Lucretius 


91 


The Brook 


90 


The Islet 


II 


Day-Dm. 


209 



thro' thick veils to a 



apprelie?id. 



poem. LINE. 
. Two Voices 296 



approach (s.) 
less achievable By slow des 
Preserve a broad a of fame . 

approach (verb.) 



Pri?icess, iii. 267 
Ode on Well. 78 



St.S.Stylites 213 
Princess, vii. 332 
En. Arden 831 



Princess, iii. 
Elaine 



Miller's D. 
Elaine. 



180 
1345 



160 
994 



. Maud I. xix. 71 



. Guinevere . 294 
. AylmersF. 474 

Miller's D. . 106 
Vision o/Sin 164 

Princess, ii. 303 

InMem.bcxxli. 7 
n cviii. 12 
it cxiv. 

Elai?te 



19 

893 



Miller's D. , 



Princess, ii. 



Princess, ii. 112 
En. Arden 154 



let him presently A 

A and fear not 

a To save the life despair'd of 

approach'c, 
a Melissa, tinged with wan . 
as the great knight A them . 
A him, and with full affection 

approaching 
A , press'd you heart to heart 
A thro' the darkness, call'd . 

approve. 
wishes me to a him 

approv'd. 
A him, bowing at their own deserts The Brook . 128 
She wore the colours I a . . Tlie Letters 16 

approven. 
by miracle was a king . 

approvingly. 
often talked of him A . 

April (adj.) 
A nights began to blow 
A hopes, the fools of chance 
clad her like an A daffodilly 
trouble live with A days 
all the years of A blood 
regret Becomes an A violet . 
For all an A morning . 

April (s.) 
('Twas A then) I came and sat 
A's crescent glimmer'd cold . 
babe, a double A old . 
To rain an A of ovation 
From A on to A went . 
Make A of her tender eyes . 
keenlier in sweet A wakes . 
May or A , he forgot, The last of A The Brook 
in A suddenly Breaks . . . Enid . 
balmier than half-opening budsof A Tithonus 

apt. 
supple, sinew-corded, a at arms 
a at arms and big of bone 

Arab. 
delicate A arch of her feet . 

Arabian. 
nodding together In some A night Maud I. vii 

Arac. 
Not ev'n her brother A 
rumour of Prince A hard at hand 
speak with A : A's word is thrice 
midmost and the highest Was A . 
genial giant, A , roll'd himself 
whereas I know Your prowess, A 
those two bulks at A's side . 
From A 's arm, as from a giant's flail 
but A rode him down . 
A, satiate with his victory . 

Arbaces. 
A, and Phenomenon, and the rest . The Brook 

arbour. 
read in a's dipt and cut . . Amphion 

arbuttis. 
there? yon a Totters . . . Lucretius . 184 

Arc v. Joan of A. 

arc (part of circle.) 
thro' a little a Of heaven . . To J. S. .26 
Bear had wheel'd Thro' a great a . Princess, iv. 195 
sine and a, spheroid and azimuth 11 vi. 239 

Run out your measured a's . . In Mem. civ. 27 



59 
107 
95 

ir vi. __ 50 

In Mem. xxii. 7 

ir xxxix. 8 

CXV. 2 
151 
338 
60 



. Princess, v. . 524 
. E?iid . . 489 

Maud I. xvi. 15 



Princess ; i. 


. 152 


11 


V. 


. 108 

. 217 


n 
11 
ti 
ii 




. 247 

. 264 
. 394 
. 488 

■ 489 


IF 




. 521 


" 


Vll. 


• 75 



162 



85 



TEXXYSON'S JVORA'S. 



Arcady. poem. line. 

To many a flute of A . . . In .Mem.xxui. 24 

arch (s.) 
Thro' little crystal a'es low . . Arabian N's. 49 

frots of a'es interlaced . . . Pal of Art. 51 
lany an a high up did lift 11 . 142 

whirl'd in an a, Shot . . . M. d Arthur 138 
to three a'es of a bridge . . Gardener sD. 43 

Yet all experience is an a . . Ulysses . 19 
then we past an a . . . Princess, i. 206 

under a'es of the marble bridge . 11 ii. 434 

delicate Arab a of her feet . . Maud I. xvi. 15 
bloom profuse and cedar a'es . Milton . 11 

archive. 
ofcrimefulrecordallMymortalaVi StS.Stylites 157 

archway. 
Gleam thro' the Gothic a's . 
shatter' d a plum'd with fern . 
Arden. 
Enoch A, a rough sailor's lad 
know Enoch A of this town ? 
You A, you! nay — sure 
Proclaiming Enochs andhiswoes 
Eh, let me fetch 'em, A 

argent (s.) 
polish' d a of her breast 

argent-lidded. 
Serene with a-l eyes 

A rgive. 
On A heights divinely sung . 
argosy. 
argosies of magic sails . 

arguing. 
seem As a love of knowledge 
A boundless forbearance 

argument. 
Half buried in some weightier a . Lucretius 

arise. 

Come forth I charge thee, a 

when little airs a . 

feel the tears of blood a 

Many suns a and set 

A, and let us wander forth . 

I will a and slay thee . 

mighty wind a's, roaring seaward 

when a fountain should a 

The thoughts that a in me . 

pillars of the hearth A to thee 

A, and get thee forth and seek 

A and lly The reeling Faun . 

Morning a's stormy and pale 

ah fur a man to a in me . . 11 x. 

A, my God, and strike . . . 11 II. i. 

war would a in defence of the right 11 III. vi 

dreary phantom a and fly 11 

lord a and look upon me . . Enid . 
yonder man upon the bier a . .11 
my dear lord a and bid me do it . 11 
himself a a living man . . h 

yearning for thy yoke, a . . Titlionus 

arisen. 
mountains have a since . . Vivien 



Codiva 


64 


Enid . 


316 


En. Arden . 


14 


11 • 


846 

S55 
869 
872 


D.o/F. Worn 


158 


Arabian .Vs 


135 


In Mem.xxu 


. 22 


Locksley H. 


121 


Princess, ii. 


43 


Ay liner's P. 


317 



Ode to Mem. 46 

Adeline . 33 

Oriana. . 77 

Miller's D. 205 

11 • 239 

M d Arthur 132 
Locksley H. 194 
Vision of Sin 8 
1 Break? etc. 4 
Princess, vii. 202 
IuMcm. lxxxiv. 79 
" cxvii. 25 
Maud I. vi. 1 



67 

4 5 

'9 

36 

1498 

1505 

1513 

1554 

40 

525 



arising. 
at Bible meetings, o'er the rest A Sea-Dreams 191 

aristocrat. 
what care I, A, democrat . . Maud, I. x. 65 

ark. 
il t to wreck my mortal a . Two Voices 389 
leave this mortal a behind . . In Mem. xii. 6 



with a (weeping of the a 
her right a whirl'd 
«wcet faces, rounded a's 

■liine a's, turn to thy rest 
A glowing a, a gleaming neck 



a in a, we went along . 

true heart thine as entwine . 

The kiss, The woven a's 

Puts forth an a, and creeps . 

Paris had raised his a . 

that my a's Were w r ound about thee 

Sat smiling, babe in a . 

my a was lifted to hew down 

humid a's festooning tree- to tree 

mailed Bacchus leapt into my a's 

with one a about her king 

held a goose upon his a 

took the goose upon his a 

one summer noon, an a Rose up 

an a Clothed in white samite 

with pain, reclining on his a . 



One a aloft — Gown'd in pure white Gardener 'sD '.124 



// Character 


[< 


The Poet . 


54 


Sea Fairies 


1 


si Dirge 


< 


Miller's D. 


7« 



in the circle of his a's Enwound us 
thrust him in the hollows of his a 
Francis, with a basket on his a 
folded in thy sister's a . 
haply dream her a is mine 
folded in Emilia's a 
in my weak lean a's I lift 
leg and a with love-knots gay 
sank her head upon her a 
close and dark my a's I spread 
Roll'd in one another's arms 
each softly-shadow'd a . 
on her lover's a she leant 
a's across her breast she laid 
her a lifted, eyes on fire 
long a's and hands Reach'd out 
Iapt In the a's of leisure 
holding out her lily a's 
Herselfand Lady Psyche the twon 
Oaring onea, and bearing in my 1 
drew My burthen from my a's 
A Xiobean daughter, one a out 
stretch'd her a's and call'd 
Arac's a, as from a giant's flail 
With Psyche's babe in a 
on every side A thousand a's 
axe was broken in their a's . 
a's were shattered to the shoulder 

blade 

with the babe yet in hern's . 
reach its fatling innocent a's 
in your own a's To hold your ow 
a that dandled you 
from mine «Vshe rose Glowing 
moves his doubtful a's . 
Science reaches forth her a's 
dark a's about the field 
mix in one another's arms 
watch'd her on her nurse's a 
find the a's of my true love . 
rush'd into each other's a's . 
dear a life your a's enfold 
a's on which the standing muscle 
breast and all-puissant a's 
folded more in these dear a's 
gray walls with hairy-fibred a's 
by the length of lance and a 
woven paces, and with waving a's 
curved an a about his neck . 
lithe a round his neck Tighten 
wizard cast a shielding a 
Her a's upon her breast across 
to make A's for his chair 
baitle-writhcnrt'sand mighty hand 
innocently extending her white a's 
armlet for the roundest a on earth 
an a to which the Queen's I s haggard 
flung One a about his neck 
often in her a's She bare me 
milk-white a's and shadowy hair 
Sir Lancelot, my right a 
Then she stretch'd out her a's 
laid the feeble infant in his (is 



POEM. LINE. 

Millers D. . 163 

11 . 216 

ii . 232 

CEnone . 4 

M . . IS 5 

" . . 193 

Pal. of Art. 96 

D.o/F. Worn. 45 

11 . 70 



Tlu: Goose 



270 
5 

11 . 41 

M.d Arthur 29 

■1 143. 153 

168 



Dora . 
A udiey Ct. 



211 

129 

5 

62 

63 

11 . 64 

StS.Stylites 116 

Talking O. 65 

11 . 207 

11 • 225 

Locksley H. 58 

Day-Dm. . 89 

11 . 165 

Beggar Maid 1 

Princess,Pro. 41 

11 i. 28 

11 ii. 152 

11 . 283 

11 iii. 19 

11 iv. 165 

11 . 174 

» • 352 

•' • 475 

11 v. 489 

r VI. 15 

1; . 21 

" • 35 

It . 36 

. 58 

II . 122 

I. . l6l 

„ . 165 

11 vii. 144 

In Mem. xiii. 3 
11 xxi. 1 3 
11 .xciv. 16, 52 
11 ci. 23 
11 Couel. 

Maud. 1 1, iv. 

The Letters 

The Daisy . 

Enid . 



46 

3 

40 

93 
76 
86 
99 
3 2 3 
1312 

56 

90 

464 

757 

759 

437 

808 

928 

1177 

1220 

■ 

1400 
600 

En. Arden . 152 



Vivien 



Elaine 



GuineT'ere 



12 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

strong cis about his drooping wife En. Arden . 227 

rear'd his creasy a's 11 . 752 

he spread his a's abroad tr . 911 

grove-like, each huge a a tree . Ayhner's F. 510 

ds stretch'd as to grasp a flyer . 11 . 588 

sideways up he swung his as . Sea-Dreams 24 

waved my a to warn them 11 . 128 

rais'd your a, you tumbled down . 11 . 137 

soft a, which, like the pliant bough 11 . 278 

Jenny hung on his a GrandmotJier 42 

turn'd and claspt me in his a's . 11 -55 

I wither slowly in thine a's . . Tithonus . 6 

Mute with folded as they waited TJie Captain 39 

cast her ds about the child . . TJie Victim 33 

stay'd his a's upon his knee . . if .58 

roll thy tender ds Round him . Lucreihts . 82 

arm-chair. 

father left his good a-c . . . Talking O. 103 

small goodman Shrinks in his a-c Princess, v. 444 

When asleep in this a-c . . Maud, I. vil. 4 

armed. 

a Her own fair head . . . Princess,Pro. 32 

Sleep must lie down a . . . Maud, I. i. 41 

wholly a, behind a rock . . Enid . 

horsemen waiting, wholly a . tr 

each of them is wholly a . . 11 . 
issuing a he found the host tr 

two stood a, and kept the door . Elaine 

armlet. 
a for the roundest arm on earth . Elaine 
a for an arm to which the Queen's 11 



. 906 
. 970 
• 992 
1256 
1240 



1177 
1220 



vi. 343 

. 258 
. 912 
- 9 2 4 
944, 1030 
■ 946 
1223 
1235 



266 
283 



armour. 
as he rode his a rung . . L. qfShaloi£ t in. 17 
mortal a that I wear . . . Sir Galahad 70 
forefathers' arms and a hung . Princess, Pro. 24 

Your very a hallow' d ... it v. 403 

When a clash'd or jingled 
who scour'd His master's a . . Enid 
will have his horse And a 
possess your horse And a 
three gay suits of a 
suits Of a on their horses 
heap'd The pieces of his a 
glimmer'd on his a in the room 
Five horses and their ds 
heart enough To bear his a . 
Bled underneath his a . 

armourer. 
riding further past an ds . . Enid 
the a turning all amazed 

armoury. 
fromJ&iovablsgoYgtoxLsarmouries Milton „ 6 

arms (weapons.) 
a or power of brain, or birth . . To tJie Queen 3 
show it at a joust of a . . . M. d Arthur 102 
broke a close with force and a . Ed. Morris 131 
forefathers' a and armour hung . Priucess,Pro. 24 
clash'd in a, By glimmering lanes ir v. 5 

piled a and rough accoutrements . n -52 

they clash'd their a ... 11 . 240 

armies and the noise Of a 11 . 336 

none to trust Since our a fail'd . tr . 417 

sinew-corded, apt at a . . . 11 . 524 

whose a Championed our cause . 11 vi. 45 

Roll of cannon and clash of a . Ode on Well. 116 
a On loan, or else for pledge . Enid . . 219 

a, a, a to fight my enemy? . tr . 282 

A ? truth ! I know not . . " . tr . 289 

thought to find A in your town. tr 418 

know Where I can light on a tr . 422 

heard me praise Your feats of a it 435 

true heart,' replied Geraint, 'but a ir 474 

A, indeed, but old And rusty . 11 . -477 
apt at a and big of bone . . tr . . 489 
rusted A Were on his princely person ti . . 543 
fight my way with gilded a . it . 870 

three goodly suits of a . . tr . 973 



. Enid . 
• tr 
ir 


1037 
1067 
1276 


ir . 
Elaine 


1335 
1360 
. 65 


IT 


- 394 


it 


• 459 
. 616 



laden with jingling a 
A horse and a for guerdon . 
a to guard his head and yours 
paid with horses and with a 
loosed the fastenings of his a 
grow In use of a and manhood 
while she watch'd their a far off 
a low thunder of a 
glittering in enamelled a 

arms (ensigns armorial.) 
painting on it fancied a . . Vivien . 324 

guess'd a hidden meaning in his a Elaine . 17 

arm's-lengtJi. 
costly fruit Out at a-l . . . (Enone . 134 

army. 
there was an army in the land . Princess, W. 463 
compassed by two armies . . tt v. 335 

preach our poor little a down . Maud, I. x. 38 
Charging an a, while . . . Lt. Brigade 30 
councils thinn'd, And armies waned Vivien . 423 

A mo. 
unfamiliar A, and the dome . . TJie Brook . 189 



D.ofF. Worn. 239 
D.ofF. Worn. 238 



A rnon. 
from Aroer On A unto Minneth 

A roer. 
from A On Arnon unto Minneth 

arose. 
a wind a And overhead 
a, and I releas'd The casement 
rain had fallen, the Poet a 
wind a and rush'd upon the South 
a Once more thro' all her height . 
sound a of hoof And chariot 
Star after star, a and fell 
on one side a The women up 
four sweet years a and fell 
at the last a the man 
could bear it no more, But a 
Nor ever a from below . 
not to die a listener, I a 
a, and raised Her mother too 
a The cry of children . 
with smiling face a 
a Eager to bring them down 
a the labourers' homes . 
footstool from before him, and a . 
thorpe and byre a in fire 

aroused. 
So sleeping, so a from sleep . 
a Lancelot, who rushing outward . 
A the black republic on his elms . 

arrange. 
A the board and brim the glass . In Mem. cvi. 16 
Dispute the claims, a the chances ToF. D.Maurice 31 

arranged. 
men and maids A a country dance Princess,Pro. 84 
A the favor, and assumed the Prince if iv. 579 

a Her garden, sow'd her name . Ayhner's F. 87 

arras (adj.) 
In Arthur's a hall at Camelot . Vivien . 99 

arras (s.) 
hung with a green and blue . 

array (s.) 
of men that in battle a . 

array 'd. 
with her own white hands A 
a herself therein 
Queen a me like the Sun 



(Enone 


96 


Two Voices 


403 


Poet's Song 


1 


Princess, \. 


96 


tt vi. 


143 


11 __ . 


358 


a vii. 


35 


tr 


107 


In Mem. xxi 


■ 3 


tr CXV1 


. 12 


Maud, I. iii. 


10 


i. II. ii. 


36 


TJie Brook . 


163 


Enid *. 


535 


ti 


1812 


Elaine 


55 1 


E?i. Arden . 


872 


Aylmer's F. 


147 


tt 


3 2 7 


TJie Victim 


3 


Day-Din. 


2 33 


Guinevere . 


105 


Ay liner's F. 


529 



. Pal. of Art. 6 
. Maud, I. v. : 
. Enid . 



array 171 g. 
morn by morn, a her sweet self 
arrival. 
will harangue The fresh ds . 
arrive. 
A at last the blessed goal 



■ J 7 
■ m • *39> 8 49 

. tr . 1549 

. Elaine . 902 

. Princess, ii. 82 
In Mem. hixxm. 41 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



arrived. poem. line. 

/i,and found the sun ofsweet content Tlie Brook . 168 



arriving. 
A all confused among the rest 

arrow. 

The viewless a's of his thoughts 
bitter a went aside, (rep.) 
damned a glanced aside, 
Within thy heart my a lies, . 
into the dark A's oflightnings. 
A random a from the brain. . 
Fly twanging headless a's . 
one would aim an a fair, 
into silver a's break 
Before an ever-fancied a, 
1 j jk'd a flight of fairy a's 

arrow-seed, 
a-s's of the field flower, . 



Princess, iv. 205 



The Poet 
Oruina 



To J. M. K. 
Two Voices 
Princess, ii. 



InMem. Ixxxvi. 25 

II c. 
. Enid . 
. Aylmer's F. 



Tlie Poet 



94 



19 



arrow-slain. 
loss of half his people a-s; . . Vivien . 415 

arrow^iuounded. 
your a-w fawn Came flying . . Princess, ii. 251 

arsenic. 
A, a, sure, would do it, . . Maud, II. v. 62 

art. 
discovery And newness of thine a Ode to Mem. 88 
knowledge of his a Held me . D. o/F. Worn. 9 

words, tho' cull'd with choicest a, ti . 285 

I and he, Brothers in A ; . . Gardener's D. 4 
will you climb the top of A . . 11 165 

liberal applications lie In A . . Day-Din. . 210 
in clubs, of (i, of politics . . Priucess,Pro.i6o 
in a's of government Elizabeth . " ii. 145 

a's of war The peasant Joan 11 . 146 

a's of grace Sappho ... 11 . 147 

inmost terms Of a and science : . n _ . 424 
A And Science, Caryatids . . 11 iv. 182 

owning but a little a . . InMem.xxxvW. 14 
From a, from nature, from the 

schools » xlviii. 1 

on mind and a, And labour . . 11 Ixxxvi. 22 

The graceful tact, the Christian a; 11 cix. 16 

all, as in some piece of a . . 11 exxvii. 6 

dear to Science, dear to A . . Idylls, Ded. 39 
knew the range of all their a' J, . Vivien . 23 

seem the Master of all A, . . 11 . 318 

Her a, her hand, her counsel . Aylmer's F. 151 
piece of inmost Horticultural a, Hcndecasyllabics 20 



Hetairai, curious in their a, 

Artemcsia. 
Carian A strong in war, 

Arthur. 
burnt His Epic, his King A . 
Kin.; A's table, man by man 
about their Lord, Kingyl 
' Ring A's sword, Excalibur 

.' panted hard 
tint - 1 who, with lance in rest 
my Lord A, whither shall I go? . 
sail with A under looming shores, 
Kin^ .1, like a modern gentleman 
cried ' A is come again : 
my lost A's loved remains, . 
My .!, whom I shall nnt see 
holy 1 leath ere A died . 

I found your shadows fair 
To show Sir A's deer . 

it, a knight of A's court 
some gay knignt in A's hall . 
the Whitsuntide before 
Cavall, King A 's hound 
cat in A's hall at Camelot 

I ride to A's court . 
rising up, he rode to A's court 
Of Modred, A's nephew 
A knight of A's court . 
knight of A's Table Round . 



Lucretius 



5^ 



Princess, ii. 67 



. T/te Epic 


28 


M. tt Arthur 3 


" 


5 


if 


103 


11 


176 


n 


222 


11 


227 


ti Ef. 


17 




22 


. hi Mem. ix. 


24 
3 


11 


17 


11 lxxix 


2 


11 lxxxviii. 6 


. TJie Brook 


*33 


. Enid . 


1 


ii • 


118 


11 


145 


11 


186 


" 


432 


it 


582 


11 


59' 


11 


595 


11 


1623 


" 


164 1 



POEM. LINE. 

will not go to A Then will A come Enid . 1663 

With A to Caerleon upon Usk . 11 . 1794 

Vivien stole from A 's court . . Vivien . 6 

A walking all alone, Vext . . 11 . -9 

leaving A ' s court he gain'd . . 11 . .46 

In A's arras hall at Camelot . n . -99 

rose and fled from A 's court . 11 . . 146 

complexities of A 's palace . . 11 . 583 

the royal rose In A s casement . n . . 590 

A, blameless King and stainless man ?' n . . 628 

jousts, Which A had ordain'd . Elaine . 32 

A, when none knew from whence 11 . .34 

A came, and labouring up the pass » .48 

A , holding then his court . . 11 . .75 

Has A spoken aught? 11 118 

A, my lord, A, the faultless King 11 . . 122 

I am yours Not A 's ir 136 

who eat in A's halls . . . 11 .184 

Known am I, and of A 's hall . 11 . . 188 

our good A broke The Pagan 11 279 

having been With A in the fight 287 

where he sat At A's right 11 551 

A to the banquet, dark in mood » 563 

'our true A, when he leams . n . . 584 

A's wars were render'd mystically 11 . . 797 

A 's palace toward the stream . 11 . 1172 

as A 's queen I move and rule . 11 . 1215 

some do hold our A cannot die . 11 . 1251 

A bad the meek Sir Percivale . 11 . 1257 

A spied the letter in her hand . 11 . 1263 

My lord liege A, and all ye 11 1282 

.4 an swer'd ' O my knight . . 11 . 1316 

A leading, slowly went The marshall'd 11 . 1321 

Then A spake among them . 11 1329 

A, who beheld his cloudy brows . 11 . 3344 

Alas for A 's greatest knight . . 11 . 1409 

a man Not after A's heart 11 1410 
in the Table Round Of A . . Guinevere . 19 

knight of A's noblest dealt in scorn 11. .41 

Which good King A founded . 11 . . 219 

the bard Sang A 's glorious wars . 11 . .284 

And that was A . . . 11 . . 293 

lead her to his lord, A . . . 11 . . 381 

The silk pavilions of King A . 11 . . 391 

think How sad it were for A . 11. . 492 

' Oh A 1 ' there her voice brake . 11 . . 601 

artist. 
hast thou done, great a Memory . Ode to Mem. 80 
A more ideal A he than all . Gardener's D. 25, 169 
golden moods Of sovereign a's . Princess, v. . 187 
an unknown a's orphan child . Sea Dreams 2 

Artist-like. 
A-l, Ever retiring thou dost gaze . Ode to Mem. 92 

Ascalon. 
was old Sir Ralph's at A : . . Princess, Pro. 26 

ascend. 
Take wings of fancy, and a . . In Mem. lxxv. 1 

ascending. 
with the dawn a lets the day . Enid . 

A tired, heavily slept till morn . En. Ardcn 

ascension. 
spheroid and azimuth, And right a Princess, vi. 

ash (tree). 
Young a'es pirouetted down . 
Delaying as the tender a delays 
hoary knoll of a and haw 

ashamed. 
believe him a to be seen? 
A am I that I should tell it thee 

asltbud. 
a's in the front of March.' 



1540 
181 



239 

. Am/>hion . 27 
. Princess, iv. 88 
. In Mem. xcix. 9 

. Maud, I. xiii. 25 
. Enid . . 577 



. Gardener's D. 28 

ashen-gray. 
seems But an a-g delight. . . Maud, I. vi. 22 

ashes. 
heap their a on the head 'lovethou thy land,' etc. 70 
will not let his a rest ! ' You might have won, etc. 28 



14 



CONCORDANCE TO 



from his a may be made 

dust and a all that is 

who knows ? We are a and dust 

A to a, dust to dust ; 

youth gone out Had left in a 

Slipt into a and was found no more Alymei^s F. 

And all I was. in a . , „ TWwnus 



ashy* 
quivering brine With a rams 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. xviii. 3 
xxxiv. 4 
Maud, I. i. . 32 
Ode 071 Well. 270 
Vivien, . 95 

6 



23 



ask. 



TJte Voyage 43 

Lilian . 3 

Z>. (j/T^. Wo7?z, 93 



77^ is^z'c 
TW Voices 
Princess, ii. 325 

» • „ - 33 2 
h . 111. 43 
ir . vi. 293 
" . „ 3 6 4 
ir . vii. 131 
» • . i33 
In Mei7i. xiv. 12 
Maud, I. xviii. 49 
ir xx. 17 
ir II. iii. 2 

87 

• *33 

• 197 
IS9 1 

• 103 

• 155 
. 158 

• 225 

• 232 

• 452 

• 536 
. 621 
. 191 

• 65O 
908 
I40 
144 
322 



E?iid 



Vivien . 



Elaine 



Guinevere 



a her if she love me 

a. thou not my name 

a me, why, tho' ill at ease ' You ask ?7ie why, etc. 1 

has a mint of reasons ; a . . The Epic . 33 

As what thou lackest , ~ 

Sheba came to a of Solomon," 

you should answer, we would a 

' O a me nothing,' I said 

a for him Of your great head 

A me no more (rep. ) 

would but a you to fulfil 3 r ourself 

I a you nothing, only if a dream 

a a thousand things of home 

a me how it came to pass 

one should a me whether 

I will not a thee why (rep.) . 

to a her, ' take me, sweet 

I charge you, a not but obey 

' Then will I a it of himself . 

will not a your meaning in it 

silent then And a no kiss 

a your boon, for boon I owe you 

wherefore a; And take this boon 

never a some other boon? . 

feels no heart to a another boon 

has tript a little ; a yourself. 

never could undo it ; a no more 

I a you, is it clamour' d 

for the diamond, a me not . 

a you not to see the shield . 

should a some goodly gift of him 

yield me sanctuary, nor a 

they spared To a it 

pray you check me if I a amiss 

came to<za favour of you.' . 

favour that I came to a 

what is it that you a ? . 

then to a her of my shares . 

A her to marry me by and by? 

asked. 
I a him, and he said 
once I a him of his early life 
I a him half-sardonically 
her we a of that and this 
when I a her ' how' 
mutual pardon a and given . 
a but space and fairplay 
again The 'wilt thou* a 
whatever is a her, answers . 
a If James were coming 
what the price he a 
to the dwarf, and a it of him 
after madness acted question a 
a her not a word, But went apart 
a this very boon, Now a again 
died Thrice than have a it once 
proof of trust — so often a in vain 
a of court and Table Round . 
would if a deny it . 
her strength, and a her of it . 
a; but not a word 
a That which I a the woman 
if a to her face, Might say no 

askew. 
all his conscience and one eye a (rep. 

asking. 
therefore at your a, yours . 



En. Ard. 

11 . 312 

ti . 424 

Sea Drea77is in 

The Window 91 



Dora . 
Ed. Morris 



142 

23 

59 

228 

11 iii. . 13 

ir v. . 44 

11 . 272 

InMe7it.Con. 55 

Maud, Li.. 4 

Tlie Brook . 105 

. 142 

, 199 

1661 



Pri7icess i. 



Enid 



II 


1728 


Vivien 


172 


11 


768 


ii 


769 


Elaine 


2bb 


En. Arden 


44 


Sea Dream. 


109 


ti 


IZ2 


11 


142 


The Winder 


v 96 


) Sea Dream 


f 176 


Enid . 


479 



TitJionus 



POEM. 

not so strange as my long a it . Vivien 
braved a riotous heart in a for it . Elaine 
Not a overmuch and taking less . En. A rden 
grant mine a with a smile 

asleep. 
smiling a, Slowly awaken'd 
I fall a at mom 
Falling a in a half-dream ! 
that dear soul hath fall'n a 
fall a with all one's friends 
when faith had fall'n a . 
When a in this arm chair ? 
come to her waking, find her a 
half a she made comparison . 
fell a again ; And dreamt herself . ii 
fell a, and Enid had no heart . n 
not seem as dead But fast a . . Elaine 

Asvwdeus. 
Abaddon and A caught at me 

Astasia. 
not for all A's cleverness 

aspect. 
pensive thought and a pale . 
More bounteous a's on me beam 

aspen. 
Willows whiten, a's quiver . 
here thine a shiver 



LINE. 

. 161 
• 358 
. 251 
. 16 



. Elcdnore . 84 
. May Queen ii. 50 
. Lotos-Es . 101 
. To. JS. . 34 
. Day-Din. . 216 
I71 Mem. cxxiii. 9 
. Maud, I. vii. 4 
11 II. ii. . 81 
. E7iid . . 651 

653 

1218 

"55 



. SIS. Stylites 169 
. Princess, ii. 323 



Margaret . 
Sir Galahad 



L. ofShalott,\. 10 
A Farewell 10 



aspen-tree. 
in the meadows tremulous a-t's . Elaine 
showers, And ever-tremulous a-t's 11 

asphodel. 
Violet, amaracus, and a . . CEnone 
weary limbs at last on beds of a . Lotos-E's. 

aspick. 
Showing the a's bite . . D. o/F. Worn. 160 



• 4°9 
- 523 



95 
170 



whisper'd 'A 'es' ears ' among the sedge Princess, ii. 98 

assail, 
a this gray preeminence of man ! . Princess, iii. 218 

assail'd. 
They that a, and they that held . Elaine 



assassin. 
earls, and caitiff knights, A's 



Enid 



■ 454 



36 



assay. 
A it on some one of the Table Round Vivie>i . .539 

Assaye. 
Against the myriads of A . . Ode on Well. 99 

assemble. 
plans And phantom hopes a . . Will Water. 30 

assembled. 
in to where they sat a . . . Vision of Sin 16 

assent. 
I gave a : Yet how to bind . . Princess, Con. 7 

assented. 
Enoch all at once a to it . . En. Arden 126 

assert, 
a None lordlier than themselves . Princess, ii. 127 
a's his claim In that dread sound . Ode on Well. 70 

assigned. 
purpose of God and the doom a 
quest A to her not worthy of it 



kiss the child That does the task a. 

association. 
A fresh a blow . 



. Mand,Ill.vi.5Q 

. Elaine . 821 

11 . , 825 

In Mem. c. iS 
assume. 

lose the child; a The woman . . Princess, ii. 136 

assumed. 
Arrang'd the favour and a the Prince Princess, iv. 584 
A from thence a half consent . ir vii. 67 

A that she had thank'd him . . Enid . 1496 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



IS 



assumption. poem. line. 

heart In its as up to heaven . . In Mem. lxii. 4 

assurance. 

A only breeds resolve.' . . . Two Voices 315 

assure. 

may now a you mine . . . Vivien . 399 

Assyrian. 

oil'd and curl'd A Bull . . . Maud, I. vi. 44 

Astolat (see Lord of A, Maid of A.) 

Ran to the castle of A . . . Elaine . 167 

Came at last, tho' late, to A . 11 . 615 

far away the maid in A . . . <i . . 741 

To A returning rode the three . 11 . . 901 

that day there was dole in A . 11 1130 

Astrceau. 
second-sight of some A age . . Princess, ii. 420 

astrology. 
brought to understand A sad a Maud, xviii. 36 

a-tadkin'. 
what a's doing a o" mea ? . . N. Farmer 45 

ate. 
let the horses graze, and a . . Enid . 1060 
Geraint A all the mowers' victual . n . 1064 

never a. with angrier appetite . 11 . 1082 

a wiih tumult in the naked hall . » . 1453 

• ever among ladies a in Hall . . Elaine . 255 
at/ilete. 
Until she be an a bold ' Clear-headed friend' etc. 21 
an a, strong to break or bind . Pal. of Art 153 

Atltos. 
Tomohrit, A, all things fair . . To E. L. . 5 

Atlantic. 
ihey were a whole A broad.' Princess, Con. 71 

atmosphere. 
ting thro' an evening a . . Elcdnore . 100 
love possess' d the a Miller's D. 91 

Cold in that a of Death . . . In Mem. xx. 14 

atom. 
Ifallbert'j,howthenshouldtheGods^7«rr<'/;>« . 114 
hing a and void, a and void . 11 . 254 

atomic. 
Being a not be dissoluble . . Lucretius . 115 

atom-stream. 
I saw the flaring a-s's . . Lucretius . 38 

atonement. 
shine So rich in a as this . . Maud, I. xix. 6 

attain. 
A the wise indifference of the wise A Dedication 8 

attain'd. 
have a Rest in a happy place . CEnone . 128 

attempt. 
Vivien should a the blameless King Vivien . 20 

attend. 

each ear was prick'd to a . Princess, vi. 263 

in his presence la . . . . JuMcm.cxxw. 2 

attendance. 

make her dance a . . . . Amphion . 62 

with no a, page or maid . . Enid. 1171 

attended. 
So she goes by him a . . L. of Burleigh 25 

attest. 
A their great commander's claim . Odeon Well. 148 

attic. 
round the a's rumbled . . . The Goose . 46 

attire. 
in her poor a was seen . . . BcggarMaid 10 
splendid in his acts and his a . Enid . . 620 

attired. 

women who a her head . . Enid . . 62 

Geraint to greet her thus a . . 11 . .772 



attribute. poem. line. 

crown'd with a's of woe . . In Mem. cxvii. i3 
all the gentle a's Of his lost child . Aylmer'sF. 730 

Aubrey. 
Ellen A, sleep, and dream of me . Audley Ct. 61 
Ellen A, love, and dream of me . 11 -72 

audibly. 
Half inwardly, half a she spoke . Enid . .109 

aitdience. 
at the palace craved A of Guinevere Elaine 1157 

Audley. 
picnic there At A Court.' 
A feast Humm'd like a hive . 

auger. 
hammer and axe, A and saw 

aught. 
I would not a of false 
Unfaith in a is want of faith in all . 

augur-hole. 
Boring a little a-h in fear 

augury. 
light upon auguries happier 1 

aunt. 

maiden A Took this fair day . Princess, Pro. 107 

the maiden A (A little sense of wrong 11 212 



. Audley Ct. 



En. Arden 174 



Princess, v. 
Vivien 



Godiva 



<- 



Boddicea . 45 



A showery glance upon her a 

A ureliau. 
the Palmyrene That fought A 

A usonian. 
stay'd the A king to hear 

austerely. 
took Small notice, or a . 

A ustralasiau. 
the long wash of A seas 

autJu>rity. 
A forgets a dying king . 
some one with a Be near her . 
All people said she had a 

autocrat. 
Aristocrat, democrat, a 

autumn (s.) 
A, in a bower Grape-thicken'd 
A brought an hour For Eustace . 
A, dropping fruits of power ; 
A, with a noise of rooks 
A, laying here and there A fiery 



Con. 33 

Princess, ii. 70 

Pal. of Art in 

Lucretius . 8 

The Brook 194 

M.d'Arthur 121 
Princess, vi. 219 

II 221 

Maud, I. x. 65 

Elcdnore . 35 
Gardeuer'sD. 202 
Princess, vi. 39 
InMemAxxxW.yi 
11 xcviii. 11 



a into a flash'd again . . . En. Arden 453 
with the travellers-joy In A . Aylmer's F. 154 
Wsmocksunshineofthcfadcdwoods 11 . 610 

after A past — if left to pass His a A Dedication 9 

autumn-fields. 
looking on the happy A-f . 



autumn-sheaf. 

Than of the garncr'd A-s 

avail (s.) 
I count it of no more a 

avail (verb. ) 
Let this a, just, dreadful 
branding summer suns a 

Avalon. 
dozing in the vale of A 

avarice. 
Down with ambition, a, pride 
evil tyrannies, all her pitiless a 
No madness of ambition, a . 

Ave. 
'A Mary' made she moan (rep.) Mariana in theS.g 
'A, A, A,' said, 'Adieu, adieu' . In Mem. lvi. is 



Princess, iv. 24 
Two Voices 114 
Enid . 1563 



StS.Stylites 
In Mem. ii. 



Pal of Art 107 



. Maud, I. > 
. Lucretius 



47 
80 
209 



i6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Peace ! there are those to a us . Princess, iv. 480 
will a this insult, noble Queen . Enid . . 215 

avenged. 
crime Of sense a by sense 



Vision of Sin 214 



avenging. 

learn his name, A this great insult Enid 



425 



Ode on Well. 79 
The Daisy . 48 
En. Arden . 355 

I71 Mem. xv. 9 
11 lxxxiv. 102 



avenue. 
ever-echoing ds of song 
city glitter' d, Thro' cypress ds 
at the far end of an a . 

aver, 
a That all thy motions 
clasping brother-hands, a 

A verill. 

A, A Sit the Rectory Thrice over . Aylmer* s F. 37 

might not A, had he will'd it so . it . 46 

1 Some other race of A V . 11 • 54 
his brother, living oft With A 

A was a decad and a half His elder it . 82 

He wasted hours with A . . 11 . 109 
oft accompanied By A . 
let that handsome fellow A walk 

his heart at A 's ear: Whom A solaced n . 342 

A seeing How low his brother's mood tr . 403 

Forbad her first the house of A . 11 . 502 

A wrote And bad him with good heart 11 . 543 

A went and gazed upon his death ti . 599 

Long o'er his bent brows linger'd A 11 . 625 



averring: 
A it was clear against all rules 



averse. 
with sick and scornful looks a 



Princess, i. . 176 



D.ofF. W0711. 101 
M. d Arthur 259 



A vilion. 
To the island- valley of A 

await. 
strength ds Completion ' Love tliou thy land* etc. 57 



. Ttuo Voices 350 
. Princess, vii. 201 
. JnMent.Con. 66 
. Ode on Well. 198 

. E?zid . . 540 



draught of Lethe might a 
for all the vales A thee . 
happier hours A them . 
Yea, let all good things a 

awaiting. 

Beheld her first in field, a him 

awake (adj.) 
All night I lie a 
lying broad a I thought of you 
deep-asleep he seem'd, yet all a 
might kiss those eyes a t 
1 have walked a with Truth . 
rose was a all night for your sake 
lilies and roses were all a 
watch'd a A cypress 
shook his drowsy squire a 
grasping her To get her well a 
Held her a : or if she slept 

awake (verb.) 
bee Is lily-cradled : I alone a 
a her with the gleam 

awaked. 
myself have a, as it seems . Maud, III. vi. 56 

awakened. 
Slowly a, grow so full and deep . Elednore . 85 

award. 

would seem to a it thine . . CEnone . 71 

aware. 

was a of three tall knights . . Enid . . 905 

she by tact of love was well a . Elaine . 978 

a lingering — ere she was a . . En. Arden 267 

awe. 
hold a fretful realm in a . . . Locksley H. 129 
springs of life, the depths of a . Two Voices 140 
beat thick with passion and with a. Princess, iii. 174 



May Queen, ii 


■ 5° 


?i ill 
. Eotos-E's. . 


. 29 


. Day-Dm. . 
. Maud, I. xix 


240 
4 


II XXll 


49 


11 II 
. The Daisy 
. Enid. 


51 
81 

I2S 


. Guinevere . 


677 

75 


. CEnone 


2Q 


. Elaine 


6 



feel once more, in placid a 
all in a For twenty strokes 
kiss'd her feet For loyal a 



POEM. LINE. 

. In Mem. cxxi. 5 

. Elaine . 715 

ir 1167 



aweary. 
She said * I am a (rep. ) . . . Mariana . 11 
I am all a of my life . . . CEnone . 32 

awed, 
a and promise-bounden she forbore En. Arden 870 
Still It a me.' .... Sea Dreams 200 

And my dream a me : — . . . ir 239 

awe-stricken. 
hold A-s breath, at a work divine . Maud, I. x. 17 

awful. 
all she is and does is a . . . Princess, i. 139 

aw?iing. 
ample ds gay Betwixt the pillars . Priticess, ii. 11 

awoke. 

with these the king a Day-Dm. . 149 

a in the heart of the child . . Maud, I. xix. 48 

a him, and by great mischance . Enid. . 112 

Refused her to him, then his prides 11 . . 448 

strongly striking out her limbs a . if 1230 

flickering in my eyes A me/ . . SeaDreams 101 



axe. 
ere the falling a did part 
lift His a to slay my kin 
Nor wielded a disjoint . 
The woodmen with their ds . 
The glittering a was broken . 
by a and eagle sat . 
hammer and a, Auger and saw 

axelike. 
That a edge unturnable . 



. Margaret . 38 

. Talking O. 236 

it 262 

. Princess, vi. 28 

» 35 

"3 

173 



11 vu. 

. En. Arden 



Princess, ii. 18 



Aylmer. 

So Lawrence A, seated on a style The Brook . 197 

Sir A A that almighty man . . Aylmer* s F. 13 

A followed A at the Hall . . 11 .36 

like an A in his Aylmerism if . 123 

Sir A. half forgot his lazy smile . if . 197 

Sir A past And neither loved . ir . 249 

did Sir A know The great pock-pitten tr . 256 

had Sir A heard — Nay but he must 11 . 261 

did Sir A (deferentially if . 266 

Sir A A slowly stiffening spoke . u . 273 

parted, and Sir A A watched . 11 . 277 

Things in an A deem'd impossible 11 . 305 

Sir A reddening from the storm within n . 322 

To shame these mouldy A's. . ir . 396 

when this A came of age — . . it . 407 

Sir A watch'd them all . it . 552 

with her the race of A, past 11 . 577 

Aylmer- A verill. 

There was an A- A marriage once Aylmer* $ F. 49 

Aylmerism. 

like an Aylmer in his A . . Ay Inzer's F. 123 

azimuth. 

sine and arc, spheroid and a . Princess, vi. 239 

azure. 

Her eyes a bashful a T/ie Brook 
stared On eyes a bashful a . " 

A, an Eagle rising or . . . Vivien 



7i 

206 



E 

Baal. 
honour thy brute B Aylmer 's F. 644 

came a Lord in no wise like to B . 11 . 647 

babble (s.) 
h of the stream Fell . . MarianaintJieS. 51 
night goes In b and revel and wine Maud, I. xxii. 28 
But babble, merely for b . . it II. v. 46 
The babes, their b, Annie . . En. Arden . 607 

babble (verb.) 
Howe'er you b, great deeds cannot Princess, iii. 237 



TEAWYSON'S WORK'S. 



17 



POEM. L 

In Mem. c. . 
Maud, II. v. 
The Brook . 

Enid . 
Vivien 



Dora . .132 
Princess, iv. 408 



Pal. of Art 
Princess, ii. 



brook shall b down the piain . 

b, merely for babble 

I b on the pebbles . 

scoff and jeer and b of him . 

you dream they b of you 

babbled. 
b for the golden seal 
b for you, as babies for the moon 
b ' Uncle ' on my knee . . In Mem. lxxxiii. 1 3 
moving homeward b to his men . Enid . 121 1 

While thus they b of the King . Elaine 1253 

babbler. 
garrulously given, A b in the land. Talking Oak 24 
like many another b, hurt . . Guinevere . 352 

babbling. 
runlets b down the glen . Mariana in the S. 44 

his wheat-suburb, b as he went . T/te Brook. 123 

babe. 

Sat smiling, b in arm 

maiden b, a double April old 

come to his b in the nest 

lis to be beat, nor petty b's 

my b, my blossom, ah my child 

My 6, my sweet Aglaia 

With Psyche's *, was Ida watching 

With Psyche's b in arm 

with the b yet in her arms 

b that by us, Half-lapt in glowing 

burst The laces toward her b 

soft b in his hard-mailed hands 

built upon the b restored 

! her b, and make her boast 

youth and b and hoary hairs 

kills her b for a burial fee 

red man's b Leap, beyond the sea 

poison our b's, poor 

an as blood of b's 

his wife And two fair b's 

seven months' b had been a truer gift 

With his lirst b's first cry 

a blessing on his wife and b's 

be comforted, Look to the b's 

give his b's a belter bringing up 

his b's were running 
gilded dragon, also, for the b's 
The b's, their babble, Annie 
lived and loved him, and his b's 
rosy, with his b across his knees 
a ring To tempt the b 
glancing often toward her b . 
the b Hers, yet not his . 
shall see him, My b in bliss , 
The b shall lead the lion 
the b \ 1 1 be fondled 

One b wis theirs, a Margaret 
the b. Their Margaret cradled near 
a leg for a b of a week I ' 
ight for his life 



>i . 117 

11 . 133 

11 . 191 

" vii. 60 

In Mem. ,xx.\Lx. 26 

" lxviii. 10 

Maud, I. i. 45 

11 xvii. 19 

11 II. v. 63 

Vivien . 194 

11 . . 557 

" ■ . 5 6> 

En. Ardcn . 85 



• 1 . 219 

" . 298 

" • 3°3 

• 536 
11 . 607 

» . 686 

" ■ 747 

11 . 752 

" • 755 

'» . 760 

. 899 
Aylmer's F. 648 
685 
3 

11 .56 

Grandmottter n 

64 



Sea Dreams 



little Us about thy knee ' Lady, let the rolling,' etc, 6 



Maud, II. i. 13 



Princess, iv. 



babe-faced. 

He came with the b fiord • 

Babel. 
let be Their canccll'd B's 
1 new-world B 

baby (s.) 

in her bosom bore the b Sleep . Gardener 's D .263 

ruthless as a b with a worm . Walk, to the M. 98 

i. nil Like tumbled fruit Princess, Pro. 83 

>u, as/vi/'/cy forthemoon 11 iv. . 408 

The b new to earth and sky . . In Mem., xliv. 1 

lightly rocking b's cradle . . En. Arden . 194 

from her b's forehead dipt . . 11 . 234 

Her b's death, her growing poverty 11 . 706 

ilc b say (rep.) . . Sea Dreams 389 

knew them all as babies . . Grandmother 88 

baly-iyrm. 
gamboll'd on the greens A b-g 



Talking 0. 78 



babyism. POEM. LINE. 

b's, and dear diminutives . . Ay Inter's F. 539 

Babylon. 
B be cast into the sea . . . Sea Dreams 28 

Babylonian. 
foundress of the B wall . . Princess, ii. 66 

baby-oak. 
magnetise The b-o within 

baby-rose. 
dimple The b-r"s in her cheeks 

baby-sole. 
tender pink five-beaded b-s's 

Bacchus. 
mailed B leapt into my arms 

back (s.) 
undress'd goatskin on my b . 
How she mouths behind my b 
my father's clamour at our b's 
Her /' against a pillar . 
daily burden for the b . 
b tum'd, and bow'd above his work 
the brutes of mountain b 
long b's of the bushless downs 
rascal in the motions of his b 



Talking O. 256 

Lilian . 17 

Aylmer'sF. 186 

D. ofF. Worn. 151 

StS.Stylites 114 
Vision of Sin no 
Princess, i. . 104 
" iii. . 164 
/// Mem. xxv. 4 
Enid . . 267 
Vivien . 426 

Elaine 399, 785 
Sea Dreams 163 



backbiter. 
Face-flatterers and b's are the same Vivien 

bad adj.) 
fear to slide from b to worse . 
base and bl what comfort? 
My dreams are b 
here beneath it is all as b 
She wur a b un, shea 



bad (pret. of bid. 
do the thing I b thee 
b you guard the sacred coasts 
b the host Call in what men 
Prince b him a loud good-night 
Nor waved his hand, Nor b farewell 
b a thousand farewells to me . 
coldly went nor b me one 
Arthur /' the meek Sir Percivale 
left her and I b her no farewell 
b him with good heart sustain 

bade (pret. of bid. 
I made a feast : I b him come 
utter' d it, And b adieu for ever 
/' him cry, with sound of trumpet 
Thro' which he b her lead 
gown he b me clothe myself . 

Badon. 
yet once more on B hill . 
on the mount Of B 

baffling. 
Then b, a long course of them 
blown by b winds . 

bag. 
not dip His hand into the b . 
With b and sack and basket . 

Bagdat. 
By B's shrines of fretted gold 
domes aloof In inmost B 



673 

Tivo Voices 231 

Princess, v. 75 

Maud, I. i. 73 

.1 II. v. 14 

N. Farmer 22 



M.d Arthur 81 
Ode on Well. 172 
1134 
1210 



Enid . 
Elaine 



11 . 1051 

11 . 1051 

• ' . 1257 

" . 1296 

Aylmer'sF. 544 

The Sisters 1 3 
07'e and Duty 8t 
Godiva . 36 
Enid . . 878 
" . 1550 



Elaine . 280 
" ■ . 303 

En. Arden 542 
11 629 

Golden Year 71 
En. Arden 63 

Arabian K's. 7 
11 128 



bailiff. 
his b brought A Chartist pike 
how he sent the /' to the farm 
b swore that he was mad 
met the b at the Golden Fleece 
found the b riding by the farm 

bairn. 
Sec your b's before you go ! . 

bait. 

the b's Of gold and beauty 
Christ the b to trap bis dupe . 



Walk, to the M. 62 

. The Brook 141 

11 143 

•• 146 

" "53 

. En. Arden 871 

. Aylmer'sF. 486 
. Sea Dreamt 187 
B 



iS 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

StS. Stylites 161 



. Princess, ii. 52 
if iii. 149 



bake. 
whose brain the sunshine b's 

Bala. 
south-west that blowing B lake . Enid . 1777 

balance (equipoise.) 
As the wind-hover hangs in b . . Alymer'sF. 321 

balance (verb.) 
would cast and b at a desk . . Audley Ct. 43 
souls that b joy and pain . SirL. andQ. G. 1 

balanced. 

Your fortunes, justlier b . 
Well, she b this a little . 

balcony. 
Under tower and b . L. ofShalott, iv. 37 

lean'd upon the b . . . Mariana in the S. 88 

baldness. 

wag their £ up and down . , Princess, v. 18 

baldric, 
from his bla^on'd £ slung . L. ofShalott, iii. 15 

bale. 
dropping down with costly b's . Locksley H. i-z-z 
tho' they brought but merchants' b's In Mem. xiii. 19 

balk'd. 
with a worm I b his fame . . D.o/F. Worn. 155 

ball. 

No compound of this earthly b . Two Voices . 35 

Is to be the b of time . . . Vision of Sin 105 

whereon the gilded b Danced . Princess, Pro. 63 

Flung b, flew kite, and raced . lr ii. 230 

tost a b Above the fountain-jets . ir 436 

Quoit, tennis, b — no games?. . » iii. 199 

him who grasps a golden b . .In Mem. ex. 3 

The day comes, a dull red b . Maud, II. iv. 65 

like a b The russet-bearded head . Enid . 1576 

tost his b and flown his kite . Aylmer's F. 84 

ballad. 
From time to time, some b . Princess, Pro. 234 

somethingin them's which they sang it Con. 14 
flungA<£ to the brightening moon In Mf em. lxxxvui. 28 
A passionate b gallant and gay . Maud, I. v. 4 
To the b that she sings tr II. iv. 43 

carolling as he went A true-love b Elai?ie . 701 

ballad-burthen. 
Like b-b music, kept . . . The Daisy . 77 

balm. 
steep our brows in slumber's holy b Lotos-E's . 66 
desires, like fitful blasts of b . . Gardener's D. 67 
spikenard, and<£, and frankincense St, S Stylites 208 
caress The ringlet's waving /' . Talking O. 178 
Beat balm upon our eyelids . . Princess, iii. 107 

balm-cricket. 
The b-c carols clear . . . A Dirge . 47 

balm-dew, 

drop B-d's to bathe thy feet ! . Talking O. 268 

balmier. 

kisses b than half-opening buds . Tiihonus . 59 
i> and nobler from her bath of storm Lucretius . 175 

Baltic. 
side of the Black and the B deep . Maud, III. vi. 51 
shaker of the B and the Nile . Ode on Well. 137 

baluster. 

leaning there on those b's . . Princess, iii. 103 

balustrade. 
Ran up with golden b . . . Arabian N's. 118 

band (s. a tie.) 
single b of gold about her hair . Princess, v. 502 
No spirit ever brake the b . . InMem. xcii. 2 
A b of pain across my brow . . The Letters 6 
bound her in his rosy b . . . Coquette, i. 6 

band (a company.) 
held debate,, a b Of youthful friends In Mem. lxxxvi. 21 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud,\\\.v\. 10 
Enid . 1402 



240 



Vision of Sin 106 



. Enid . 




. 921 


ti 




1008 


11 




1042 

1643 
1666 


. Ay Inters 


F 


597 



522 



The little life of b and brier 



in a dream from a b of the blest 
we will have him of our b 

bandage. 
raised the blinding b from his eyes Princess, i. 

bandied. 
B by the hands of fools 

bandit. 
I saw three b's by the rock . 
thro' the bulky b's corselet . 
now so long By b's groom'd . 
half a b in my lawless hour . 
the b scatter'd in the field 
redden'd with no b's blood . 

bandit-hau ?i ted. 
past The marches, and by b-h holds Enid . 

bane. 
courtesies of household life Became 

her b ..... Gtiinevere . 

mockery of my people, and their b 11 

banged. 
palace b, and buzz'd and clackt . Day-Dvi. . 146 
iron-clanging anvil b With hammers Princess, v. 494 

bank. 
cool soft turfupon the b . . . Arabian N's. 96 
wave-worn horns of the echoing b . Dying Swan 39 
From the b and from the river L. of Shalott, iii. 33 
broad stream in his Us complaining 11 iv. 3 

Shadow forth the b's at will . . Eleanore . no 
f * You might have 
\ won,' etc. . 30 
group'd In the hollow b . 
shadowing bluff that made the Us 
Behind a purple-frosty b 
Full to the Us, close on the . 
With many a curve my Us I fret 
Parts from a b of snow . 
happily down on a b of grass . 

banner. 
droops the b on the tower 
hedge broke in, the b blew 
the maiden b of our rights 
undulated The b . ■, . 
March with b and bugle and fife 
to the b of battle unrolled ! 
With b and with music . 

banquet. 

baron at the b sleeps 
with this our b's rang 
b in the distant woods . . In 
flowers or leaves To deck the b 
Spice his fair b, with the dust 
made him leave The b . 
Arthur to the b, dark in mood 
knights at b twice or thrice 
against the floor Beneath the b 
from a binn reserved For Us . 
distant blaze of those dull Us . 

banquet-hall. 
Into the fair Peleian b-h . . CEnone . 221 

banter (s.) 
he spoke Part b, part affection Princess, Pro. 166 
hated b, wished for something real ir Con. 18 

banter (verb.) 
did Eustace b me . . . Gardener's D. 164 

banter' d. 
I b him, and swore They said 
we b little Lilia first 



. Princess, iv 


173 


. In Mem. ci 


. 22 


ir cv 




. Maud, I. xviii. 6 


. The Brook . 


43 


. Enid . 


735 


n 


*Z$6 


. Day-Dm. . 


33 


11 


141 


. Princess, iv. 


482 


11 v. 


244 


. Maud, I. v. 


10 


nlll.vi. 


42 


. Ode on Well. 81 


. Day~Dm. . 


57 


. Princess, i. 


131 


Mem. lxxxviil 


■ 3 2 


11 cvi 


6 


Maud, I. xviii 


56 


. Elaine 


561 


w 


563 


11 


732 


II . ■ / S3 

Ay Inzer's F. 406 


M 


4S9 



. Golden Year 8 
Princess, Con. 12 

bantling. 
let the b scald at home . . . Princess, v. 448 
Lo their precious Roman b . . Boadicea . 31 

bar (obstruction^ 
lock'd in with Us of sand . . Pal. of Art 249 

looking thro' his prison Us? . . Margaret . 35 



TEX.VYSON'S WORKS. 



19 



stream'd thro' many a golden b 
spirit beats her mortal b's 
squeezed himself betwixt the b's 

, his birth's invidious b . 
The b of Michael Angelo 
Unlov'd, by many a sandy b . 
I linger by my shingly b's 
Low breezes fann'd the belfy b's 
yet had laid No b between them 
nor conscious of a b Between them 



POEM. LINE. 

. Day- Dm. . 179 
. Sir Galahad 46 
Princess, Pro. 112 
. InMem. Ix'n'i. 5 
11 lxxxvi. 40 
11 c. 9 

. The Brook 180 
. The Letters 43 
. Aylmer's F. 118 
. ' » 134 



bar (tribunal.) 
himself The prisoner at the b . . Sea Dreams 172 

bar (body of barristers. ) 
year or two before Call'd to the b . Aylmer's F. 59 

bar (division of music.) 
a random b of Bonny Doon . . The Brook 82 

bar (verb.) 
b The secret bridal chambers . Gardener' s D . 243 
block, and b Your heart with system Princess, iv. 442 

barbarian. 
gray b lower than the Christian child Locksley H. 174 
such wild b's ? Girls 1 . . Princess, iii. 26 

B's, grosser than your native bears 11 iv. 516 

barbarous. 
These women were too b 

bard, 
b has honour* d beech or lime 

knew the starry heavens . 
her b, her silver star of eve . 
many a b, without offence 
le, a b; of whom 

rthur*s glorious wars 
O foolish b, is your lot so hard 

bare (adj.) 
plain was grassy, wild and b . 
>re whom ever fie b 
ht Laid b . 
walks were stript as /' as brooms 
strip a hundred hollows /' of Spring 

, might it last . . In.Vem.xYn. 

breathing £ The round of space . n Ixxxv. 

altar cold and b . . The Letters 

"' their .res b . . Lt. Brigade 

1 lie sun . . . Enid . . 322 

love and reverence left them bare? Aylmer's F. 735 

bare (pret. of bear.) 
■ ■■' on the ridge of spears . Princess, v. 478 
b Straight to the doors ... 11 vi. 32S 

f virtue out of earth InMem.lxxxL 9 



Princess, ii. 


278 


Talking O. . 
Vivien 


291 
25 


Elaine 


803 
212 


Guinevere . 


27S 


Spiteful Let 


283 

5 



Dying Swan 1 
Pal. of Art . 222 
D.ofF. Worn. 159 
Princess, Pro. 182 
49 
6 
4 
4 
"7 



upon him b the bandit three . 
dreaded most, b down 

the mowers 
main violence to the board 
guilty love lie b the Queen . 

ive he b his lord 

all together down upon him B 

came the hermit out and b him in 

in her arms She b me . 

ures took and b him off. 

I ever 1 b was dead 



. Enid . . 933 

11 . 1005 

105 1 

1502 

Elaine . 245 

„ . . 246 

11 . . 481 

11 . . 518 

n . 1401 

. Guinevere . 108 

. Grandmother 59 

bare (to lay open.) 

Falsehood shall b her plaited brow j 'Clear-headed 

( friend, etc. 11 
I the eternal Heavens again . . In Mem. exxi. 4 

bared (verb.) 

tho' it to view . . In Mem, xci. 9 

column of his throat Enid . . 74 

t her forehead to the blistering sun n . 1364 

-■■pared, the victim b . . The Victim 70 

barefooted. 
i;iie the beggar maid . . Beggar Maid 3 

barerrinniii;. 
the b-g skeleton of death I . ' . Vivien . 696 



. Princess, i. 


• 73 


. The Brook 


. 156 


L. qfShalott, 


i. 20 


. M.d'Arthu 


'•iQS 


11 


204 


11 


239 


11 


2O5 


. Elaine 


1116 


n 


"35 


" 


1234 


t' 


1238 


it 


1382 



bare-Jieatied. poem. line. 

Some cowled, and some b-h . . Princess, vi. 6i 

bareness. 
make old b picturesque . . In Mem. exxvii. 19 

bargain. 
May rue the b made 
closed a b, hand in hand 

barge. 
Slide the heavy b's trailed 
there hove a dusky b 
' in the b, And to the b they came 
answer' d Arthur from the b . 
b with oar and sail Moved . 
a b Be ready on the river 
that stream whereon the b . 
slowly past the b . 
the b, On to the palace-doorway 
b that brought her moving down 

barge-laden. 
creeps on, B-l, to three arches . Gardener 's D. 43 

bark (vessel.) 
a b that, blowing forward, bore M. d' Arthur, Ep. 21 
I find a magic b . Sir Galahad 38 

sit within a hclmless b . . .In Mem. iv. 3 
unhappy b That strikes by night . 11 xvi. 12 

spare thee, sacred b 11 xvii. 14 

/' had plunder' d twenty nameless isles Vivien . 409 
Down on a b, and overbears the b Elaine . 484 

lading and unlading the tall b's . En. Arden . 817 
thisfrail^of ours, when sorely tried Aylmer'sF, 715 
swiftly stream'd ye by the b ! . Tlie Voyage 50 

bark (of a tree. ) 
silver-green with gnarled b . . Mariana . 42 
Could slip its b and walk . . Talking O. 188 

bark (verb. ) 
B an answer, Britain's raven ! (rep.) Boiidicea . 13 

barking, 
b for the thrones of kings . . Ode on Well. 121 

barley. 
Long fields of b and of rye . 
In among the bearded b 
raked in golden b . 



. L.ofShalott,\. 2 

11 . 29 

. Will Water. 128 

barley-sheaves. 
rode between the b-s . . . E.ofShalott,m. 2 



Bitter b, waning fast ! 



barmaid. 



Vision of Sin 67 



N. Farmer 14 



Day-Dm. 

ii 
Princess, ii. 



57 
'55 

222 



464 



barn (bairn.) 
Bessy Marris's b (rep. ) 

baron. 
Each b at the banquet sleeps 
b's swore, with many words . 
gaunt old B with his beetle brow 
bush-bcarded B's heaved and blew 
Heard from the B that, ten years Elaine 
Count, b — whom he smote, he over- 
threw 11 

baronet. 
No little lily-handed B he . 
hoar hair of the B bristle up 

B yet had laid No bar . 

barred. 
All b with long white cloud . 
Every door is b with gold 
door shut, and window b 
But now fast b 
entering // her door 
home-circle of the poor Theyi her 

barren. 
it is wild and /'.... Amihimi . 2 
The soil, left /', scarce had grown In Mem., Iii. 7 

barren-beaten. 
left the b-b thoroughfare . . Ela:r.e . 161 



Princess 


( ':■>: 


. 84 


Aylmcr 1 
11 


p. 


42 
'17 


Pal. of Art 


83 


Locksley 


11. 


100 


Godiva 




41 


Princess, 


V. 


3S7 


Elaine 




15 



Aylmer's P. 505 



20 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. cxxvi. 8 



Princess, v. . 475 
In Mem.cxxn. 14 
Elaine . 499 

Princess, Con. 66 



barricade. 
pile her b's with dead . 

barrier, 
trumpet blared At the b 
burst All b's in her onward race 
Back to the b; then the heralds 

barring out. 
graver than a schoolboys' b o 

barrow. 

gray down With Danish b's . . En, Arden . 7 

Pass from the Danish b overhead 11 . 439 

grassy b's of the happier dead . Tithonus . 71 

barter. 
not being bred To b 

base (adj.) 
him that uttered nothing b . 
O b and bad ! what comfort? 
is he not too b? 
myself so languid and b 
therefore splenetic, personal, b 
know I whether I be very b 
to keep down the b in man . 
Ungenerous, dishonourable, b 
nothing that she meets with b 



En. Arden . 249 



To the Queen 
Princess, v. 
Maud, I. iv. 



base (s.) 
Upon the hidden b's of the hills' . 
hum About the column's b . 
in dense cloud from b to cope 
the b's lost In laurel 
has a solid b of temperament 
roots of earth and b of all 
move the stony b's of the world . 
breaks the Pharos from his b 
great the crush was, and each b . 
drown The b's of my life in tears . 
at the b with slanting storm 
gathering at the b Re-makes itself 
The broken b of a black tower 
sees itself from thatch to b . 

based, 
b His feet on juts of slippery crag M.d' Arthur 18 

basement. 

brought His creatures to the b 



» x. 33 

Enid . . 468 
Guinevere . 476 
Aylmer's F. 292 
On a Mo u mer 4 

M.d* A rt/uir 106 

StS.Stylites 38 

Two Voices. 186 

Princess, i. . 227 

11 iv. 235 

n v. 436 

ti vi. 42 

11 . 319 

" :..333 

In Mem. xlviii. 16 
Vivien . 485 

Guinevere . 603 
Aylmer's F. 511 
Requiescat . 3 



baseness. 
knows a b In his blood . 
equal b lived in sleeker times 
no b we would hide ? 
finds the b of her lot 
To leave an equal b 

basest. 
Altho' I be the b of mankind 
The b, far into that council-hall 

bashfirfness. 
His b and tenderness at war . 



Guinevere . 103 

Two Voices . 301 

Princess, v. 375 

In Mem. 1. . 3 

11 lix. 6 

Vivien . 679 



. St S. Stylites 1 
. Lucretius . 171 

. En. Arden . 288 

basts. 

All but the b of the soul l Love thou thy land? etc. 44 

bask. 
to b in a summer sky . . . Wages . 9 

basked, 
b and batten'd in the woods . . InMein.xxxv. 24 

basket. 

Francis, with a b on his arm. . Audlcy Ct. . 5 

set down His b, and dismounting . Enid . 1059 

Clung but to crate and b . . Vivien . 475 

holiday With bag and sack and b . En. Arden . 63 

basking. 
city Of little Monaco, b, glow'd . The Daisy . 8 

Bassa. 
by the shore Of Duglas : that on B Elaine . 290 

bassoon. 
liquid treble of that b . . . Princess, ii. 404 
heard The flute, violin, b . . Maud, I. xxii. 14 



bastion. 
looming -b fringed with fire . 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. xv. 20 



bastion' d. 
from the b walls Like threaded spiders Princess, i. 106 

bat. 
After the flitting of the b's . 
laid up like winter b's . 
b's wheel'd, and owls whoop'd 
b's went round in fragrant skies 
the black b, night, has flown 

bath. 
the b's Of all the western stars 
dipt in b's of hissing tears 
a faded beauty of the B's 
nobler from her b of storm . 

bathe. 
Balm-dews to b thy feet ! 
Soft lustre b's the range of urns 
she b's the Saviour's feet 
Coldly thy rosy shadows b me 

bathed. 
lying b In the green gleam . 
b your feet before her own . 

battened. 
bask'd and b in the woods 

battenest. 
b by the greasy gleam . 

batter, 
b at the dovecote-doors . 

battered. 
\ hoofs . 



Mariana . 17 
Princess, iv. 126 
it Con. no 
In Mem. xciv. 9 
Maud, I. xxii. 2 



Ulysses . 60 
In Mem. cxvii. 23 
Aylmer's F. 27 
Lucretius . 175 

Talking O. 268 
Day-Em. . 29 
In Mem. xxxii. n 
TitJionus . 66 



Princess, i. . 92 
VivieJi . 133 

hi Mem. xxxv. 24 

Will Water. 221 

Princess, iv. 151 



. D. o/F. Worn. 2t 
. Princess, v. 327 



flints b with clanging 

He b at the doors . 

Cyril, b as he was, Trail'd himself 11 vi. 138 

b with the shocks of doom . . hiMem. cxvii. 24 

battering 
B the gates of heaven . 



. StS.Stylites 7 



Oriana 


IS 


11 . 51 
M. d 'Arthur i 


Ulysses 
Tivo Voices 


16 

126 


Princess, iv. 


555 


11 


557 


ti 


57 2 


II v. 

11 

11 vi. 


154 
469 
208 


Maud, I. i. . 
11 Ill.vi. 


48 
29 



battery-smoke. 
Plunged in the b-s . . . Lt. Brigade 

battle (s.) 
heard the steeds to b going . 
b deepen'd in its place . 
the noise of b roll'd 
drunk delight of b with my peers . 
distant b fiash'd and rung 
beat to b where he stands 
gives the b to his hands 
prove Your knight and fight your b 
Breathing and sounding beauteous b 
doing b with forgotten ghosts 
have fought Your b 
War with a thousand b's 
rumour of b grew .... 
Far into the North, and b, . 
to the banner of b unroll' d ! . 
talk of b's loud and vain 
Some ship of b slowly creep . To 
ride with him to b and stand by . 
' Do b for it then' 
great b fighting for the king . 
wont to hear His voice in b . 
In b, fighting for the blameless King 
after furious b turfs the slain 
In b with the love he bare 
four wild b's by the shore 
hast been in b by my side 
In open b or the til ting-field (rep.) Guinevere 
In twelve great b's ruining 
that great b in the west 
ere he goes to the great B ? 
boyish histories Of b, bold adventure Aylmer's F. 

battle (verb.) 
For them I b till the end, . . Sir Galahad 15 



Ode on Well. 247 
F. D. Maurice 26 



Enid 



Vivien 
Elaine 



• 94 

• 561 

■ 59 6 
1024 
1818 

■ 5°7 
. 246 
. 289 

1349 
. 328 
. 429 
- 567 
645 



battle-axe. 
Bloodily, bloodily fall the b-a 



Boddicea . 56 



TEXNYSOM'S WORK'S. 



21 



lattle-balt. poem. _ line. 

i-b sang from the three-decker . Maud, I. i. 50 

battle-club. 

i-c's From the isles of palm : . Princess,Pro. 21 

battled (adj.) 
glow Beneath the £ tower . . D.qfF. Worn. 220 

ba I tied (verb.) 
£ for the True, the Just, . . In Mem. lv. 18 

battle-field. 
Be shot for sixpence in a b-f, . A udley Ct. . 40 

battlc-Jlag. 
and the b-f's were furl'd . . Lockslcy H. 127 

battle-song. 
hear again The chivalrous b-s . Maud, I. x. 54 

battle-thunder. 
thine the b-t of God.' . . . Boadicea . 44 

battle-writlien. 
b-'.u arms and mighty hands . . Elaine . 808 

bawl. 
I for civil rights: No woman named, Princess, v. 377 

bay (arm of the sea.) 
spangle dances in bight and b . Sea Fairies 24 
b's among her tallest towers.' OJnoue . 117 
b runs up its latest horn . . A udley Ct. 10 

farmer's son, who lived across the b 11 . 74 

The b was oily calm ... n . 85 

Sings in his boat on the b .' . ' Break, break,' etc. 8 
vaves that roll in yonder b ? . Maud, I. xviii. 63 
bubble into eddying b's . . The Brook . 41 

b's, the peacock s neck in hue ; . The Daisy . 14 
caves about the dreary b . . Sailor Boy . 10 

bay (barking.) 
Where he greatly stood at b . . Ode on Well, iofi 
heard The noble heart at b . . Enid . . 233 

bay (verb.) 
tho' dogs of Faction b . ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 85 

haying. 

chiefly for the b of Cavall 



Enid 



■ 185 
bay-aviudotv. 
from some b-w shake the night . Princess, i. . 105 

beach. 

crisping ripples on the b . . Lotos-E's. . 106 

rounded by the stillness of the b . Audley Ct. . o 

Here about the b I wander'd . Locksley If. 11 

breaker breaking on the b .In Mem. Ixx. 16 

the scream of a madden'd /' . . Aland, \. iii. 12 

here and there, on sandy b'es . The Daisy . 15 

shore-cliff's windy walls to the /' . Enid . 1013 

leaving Ai-thur'scourthcgam'dthc£ Vivien . 46 

tremulously as foam upon the b . Guinevere . 362 

on this b a hundred years ago . En. Arden . 10 

beacon (s.) 
like a b guards thee home . . In Mem. xvii. 12 

Beacon (verb.) 
Not in vain the distance b's . . Locksley II. 181 

beacon-blaze. 

b-b allures The bird of passage . En. Arden . 729 

beacon-star, 
with a b-s upon his head, . . Guinevere . 239 

beacon-tower. 
like a b-t above the waves . . Princess, iv. 472 

bead. 
numbcr'd b, and shrift . . . Talking O. . 46 

beaded. 
woolly breasts and b eyes ; . . In Mem. xciv. 12 

beak. 

stood with the down on his b, . Poet'sSong . 11 

1 Iture, b and talon . Prineess, v. 373 

ever ravening eagle's b and talon . Boadicea . 11 



beaker. POEM, line. 

b brimnVd with noble wine . . Day-Dm. . 56 

bea?n (ray.) 

gird their orbs with b's . . . The Poet . 29 

'ntotwoburningringsAll//,s'ofLoveZ>. o/F. Worn. 175 



deep-blue gloom with b's divine 

the white dawn's creeping b's 

fresh b of the springing east ; 

lane of b's athwart the sea 

will one b be less intense 

b's, that thro' the Oriel shine 

spaces cloth'd in living Us 

a b Had slanted forward 

first b glittering on a sail 

b Of the East, that play'd upon them 



86 

11 261 

M. oT Arthur 214 

Golden J 'ear 50 

Two Voices . 40 
Day-Dm. . 54 
Sir Galahad C6 
Princess, ii. 122 
ir iv. 26 
248 



In Mem. Pro. 24 
tr bod. 15 

Maud, I. iii. 3 
ii xiv. 21 
Enid . . 262 
Aylmers F. 684 
L ucretius . 59 

Princess, vi. 30 



A b in darkness : let it grow. 
A chequer-work of b and shade 
golden b of an eyelash . 
Like a b of the seventh Heaven 
smitten by the dusty sloping b 
b of Heaven Dawn'd sometime 
the first b of my latest day? . 

beam (timber, 
shape it plank and b 

beam (verb.) 
More bounteous aspects on me b . Sir Galahad 21 

beam'd. 

Love's white star B . . . Gardener's D. 162 

fhostly grace B on his fancy . Elaine . 8S2 

, Beneath a manelike mass . . Aylmer's F. 67 

bean (s. bean.) 
'ere a b an' yonder a pea . . N. Farmer . 46 

bear (s. ) 
grosser than your native b's — . Princess, iv. 516 

Bear (Constellation,.) 
B had whccl'd Thro' a great arc . Princess, iv. 194 

bear (verb.) 
canst thou b my weight? 
proud to b your name 

whatever sky B seed of men - 

b blossoms of the dead . 

I will not b it longer.' . 

b me to the margin ; 

Less burthen, by ten-hundred-fold 

to b 

B witness, if I could have found 
[thou wilt b witness here) 
that which b's but bitter fruit? 
he b's a laden breast 
b's relation to the mind 
sons grow up that b his name 
Three angels b the holy Grail 
b's a season'd brain about 



. QZnone . 233 

L.C. V.deVere 10 

* Love thou thy 

land,' etc. . 20 

rr . 94 

The Goose . 32 

M. d' Arthur 163 



StS. Stylites 24 

" 54 

127 

6S 

'43 

'77 

" 256 

Sir Galahad 42 

Will Water. 85 

bmc with thee, smoothly borne 'Move eastward,' etc. 9 



The king would b him out 

Earth Should b a double growth 

b that heart within my breast 

much I b with her 

I b, Tho' man, yet human 

if thou needs must /' the yoke 

help thy foolish ones to b 

thy vain worlds to b thy light 

b thro' Heaven a tale of woe 

pure hands and b the head . 

loved the weight I had to b . 

life that b's immortal fruit 

that ideal which he b's ? 

often brings but one to b 

b's the burthen of the weeks . 

growing, till I could b it no more 

heart enough To b his armour ? 

b him hence out of this cruel sun 

b him to our ball . 

b's, with all Its stormy crests 

Then will I b it gladly ;' 

I myself must b it.' 



Locksley //. 
Two l /W oices 



Princes 



In Mem. Pro. 

11 xii. 

11 xviii. 

II XXV. 

11 xxxix. 
Ii. 

1, liv. 

11 lxxix. 
Malut, I. iii. 
Enid 



163 
3'3 
65 
404 
188 
3" 
32 
2 
9 
7 
r; 



Elaine 



9 

'339 
1393 
1401 
. 482 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

seize me by the hair and b me far . Elaine 1415 

added to the griefs the great must b Guinevere . 203 
B with me for the last time n . 451 

beseech you by the love you b Him En. Arden . 306 
*Too hard to bl why did they . u . 782 

boat that b's the hope of life . . tt . 831 

b it with me to my grave . 11 . 897 

b's about A silent court of justice . Sea Dreams 169 
skater on the ice that hardly b's him He?tdccasyllabics 6 
jam the doors, and b The keepers down L zccretius , 169 
who b's one name with her . . ir 232 

beard, 
b Was tagged with icy fringes . StS. Stylites 30 
His b a foot before him . . . Godiva . 18 
' By holy rood, a royal bl . Day-Din. . 152 

b has grown into my lap . . if . 154 

paw'd his b, and muttered 'catalepsy' Princess, i. 20 
answer which, half-muffled in his b it v. 224 

father's face and reverend b . . ti vi. 87 

under-fringe of russet b . . Enid . 1386 

took his russet b between his teeth n . 1561 

part The lists of such a b . . Vivien . 94 

shaggy mantle of his b if . 105 

no more sign of reverence than a 6 11 . 128 

beard-blown, 
b-b goat Hang on the shaft . . Princess, iv. 60 

bearded. 

In among the b barley . . . L. of Shalott >\. 29 

b meteor, trailing light ... ir iii. 26 

the b grass Is dry and dewless . Miller's D. . 245 

beardless, 
b apple-arbiter Decided fairest 

bearer. 
Save under pall with b's 

bearest. 
love thou b The first-born 



Lucretius 



. Alymers F. 827 



Ode to Mem. 



bearing (part. ) 
b on My shallop .... Arabian N's 35 
Oaring one arm, and b in my left . Pri?tce$$ y iv. 165 
not openly b the sword . . . Maud, I. i. . 28 
sent him to the Queen B his wish Elaine 1163 

B a lifelong hunger in his heart . En. Arden . 79 
b hardly more Than his own shadow Aylmer's F. 29 
b in myself the shame ir . 355 

bearing- (bringing forth) s. 
b and the training of a child . Princess, v. 455 

beariyzg (mien.) 
thro* these Princelike his b shone . Enid , . 545 

beari?ig (armorial.) 
gateway she discernsWith armorial b 's L.of Burleigh^ 

bearing (force.) 
To change the b of a word . InMem.cx.xvi\. 16 

beast. 
people here, a b of burden . 
deep cry Of great wild b's 
I a b To take them as I did ? 
even b's have stalls 
Like a b with lower pleasures 
but a little more Than b's 

many-headed b should know.' 

laws to scare the b's of prey . 
b that takes His license 
Move upward, working out the b 
not in vain, Like Paul with b's 
skins the wild b after slaying 
as sullen as a b new-caged . 
beauteous b Scared by the noise 
weak b seeking to help herself 
Vs themselves would worship 
like a subtle b Lay couchant 
subtle b, Would track her guilt 
like a b hard-ridden 
surely lives in man and b 



{' 



. Pal. of Art * 149 

ir t . 283 

. Ed. Morris 71 

. StS. Stylites 107 

. Eocksley PI. 176 

. Two Voices 197 

You might have 

won,' etc. . 20 

, Princess, v. 383 

. 1 11 Mem. xxvii. 5 

11 cxvii. 27 

" cxix. 4 

. Enid . . 942 

ir . 1704 

. Vivien . 271 



Guinevere 



4 2 5 



Aylmer's F. 291 
Sea Drea?ns 68 



POEM. 

Lucretius 



245 



Lucretius . 193 

Lucretius . 228 

Miller's D. 67 
n 177 

" . J 79 

May Quee?i, \\\. 21 
To J.S. . x 
Locksley H. 140 

" . » . J 54 

Two Voices 261 
it 422 

Day-Dm. . 127 
Sir Galahad 46 
Princess, Pro. 34 



111. 107 

ir 139 

" 174 

iv. 128 

» 555 

v. 85 

ip 241 

vi. 164 

vii. 223 

11 310 

i. 12 

ii. 8 



What £ has heart to do it? . 
b or bird or fish, or opulent flower 

beastlier. 

B than any phantom 

beast-like, 
b as I find myself . 

beat. 
B time to nothing in my head 
heart would b against me 
should know if it b right 
howl, mother, or the death-watch b 
wind, that b's the mountain . 
heart of existence b for ever . 
where my life began to b 
winter rains that b his grave 
frozen heart began to b 
Music in his heart B's quick 
spirit b's her mortal bars 
b her foes with slaughter 
convention b's them down . 
B balm upon our eyelids 
b admission in a thousand years 
heart b thick with passion 
vassals to be b, nor petty babes 
b to battle where he stands . 
they will b my girl 
clash'd their arms ; the drum B 
One pulse that b's true woman 
greater than all knowledge, b her down n 
faith in womankind B's with his blood 11 
dance with death, to b the ground In Mem. 
B's out the little lives of men 
makes me; b so low ? 
life that b from thee 
my heart was used to b 
flower b with rain and wind . 
darken'd heart that b no more 
hearts that b from day to day 
plays with threads, he b's his chair 
pulses therefore b again 
b's within a lonely place 
seeks to b in time with one . 
crash'd the glass and b the floor 
he b his music out 
hearts of old have b in tune . 
let no footstep b the floor 
heart was used to b So quickly 
heart b stronger And thicker 
B to the noiseless music 
B, happy stars, timing with things 
B with my heart more blest 
heart would hear her and b (rep. 
Is it gone ? my pulses b — 
broad light glares and b's 
hoofs of the horses b, b (rep.) 
heart of a people b with one desire 
fierce light which b's upon a throne 
B thro' the blindless casement 
Invaded Britain, ' but we b him back 
Not b him back, but welcom'd 
B, till she woke the sleepers 
sun yet b a dewy blade 
never merrily b Annie's heart 
b's out his weary life 
b a pathway out to wealth 
her heart had b remorselessly 
b me down and marred 
b the twilight into flakes of fire 
b with rapid unanimous hand 

B upon his father's ' Home they brought him,' etc. 9 
b quicker, for the time Is pleasant On a Mourner 12 
B breast, tore hair, cried out . Lucretius . 273 



1 VII. 

1 viii. 
1 xix. 

1 lvii. 
' lxv. 
r Ixxxiv. 



ti Ixxxvi. 
11 xcv. 
11 xcvi. 
11 civ. 
ii cxviii. 
Maud, I. viii. 
11 xviii. 



3 
15 
2 
6 
13 
57 
no 

"5 



'7 



xxu. 
II. i. 



nlll.vi. 
Idylls, Ded. 
Enid . 



En Arden. . 

Aylmer's F. 

11 
Tithonus 



Boddicea 



77 

81 

82 

69 

36 

89 

8 

49 

26 

71 

746 

748 

1253 

1295 

5°9 
73i 
439 
799 
19 
42 
79 



beaten. 
B with some great passion 
no bolder than a b hound 
a way which, b broad . 
b back, and b back Settles 
weeping like a b child . 
dint a sword had b in it 



Princess, iv. 369 

Enid . . 910 

11 . 1285 

Vivien . 221 



Elaine 



■ 7°4 
• 19 



TEAWYSON'S WORKS. 



beating. poem. line. 

b hearts of salient springs . . Adeline . 26 

his b heart did make . . . Lotos-Es. . 36 
heard with b heart The Sweet-Gale Ed. Morris . 109 

The two-cell'd heart b . . . Princess, vii. 289 

B from the wasted vines , . Ode on Well. 109 

B it in upon his weary brain . En. Arden . 797 

b up thro' aJl the bitter world . " . 803 

bobuin b with a heart renewed . Titlionus . 36 

beauteous. 
reflex of a b form . 
Breathing and sounding b battle 
whispers of the b world . 
b in thine after form 
the b beast Scared by the noise 
when the b hateful isle Returned 
heart so near the b breast 

beautiful. 
spirit-thrilling eyes so keen and b 
said the earth was b 
Her b bold brow 
B Paris, evil-hearted Paris . 
Idalian Aphrodite b . . 
How b a thing it was to die . 
Twin-sisters differently b 
'She is more b than day ' 
made His darkness b with thee 
Perfectly b; let it be granted 
flash'd over her b face . 
Silence, b voice ! . 
O b creature, what am I 
Not b now, not even kind 
not dream'd she was so b 
his own children tall and b . 
ever thus thou growest 6 
stars about the moon Look b 

beaut i/u I- brovfd. 
B-b OEnone, my own soul . . CEnone . 69 

beautifully. 
So lightly, b built . . . . Pal. of Aft 
her b, and keep her true* — . Enid . 



. Miller's D. 


77 


. Princess, v. 


Is4 


. /«.JAv«.lxxviii.:2 


i» xc. 


IS 


. Vivien 


271 


. En. Arden . 


618 


. Coquette, ii. 


7 


. Ode to Mem. 


TO 


. A Character 


12 


. The Poet 


38 


. CEnone 


49 


" 


170 


. n.o/F.\Vo7>t. 


231 


. Ed. Morris . 


33 


. Beggar Maid 


8 


. InMem. lxxiii 


12 


. Maud, I. ii. 


4 


II IV. 


16 


" V. 


19 


" XVI. 


10 


I. II. V. 


66 


. Elaine 


3S2 


. En. Arden. . 


763 


. Titlionus 


43 



Spec, oj Iliad 12 



'-"' I 



1529 



. A Character 
Alariana in tlu'S. 

. Eleanore 
The Sisters 



-. With Palo/ Art 6 



beauty should go b (rep.) 

beauty, 
spake of b: that the dull 
now thy b flows away . 
thy b gradually unfold . 
loved his b passing well 

■ nly />' seen In all To- 

. ledge for its b 

t ! id only for its b 11 -9 

B, Good and Knowledge are three 11 . to 

■ Ii walkinghandinhand D. o/F. Worn. 15 

L;reai /•: ask thou not . . 11 -93 

B such a mistress of the world 
Her b grew ; till Autumn brought 
many a group Of beauties . 
murmurs of her b from the South 
All b compassed in a female form 
beauliescvcry shade of brown and fs 
underneath the crag, Full of all b 
moon of b in the South 
Another kind of b in detail . 
for the b of their skins . 
became Her former b treble . 
orb of flame, Fantastic b; 
rail Against her^.' 
the singular b of Maud . 

but in thought to your b 
O child, you wrong your b . 
B fair in her flower 
dream of her b with tender dread 
know her b might half undo it 
The b would he the same 
Remembering all the b of that star 
make her b vary day by day 
prize of/' for the fairest 

ill beauties of our time . 
won it for thee, The prize of b.' 
b is 110 b to him now 



Gardener'sD. 57 


11 


202 


Talking O. 


62 


Princess, i. 


35 


" 11. 


20 


lr 11 


414 


11 111. 


3'9 


II IV. 


OS 


" 


428 


» v. 


149 


" VII. 


10 


In Mem.xxxlv. 6 


" cxiu. 2 


Maud, I. i. 


67 


i> 111. 


6 


II IV. 


17 


11 


25 


" XVI. 


14 


II 


19 


.1 II. ii. 


12 


Idylls, Ded. 


45 


Enid . 


9 


11 


485 


" 


498 


11 


555 


" 


1179 



POEM, LINE, 

put your b to this flout and scorn . Enid . J523 

b should go beautifully (rep.) . 11 . J520 

Guinevere, The pearl of b . . Elaine . 115 

Your b is your b, and I sin . .11. 1180 

her b, grace and power Wrought . Guinezere . 142 
b such as never woman wore 11 . 545 

wife a faded b of the Baths . . Aylmer's F. 27 

whose pensive b, perfect else . u • 70 

the baits Of gold and b . . . 11 . 487 

Willy, my b, my eldest-born . Grandmother 9 
So Willy has gone, my b 11 . 101 

glorious in his b and thy choice . Titlionus . 12 

thy love, Thy b, make amends . 11 .24 

renew thy b morn by morn . . 11 -74 

Light Hope at B's call . . . Coquette, i. 3 

live with B less and less . . 11 .9 

b still with his years increased . The Victim ;j 
shamed At all that b Lucretius . I4 

became. 

Therefore revenge b me well . The Sisters 5 

well his words b him . . . Ed. Morris 25 

b Her former beauty treble . . Princess, vii. 9 

Lancelot, as b noble knight . . Guinevere , 326 

beck (brook.) 
the dark and dimpled b . . Miller's D. . 80 

beck (call.) 
move, my friend, At no man's b . Princess, iii. 211 

beckou'd. 
She ended here, and b us . Princess, ii. 165 

beckoning, 
b unto those they know . . In Mem. xiv. 8 

become, 
b's no man to nurse despair . . Princess, iv. 444 

bed. 
Upon her b, across her brow . Mariana . 56 

wilt not turn upon thy b . .A Dirge . 15 
after supper, on a /' . . . The Sisters 16 
as he knelt beside my b . . MayQueetivL 16 
sit beside my /', mother, . 11 . 23 

I listened in my b . 11 .33 

firopt on b's of amaranth and moly Lotos-Es. . 133 
unbs at last on b's of asphodel . n . 170 

feels a nightmare on his b . . M.d' Arthur 177 
so to 4: where yet in sleep . . 11 E/>. 16 

packs up his b's and chairs . Walk, to the Jl. 31 
pack'd the things among the b's . 11 .36 

to the college tower From her warm b 11 . 82 

In b like monstrous apes . . St S. Stylites 171 
See that sheets are on my b . . Vision of Sin 63 
then to b, where half in doze . Princess, i. . 242 

glitter'd like a b of flowers . . 11 ii. 416 

as if caught at once from b . 11 iv. 266 

for an hour in mine own b 11 v. 424 

on my b the moonlight falls . . In Menuhm. 1 
From off my b the moonlight dies 11 . 10 

tends upon b and bower . . Maud, I. xiv. 4 

Hung over her dying b — . . 11 xix. 36 

On a b of daffodil sky ... 11 xxii. 10 

Were it earth in an earthy b. .11 -7° 

By the curtains of my b . . 11 II. iv. 54 
flush il the b Of silent torrents . 'J he Daisy . 33 
hurl'd his huge limbs out of b . Enid . . 114 
o'er a shingly b Brawling . .11 . 248 

now get you hence to b . . Elaine . 387 
lowly by the corners of his b. . 11 . . fc'22 

the little /' on which I died 1111 

on the black decks laid her in her b 11 . 1141 

Started from b, and struck . . En. Arden . 490 
yet a /< for wandering men . . » . 699 

the house, his chair, and last his b n . 827 

then homeward and to b . . Sea Dreams 40 
In her /' at peep of day ? . 11 , 

they hover about my — . . Grandmother 83 
a sittin 'ere o' my b . . ■ N. Farmer. 9 
along the valley, down thy rocky b V. ofCautcrct: 7 

bedded. 
With all its casements b . . Audley CI. . 17 



2 4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Bedivere. 
bold Sir B uplifted him . 
Sir B, the last of all his knights 
went Sir B the second time . 
quickly rose Sir B and ran . 
Sir B Remorsefully regarded 
loudly cried the bold Sir B . 
stood SirB, Revolving many memories 

bedridden. 
infancy Or old b palsy . 



POEM. LINE. 

M.d' Arthur 6 
" • 7 

I! . 82 

" • 133 

If . I7O 

II . 226 

. 269 



Ay liner's F. 17 



16 



the wild b hummeth . . . Clarlbel 

Chaunteth not the brooding b . A Dirge 

or the yellow banded Us . . Eleanore 

the hum of swarming Us . . n 

golden b Is lily-cradled . . CEnone 

the b would range her cells . . Two Voices . 70 

With all her Us behind her . . Amphion . 36 

here by thee will hum the b . .A Farewell 11 

stopt aS he hunted the b . . Poet's Song- 9 

Made noise with Us and breeze . Princess, Pro. 88 

swarm as Us about their queen . 11 i. 39 

murmuring of innumerable b's/ . ti vii. 207 

shake off the b that buzzes at us . Elaine . 781 
like the working b in blossom-dust En. Arden . 363 
Us are still' d and the flies are kill' d The Window 52 

beech. 
Moving in the leavy b . 
like a purple b among the greens 
wish'd myself the fair young b 
bard has honQur'd b or lime . 
Coquetting with young Ues . 
the winds were in the b 
the b will gather brown 
seated on a serpent-rooted b 
b and lime Put forth and feel 



bee-like, 
b-l instinct hiveward 

beeswing: 
richest b from a binn reserved 

beetle (adj.) 
gaunt old Baron with his b brow 

beetle (s.) 
At eve the b boometh . 

beetling, 
b crag to which he clung 

beeves. 
whole hogs and quarter b 

befall. 
Shame might b Melissa 
I hold it true, whate'er b 
aught of things that here b . 



. Margaret . 61 
. Ed. Morris . 84 
. Talking O. . 141 

11 . 291 

. Amphion . 28 
. In Mem. xxx. 9 

ti c. 3 

. The Brook . 135 
. On a Mourner 14 

. Princess, iv. 181 

. Aylmer's F. 405 

. Princess, ii. 222 

. Claribel . 9 

. Aylmer's F. 229 

. Enid . 1450 

. Princess, iii. 131 
. In Mem. xxvii. 13 
. Ode on Well. 138 



tale for summer as Us the time Princess, Pro. 205 

As Us a solemn fane . . . Ode on Well. 250 

befooled. 

being much b and idioted . . Aylmers F. 590 



Or see (in Him is no b) 



before. 



b of him to take thee back 
steal or plunder, no nor b 

began. 
when my passion first b 
' When first the world b 
fares it since the years b 
He b, the rest would follow . 
So I b, And the rest followed 
b A blind and babbling laughter 
seem'd my worth since I b . 
total world since life b . 
Whose life in low estate b 
la tracts of fluent heat b 



. In Mem. xxvi. 10 

. Dora . . 121 
. Enid . 1336 



. Talking O. 9 

, Two Voices . 16 

Will Water. 169 

Princess, Pro. 196 

ti . 235 

11 vi. 121 

InMem.Pro. 34 

ti xlii. 12 

11 lxiii. 3 

tt cxvii. 9 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud, II. v. 21 
Ode on Well. 86 



. Miller's D. 206 



Wretchedest age, since Time b 
greatest sailor since our world b 

beget. 
Many a chance the years b . 

begetters. 
worldly-wise Us, plagued themselves Aylmers F. 482 

beggar maid. 
Bare-footed came the b m . Beggar Maid 3 

* This b m shall be my queen !' 11 16 

beggar (s.) 
no Us at your gate . . L.C. V. de Vere 67 

a b born,' she said (rep.) . . Lady Clare 37 
tho' she were a b from the hedge . Enid . . 230 
her, he loved, a b . . . . En. Arden . 117 

beggar-woman. 
silken rag, the b-w's weed . . Enid . 1528 



At last she b a boon 

then they b For Father Philip 

begin. 
to b implies to end 

B's the scandal and the cry . 

noise of life Us again 
whence clear memory may b 
overhead B's the clash and clang 



. Princess, i. 
. En. Arden 



145 
361 



Two Voices 339 

c You might have 

won,' etc. . 16 

In Mem. vii. 10 

tr xliv. 10 

Con. 



ToF. D. Mazer ice 



made a selfish war b 

beginning (part.) 
world's great work is heard B . In Mem. cxx. 11 
B to faint in the light that she loves Maud, I. xxii. 9 

beginning (s.) 
end and the b vex His reason . Two Voices 298 
The low Us of content . . In Mem. Ixxxiii. 48 
be the fair b of a time . . . Guinevere . 463 
blind Us that have made me man . Lucretius . 242 



begone. 
* You must b* said Death 
B ; we will not look upon you 

beguile. 
To b her melancholy 

begziilcd. 
well, well, well, I may be b . 

begun. 
help me as when life b . 

beheld, 
b great Herd's angry eyes 



Love a?id Death 7 
. Princess, iv. 526 

. Maud, I. xx. 3 

. Maud, I. vi. 89 

. Locksley H. 185 

. CEftone 186 



Since I b young Laurence dead. L. C. V. de Vere 28 

ere a star can wink, b her . Gardener' s D . 121 

b her ere she knew my heart . 11 270 

when the boy b His mother . . Dora . . 134 

I b her, when she rose . . . Princess, v. 167 

what I am b again, . . . In Mem. cxx'm.2i 

b The death-white curtain . . Maud, I. xiv. 33 

B the long street of a little town . Enid . . 242 

Geraint B her first in field, . . 11 . . 540 

Turn'd, and b the four . . 11 . 558 

b A little town with towe.s, n 1045 

never yet b a thing so pale " 1463 

b a lily like yourself v 1468 

B the man you loved n 1795 

b the King Charge at the head . Elaine . 303 

Arthur who b his cloudy brows . h . 1344 

b three spirits mad with joy . . Guinevere . 250 

B at noon in some delicious dale . n . 390 

glancing up b the holy nuns . 11 . 658 
B the dead flame of the fallen day En. Arden . 438 

b His wife his wife no more, . ti . 759 



b the Powers of the House 



Aylmers F. 287 



behest. 
not to disobey her lord's b . . Enid . 1299 

be/zold. 
B this fruit, whose gleaming rind . CEnone . 7° 



TEALVYSON'S WORK'S. 



25 



POEM. LINE. 

Mayst well b them unbehcld, . CBnone . 87 

B her there, As I beheld her Gardener's D. 269 

Who is this? b thy bride,' . Love and Duty 49 

in me b the Prince 

B your father's letter.' . 

B the man that loved and lost 

B me, for I cannot sleep 

' in in raised up by Christ ! 
An inner trouble I b 

happy hour, b the bride, . 
reverent people b The towering 
did Enid, keeping watch, b . 
B me overturn and trample on ] 
b mc come To cleanse this . 

1 b him in my dreams . 
dost thou b thy God 

beholden. 
being so b to the Prince 
Prince To whom we are b 

beholding. 
B one so bright in dark estate 

■ you butt against my wish 
P> it was Edyrn, son of Nudd : 
b her, Tho' pale, yet happy . 

1 he years which are not Timc'3 Aylmer'sF. 601 
belioof. 
break them more in their b . . Princess, vi. 45 
mask, tho' but in his own b . Maud, I. vi. 48 

being. 



. Princess, ii. 


196 


II IV. 


448 


. In Ale m., i. 


15 


II Vll. 


6 


II XXXI. 


n 


xl. 


18 


11 Con. 


69 


car Ode on Welt 


• S4 


. Enid . 


967 


htm 11 


1691 


11 


1742 


. Elaine 


7TO 


. Aylmer's F. 


657 


. Enid . 


623 


11 


727 


. Enid . 


787 


sh . 11 . 


IS2S 


11 


1629 


11 


1727 



changes should control Our b 


f ' Love thou 
\ land,' etc. 


thy 

42 


current of my b sets to thee . 


. Loch-sly 11. 


24 


1, but a dearer b 


. Princess, vii. 


301 


all tlie wheels of B slow 


. In Mem., xlix. 4 


His b working in mine own . 


11 Ixxxiv. 43 


strike his /' into bounds 


11 Con. 


124 


b he loved best in all the world 


. Enid . 


95 2 


peaceful b slowly passes by . 


. Requiescat * 


7 


1 bliss mb 


. Lucretius . 


219 


Bel, 






Till the face of B be brightcn'd 


. Boadicea. 


16 


belaboured. 






so b him on rib and cheek 


. Princess, v. 


33' 


belaud. 






blush to b myself a moment . 


Hendecasyllabics 18 


bel/ry. 






white owl in the b sits (rep.) 


. The Owl . 


7 


breezes fann'd the b bars 


. TIw Letters 


43 


belied. 






liars /'in the hubbub of lies . 


. Maud, I. iv. 


5 1 



belief. 
mine old b in womanhood 
quicker of b Than you believe mc 

believable. 
that he sinn'd, is not b . 

believe. 
1 /' she wept . 

in»n in the blood, And I b it 
heard a voice, 'b no more' . 
/> him ashamed to be seen? . 
b him Something far advanced 
do // yourself against yourself 
will not b a man repents 
half b her true 
b that all about this world 

lemptcd them and failed 
I might b you then 
I v II /\ the noblest 
could /' the things you say . 
may not well b that you 
quicker ■ . t" belief Than you b mc 

soon b that his 
b, if you were fast my wife . 

!'hri-.t as we b him 
nor /' mc Too presumptuous 
Clods there arc, for all men so b 



Elaine 



Vivien . 610 

Talking 0. . 164 
Princess, vi. 214 
hi J/(-;;/.,cx.\iii.lo 
Maud, I. xiii. 25 
Ode on Well. 274 
1592 
1748 



Enid 
Vivien 



Elaine 



■ 42 

• 39 1 
. 668 

• 77' 
. 360 

1091 
1190 
1 199 

• 348 
4 



Guinevere 

En. Arden 

Aylmer's P. 573 

Ilcndecasyllabics 16 

. Lucretius . 117 



believed. 

often she b that I should die 

I b that in the living world . 

The woman cannot be b 

Not less Geraint b it 

I b myself Unconquerable 

Enid easily b ... 

and half b her true 

b This filthy marriage-hindering 

when he came again, his flock b 

saw, but scarce b . 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, vii. 85 

11 . 142 

The Letters 32 

Enid . . 28 

11 . 1683 

ti . 1722 

Vivien 250, 742 

Aylmer's I'\ 373 

11 . 600 

Sea Dreams 34 



believing. 
B where we cannot prove . . hi Mem. Pro. 4 
B 'lo I mine helpmate, one to feel Guinevere . 481 

bell. 
dropping low their crimson b's . Arabian N's. 62 
with white b's the clover-hill swells Sea laities 14 
bridle b's rang merrily . . L. o/Shalott, iii. 13 
placed great b's that swung . . Pal. 0/ Art 129 
those great b's Began to chime . 11 . 157 

midnight 4'scease ringing suddenly D. o/F. Worn. 247 
hundred b's began to peal . M. d' Arthur, Ep. 29 
sound of funeral or of marriage b's Gardener's D. 36 



Talking O. 
Two Voices 



216 
39 
56 
272 
72 

11 . 408 

. Sir Galahad 35 

. Princess, ii. 410 

11 . 446 

11 vi. 176 

" ..-. 3ii 

. In Mem. viii, 3 



lvi. 
ciii. 



Con. 



Maud, I. 

II. v. 

The Letters 

Ode on II -ell. 



from them clashed The b' 

when the b's were ringing, Allan call'd Dora 

do not hear the b's upon my cap . Ed. Morris 

blow The sound of minster b's 

foxglove cluster dappled b's . 

sweet church b's began to peal 

shrill b rings, the censer swings 

hark the b For dinner . 

the chapel b's Call'd us . 

half open'd b of the woods 

like a /' Toll'd by an earthquake . 

'lights and rings the gateway b 

hear the b struck in the night 

Christmas b's from hill to hill 

Before I heard those b's again 

The merry merry b's of Yule 

One set slow bell will seem to toll 

A single peal of b's below 

these are not the b's I know . 

Ring out, wild b's (rep.) 

Ring, happy b's, across the snow . 

dead leaf trembles to the b's . 

Is cap and b's for a fool 

Not a b was rung, not a prayer 

conies a sound of marriage b's 

Let the b be toll'd . 

were wed, and merrily rang the b's En. ArdenSo, 507 

the pealing of his parish b's 11 . 616 

Clash, yeffs, in the merry March air! IV. toAte.vatr. 18 

BeUerophon. 

White Rose, B, the Jilt . . The Brook . 161 

bell-like. 

many a deep-hued bd flower . Eleiinore . 37 

bell-month' d. 
whom the b-m glass had wrought Princess, iv. 137 

bellowed. 
ever overhead B the tempest 

bellowing. 
B victory, b doom . 

belonging. 
things b to thy peace and ours ! 
I knew it — Of and b to me . 

beloved. 
Revered, b—O you that hold 

( ) this world's curse, — b but hated LoveanR fluty 47 
love reflects the thing /; . . /// Mem. Ii. 

Maud the /' of my mother . . Maud, I. i. 
the liquid note b of men . . Enid . 

belt(s.) 
Unclasp'd the wedded eagles of her b Gffdiva 
A gleaming crag with Us of pines . Two I 

Half-lost in b's of hop . . . Princess, Con. 45 
From b to b of crimson seas . In Mem. txxxv. 13 

summer b's of wheat and vine . 11 xc\ii. .•. 



Vivien 



806 



Ode on Well. 66 



. Aylmer's F. 740 
. Lucretius . 44 

To the Queen 



72 
336 



43 

189 



25 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

a mighty purse, Hung at his b . Enid . . 872 
seem a sword beneath a b of three Vivien . 360 

faltering sideways downward to her b v . . 699 
glories of the broad b of the world En. Arde?i . 580 
A b, it seem'd, of luminous vapour Sea Dreams 202 
ridge Of breaker issued from the b 11 . 205 

same as that Living within the b . tr . 209 

past into the b and swell'd again . n . 215 

belt (verb.) 
woods that b the gray hill-side . Ode to Mem. 55 

belted, 
with pufTd cheek the Shunter blew Pal. of Art 63 

bench. 
Jack on his ale-house b . . . Mazed, I. iv. 9 

bench'd. 
stately theatres B crescent-wise . Princess, ii. 348 

bencher. 
wrinkled Us often talk'd of him . Aylmer's F. 473 

bend. 

that I could not b One will . D. of F. Worn. 137 

sweet are looks that ladies b . . Sir Galahad 13 

fathers b Above more graves. . In Mem. xevn. 15 

On me she Us her blissful eyes . u Con. 29 

tyranny now should b or cease . Maud, III. vi. 20 

be?tding. 
erect, but b from his height . . Aybner's F. 119 

Bengal. 
in branding summers of B . . The Brook . 16 

bent. 

lowly b, "With melodious airs . Adeline . 54 
yon blue heavens above as b L. C. V. de Vere 50 
Norb, nor broke, nor shunn'd . Princess, Pro. 38 

Cupid b above a scroll ... tr i. 238 

B their broad faces toward us . ir iv. 529 

Her head a little b n vi. 252 

thrice as large as man he b . . In Mem. cii. 42 

b he seem'd on going the third day Enid . . 604 

B as he seem'd on going . m . 625 

b the spirits of the hills . . Gui?ievere . 281 

^orbrokeThelittle reluctant boughsiiVi. Arden . 377 

b as he was To make disproof . Aylmer's F. 445 

King b low, with hand on brow . The Victim 57 

bereave. 
nothing can b him Of the force . Ode on Well. 272 

berg. 
like glittering b's of ice . . Princess, iv. 53 

Berkshire. 
weed the white horse on the B hills Enid , 1784 

berried. 
about my feet The b briony fold . Talking O. 148 

berry. 
With bunch and b and flower . CEnone . 100 

beseech. 
do b you by the love you bear . En. Arde?i 306 

beseem. 

might well b His princess . . Enid . . 759 

besee?n*d. 
true answer, as b Thy fealty . M. d* Arthur 74 

besotted. 
A drowning life, b in sweet self . Princess, vii. 295 

besought. 

the knight b him, 'Follow me . Enid' . 1655 

B Lavaine to write as she devised Elaine iogj 

B me to be plain and blunt . . ir 1293 

B him, supplicating, if he cared . En. Arden 163 

Bess. 
Black B, Tantivy, Tallyho, . . The Brook . 160 

Bessy Marris. 
B M's barn (rep.) . . . N. Farvier . 14 



best. POEM. LINE. 

Kind nature is the b . . Walk, to tlie M. 56 
b That ever came from pipe . . Will Water. 75 
gave the people of his b ' You might have tvozi,' etc. 25 
worst he kept, his b he gave 11 26 

cancell'd nature's b . . . I?i Mem. Ixxi. 20 
as the stateliest and the b . . Enid . . 20 
child is set forth at her b tr , 728 

arms for guerdon : choose the b* . tr . 1067 

desired the humbling of their b . \\ . i486 

women, worst and b, as Heaven and Hell Vivien . 664 
do my b to win . . . Elaine . 221 

yet would I do my b tr . 222 

meats and vintage of their b . ti , 266 

for his children, ever at its b . ir 335 

when they love their b Closest . u . 865 

She deem'd she look's her b . . » . 903 

having loved God's b And greatest 11 10S7 

free love is for the b \\ 1372 

b, if not so pure a love ... tr 1374 

You chose the b among us . . En. Arden . 292 
b and brightest, when they dwelt Aylmer's F. 69 
that second thoughts are b ? . . Sea Dreams 65 
did his holy oily b ir 191 

could have wept with the b . Grandmother 20,100 
b and stateliest of the land . . Lucretius . 172 

best-natured. 
' Which was prettiest, B-nV . Princess, i. 231 

bestrode, 
b my Grandsire, when he fell . Princess, ii. 224 

bethink. 
B thee, Lord, while thou and all . StS. Stylites 103 

bethought, 

b her of a faded silk . . . Enid 

b her of her promise given . . tr 

b her how she used to watch . 11 



• 134 
. 602 

• 647 



betide. 
All-armed I ride, whate'er b 



. Sir Galafiad 83 



betray, 
b me for the precious hilt, . . M. d'Arth?tr 126 

Break lock and seal ; b the trust i ' You ™% ht hav % 

( won, etc. . 18 

Simpler than any child, ffs itself . Guinevere . 369 

I should b myself .... En. Arden . 790 

betrayed 

Thou hast b thy nature . . M.eC Arthur 73 

B my secret penance . . . St S. Stylites 67 

b her cause and mine . . . Princess, v. 73 

let them know themselves b . . Aylmer's F. 524 

betraying. 
statesman there, b His party-secret Maud, II. v. 34 

betrotJid. 
b To one, a neighbouring Princess Princess, i. . 31 
of why we came, And my b . . m .119 

B us over their wine, . . . Maud, I. xix. 39 
far-off cousin and b The Brook . 75 

betrothment. 
how the strange b was to end . Princess, v. 463 

betted. 
they b ; made a hundred friends Princess, Pro. 162 

better (adj. and adv.) 
b than to own A crown 
'Twere b I should cease 
men b than sheep or goats 
Something b than his dog, . 
B thou wert dead before me*, 
B thou and I were lying 
held it b men should perish . 
B fifty years of Europe 
b not to be? . 

Is boundless b, boundless worse, 
b not to breathe or speak 
A murmur, ' Be of b cheer, . 
B to me the meanest weed . 
B not be at all Than not be noble 



. Ode to Mem. 


120 


. To J. S. . 


66 


. M. d' A rthur 2 ^0 


. Locksley H. 


SO 


tr 


56 


11 


57 


ir 


1 79 


ti 


184 


. Two Voices 


3,48 


ti 


27 


ir 


94 


?i 


4 2q 


. Amj)hwn . 


PS 


. Princess, ii. 


79 



TEAWYSOtfS WORK'S. 



B to clear prime forests • 

he seems no b than a girl 

in the distance pealing news Of b 

hold the woman is the b man 

maids were b at their homes 

b or worse Than the heart of the 

peace or war ? b, war ! loud war 

a to be born To labour . 

as it seems, to the b mind 

b to fight for the good . 

b were I laid in the dark earth 

B the king's waste hearth 

griefs Like his have worse or b 

himself has done much b 

better (s. ) 
Go, therefore, thou ! thy b's went 
Thine elders and thy b's 
striking at her b, miss'd 
Thy b bom unhappily from thee 

better (verb.) 
his work That practice b's V . 
cared to b his own kind 

bettering. 
who, b not with Time . 

bevy. 
a b of Kroses applc-cheek'd . 

bewail'd. 
with one mind B their lot 

beware, 
b Lest, where you seek . 

Bible. 
oft at B meetings, o'er the rest 

bicker, 
b's into red and emerald 
To b down a valley 
b with the things they love . 
points of lances b in it . 

bid. 
lest I should b thee live 
b her abide by her word ? 
b him bring Charger and palfrey 
ari-c and bme do it 
And b me cast it , 
I b the stranger welcome 
b farewell to sweet Lavaine . 
b call the ghostly man . 
b to speak of such a one 
of him I was not b to speak . 

bidden. 
I knock'd and, b, enter'd 

bidding. 
b him Disband himself . 



POEM. LINE. 


. Princess, iii. 


in 


11 


202 


If IV. . 


64 


ti 


391 


If V. 


41a 


. Maud, I. I. . 


23 


II 


47 


if XVU1. . 


31 


. II III. vi. . 


56 


II • 


57 


. Enid . 


07 


. Guinevere . 


S20 


JSn. Arden . 


742 


. Spiteful Let 


4 


Will Water. 


185 


t» 


192 


Vivien 


341 


Ay Ime^s F. 


675 


Princess, iii. 


281 


Sea Dreams 


196 



Will 



The Islet 



. In Mem. cii. 46 
. Princess, vi. 155 
. Sea Dreams 190 



Princess, v. 
The Brook 
Enid . 



253 

26 

1174 

129S 



Princess, vi. 372 
Maud, I. xvi. 25 



Enid . 



Vivien 
Elaine 



1249 

1513 

1555 

119 

34° 

pi 1093 

. Aylmcr's F. 677 

" . 710 

. Princess iii. 114 



Enid 



bide. 

well, to b mine hour . . . Two Voices 

why she should B by this issue . Princess, v. 

lord of Astolat, 'B with us . . Elaine 

if I /', lo ! this wild flower . . 11 , 

ver'd he: 'we needs must hear 11 

into sanctuary And b my doom . Guinevere . 

b your year as I b mine ?' . . En. Arden . 
Philip answer" d ' I will b my year' 11 

bided, 

b tryst at village stile . . . Vivien 

bier. 
borne with //and pall . 
him and the b in which he lay 

yonder man upon the b arise . 11 

big. 

apt at arms and /> ofbonc . .Enid 

Cried out with a b voice , . 11 

bigger. 

enter'd in the b boy . . . Princess, ii. 

No t> than a glowworm . . 11 iv. 



1645 

76 
316 
629 
64 1 
752 
121 

435 
436 

228 



/;/ Mem. Ixxxiv. I 



Enid 



1420 
1S°5 

• 489 
1390 

38a 

7 



POEM, LINE. 

Sea Fairies 24 

T/te Blackbird 1 1 
11 . 13 



Day-Dm. . 159 



bight. 

spangle dances in b and bay . 

bill (beak, 
that gold dagger of thy b 
A golden b ! the silver tongue 

bill (parliamentary measure.) 
it was this b that past . . Walk, to the M. 59 

shall we pass the b 

bill of sale. 
Kb o s gleamed thro' the drizzle 

billow. 
to the b the fountain calls 
a b, blown against, Falls back 

billowing. 
a b fountain in the midst 
his river b ran 
b in a hollow of it . 

bin. 



En. Arden 



Sea Fairies 
'I wo Voices 



Princess, ii. 
Maud, I. iv. 
Lucretius . 



9 

316 



14 
32 



11 Con. 

In Mem.xxxv'1.13 
11 xliv. n 
11 lxviii. 7 
11 lxxvi. 6 

Enid . . 790 

Elaine 137° 

11 . 1376 

Ay liner's F. 41 

The Brook 203 
Ay liner's F. 113 
Aylmcr's F. 405 
Poet's Mind 



In musty b's and chambers . . Will Water. 102 

bind. 
cords that b and strain ' Clear-headed friend' etc. 4 
an athlete, strong to break or b. . Pat. of Art . 153 
that, working strongly, b's ' Love thou thy land, ' etc. 34 
woodbine wreaths that b her . Am/>hion . 34 

Faster b's a tyrant's power . . Vision of Sin 128 
my vow B's me to speak . . Princess, ii. 185 
wont to b my throbbing brow . 11 232 

b the scattered scheme of seven 
may read that b's the sheaf . 
frame that b's him in 
the thorns to b my brows 
b a book, may line a box 
b The two together 
what is worthy love Could b him 
yet thee She fail'd to b . 
That Love could b them closer 

bindweed-bell. 
fragile b-b's and briony rings 

bine. 
When burr and b were gathcr'd 

Sinn. 

a b reserved For banquets . 

bird. 
the merry b chants 
b would sing.nor lamb would bleat Mariana in theS. 37 
song of b, or sound of rill . . D.ofF. Worn. Co 
clearer than the crested b . . 11 1-, 

lusty b takes every hour . M. d 'Arthur, Ef>. 1 1 
as tho* he were the b of day . . Gardener's D. 95 
These b's have joyful thoughts . 11 98 

Slides the b o'er lustrous woodland Locksley II. 162 
every b of F.den burst In carol . Day-Dm. . 255 
long-tail'd Us of Paradise 11 . 275 

fly, like a b, from tree to tree . Ed. Gray . 30 
b that pipes his lone desire' I 'on might havewon,' etc. 31 
the b, the fish, the shell, the Bower Princess, ii. 361 
As flics the shadow of a b 
b of passage flying south 
pipe of half-awakcn'd b's 
wild b's on the light Dash 
b's that piped their Valentines 
b That early woke to feed 
b's the charming serpent draws 
Wild b, whose warble, liquid sweet 
the sea-blue b of March 
loud with voices of the b's 
low love-language of the b . 
happy Vs, that change their sky 
I hear a chirp of b's 

lining, and the wakeful b 
B's in the high Hall-garden (rep.) 

li's In our wood sang . 
the /- of prey will hover 
silence fell with the waking b 
My b with the shining 
ch.utci'd inure than biouk or b 



II 111. 


:,, 


II 


[94 


II IV. 


3» 


II 


•171 


II V. 


- 1 


11 VII. 


• rt 


InMi-m.xxxiv 


14 


ct 11 Ixx.wii 


1 


11 xc. 


4 


II XCVIU. 


2 


II CI. 


11 


II CXIV. 


IS 


11 exvni. 


5 


It cxx. 


11 


) Maud, I. xii. 


1 


it 


9 


11 XX. 


28 


11 XXI], 


17 


1. 11. iv. 


4S 


. The Brook . 


:-' 



2S 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 

as the sweet voice of a b . . Enid . 
think what kind of b it is . . u 
b's song you may learn the nest . n 
the dancing shadows of the b's . ir 
were b's Of sunny plume it 

live like two b's in one nest 11 

brush and blotted out the b . . Vivien 
foul b of rapine whose whole prey tt 
a little helpless, innocent b . . Elaine 
Like the caged b escaping suddenly En. Arden 
flash of insect and of b ... n 

beacon-blaze allures The b of passage 



The b's were warm, (rep.] 
as the b returns, at night 
and every b that sings . 
one b with a musical throat . 
Make music, O b, in the 
b in air, and fishes turn'd 
b Makes his heart voice 
b or fish, or opulent flower . 
B's love, and b's song (rep.) . 
Arn't we b's of a feather 
we'll be b's of a feather 
Be merry all b's to-day 

birdie. 
Sleep, little b, sleep, (rep.) . 



LINE. 

3 2 9 
33 1 
359 
601 
658 
1475 
328 
578 
890 
268 
576 
73o 



Aylmer's F. 260 
. Sea Dreams 43 

!l . 100 

. The Islet . 27 
. W. to A lexan. 1 1 
. The Victim 19 
. Lucretius . 10c 

n . 245 

. The Window 62 



Sea Dreams 271 



bird's-eye-view, 
b-e-v of all the ungracious past . Princess, ii. 109 



hirk. 



A Dirge 



To the Queen 3 



Eleanore 

. Miller's D. 

L. C. V de Vere 



Two Voices 169 

~ "^ ' 332 

Day-Dm. . 229 

Lady Clare 9 

Princess, iii. 309 



Shadows of the silver h 

birth. 
power of brain, or b 
At the moment of thy b 
God renew me from my b 
slew him with your noble b 
hadst not between death and b 
that first nothing ere his b 
Titanic forces taking b . 
does not love me for my b 
one act at once, The b of light 

draws near the b of Christ hi Mem. xxviii. 1, cm. 1 
Beyond the second b of Death . h xliv. 16 

breaks his b's invidious bar . 4 11 lxiii. 5 

Evil haunts The b, the bridal . 11 xcvii. 14 

Memories of bridal, or of b . . 11 xcviii. 15 

Becoming, when the time has b . n cxii. 14 

shaping an infant ripe for his b . Maud, I. iv. 34 
mine by a right, from b till death ti xix. 42 

By the home that gave me b . u II. iv. 7 

voiceless thro' the fault of b . Enid . 1115 

mystery From all men, like his b . Guinevere . 296 
marriage, and the b Of Philip's child En. A rde7i . 709 

birth-day. 
Each month, a b-d coming on 
night Before my Enid's b-d . 
on the night Before her b-d . 



Biscay. 
The B, roughly ridging eastward . 

bit(s.) 
Nobbut a b on it's left 
b's of roasting ox Moan 

bit (verb. ) 
b his lips, And broke away . 
helmet thro', and b the bone . 
fingers till they b the palm . 

bite{s.) 
showing the aspick's b . 

bite (verb.) 
b's it for true heart 
B, frost, b (rep.) . 
b far into the heart of the house , 



. Will Water. 93 

. Enid . . 458 

" - • 633 

En. Arden . 528 

JV. Farmer 41 
Lucretius . 131 

Dora . . 31 
Enid . . 573 
Elaine . 608 

D. of F. Worn. 160 

Pri?icess,Pro. 172 

The Window 49 

" • 53 



biting, 
b laws to scarce the beasts of prey 



Princess, v. 3S3 



bitten 
b the heel of the going year 
b into the heart of the earth 



. D. of F. Worn. 2I 
. In Mem. iii. 



bitter. 
to give the b of the sweet 
O sweet and b in a breath 
My own less b, rather more 
If I find the world so b 
world were not so b (rep.) 
and fail'd, She is so b . 
^deathmust be : Love, thou art b; Elaine 

bitterer. 
Yet b from his readings 



POEM. LINE. 

T/ie Window 48 
11 .60 



Maud, I. vi. 
Vivien 



3 
6 
33 
38 
669 
1004 



Aylmer's F. 553 



bitterly. 

B weeping I turn'd away . . Ed. G?-ay 

B wept I over the stone . . tr 
spake the Queen, and somewhat b Guinevere 

long and b meditating . . . Boadicea 

bitterness. 

fretted all to dust and b . . Princess, vi. 



wake the old b again 



6,33 
■ 34 



247 



In Mem. Ixxxiii. 47 



blabbing. 
physician, b The case of his patient Maud, II. v. 36 
curse me the ^ lip ir 57 

black 
B the garden-bowers and grots A 
yew-wood b as night 
foreground b with stones and slags 
More b than ashbuds 
in its coarse b's or whites . 
streets were b with smoke 
b and brown on kindred brows 
ready on the river, cloth'din b . 
Wear b and white, and b a nun 
You so fair ! am I so b ? . 



rabian FTs. . 78 
Oriana . . 19 
Pal, of Art . 81 
Gardener's D. 28 
Walk, to the M. 97 
hi Mem. lxviii. 3 
?t lxxviii. 16 
Elaine . 1117 

G?tincvere . 669 
The Window . 74 

Black (Sea.) 
the B and the Baltic deep, . . Maud, III. vi. 51 

black-beaded. 
Glancing with b-b eyes . . Lilian . . 15 

black-bea rded. 
stern^-^kingswlthwolfisheyes D. ofF. Worn, in 

blackbird. 
OB! sing me something well 
b on the pippin hung 

black'd. 
B with thy branding thunder, 

blacken. 

upon a throne, And b's every blot Idylls, Ded. 27 

pierces the liver and b's the blood The Islet . 35 

bark and b innumerable, . . Boadicea . 13 

B round the Roman carrion ir 14 

blacken'd 
b all her world in secret 
the walls B about us 

blackening, 
b over heath and holt . 
b, swallow'd all the land 

blackest. 
half a truth is ever the b of lies 

black-heart. 
unnetted b-h ripen dark 

black-hooded. 
Black-stoled, b-h, like a dream 

blackness. 
With b as a solid wall . 
b round the tombing sod 

blacksmith-border. 
The b-b marriage — one they knew Aylmer's F. 263 

black-stoled. 
B-s, black-hooded like a dream . M. d' Arthur 197 



. The Blackbird 1 
. Audley Ct. 37 

. St S. Stylites 75 



Princess, vii. 27 
tr Con. no 



Locksley H. 191 
Guinevere . 82 



Grandmother 30 

TJie Blackbird 7 

M d' Arthur 197 

Pal. of Art 274 
On a Mourner 27 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



29 



2o6 

3 1 

1295 

108 



blackthorn. poem. li ne. 
never see The blossom on the b . May Queen, ii. 8 

blade (spire of grass.) 
varying year with b and sheaf . Day-Dm. 
b, or bloom may find ... 11 

life was yet in bud and b . . Princess, i. 
sun yet beat a dewy b . . . Enid . 
voice clings to each b of grass . Elaine 

blade (part of sword, etc.) 
good b carves the casques of men . Sir Galahad 1 
stntokoutandshouted ; thc^glanced Princess, v. 529 
Geraint's, who heaved his b aloft . Enid . . 572 
with the b he prick' d his hand . Aylmer's E. 239 
was engraven on the b . 11 . 598 

bore the b of Liberty . . . The Voyage 72 

blade (shoulder-bone.) 
armswercshattcr'dtotheshoulder£ Princess, vi. 

blame (s.) 
Joyful and free from b . 
smile away my mai'den b 
he is chill to praise or b 
crime of malice, and is equal b 
such reverence for his b 
has worn so pure of b . 
white blamcfessness accounted b . 
Nor yours the b — for who beside . 

blame (verb.) 

in truth you must b Love . . Miller's D. . 192 

I have been to b — to b . . . Dora . . 156 

Am I to b for this .... SiS. Stylites 122 

she had a will ; was he to b . Princess, i. . 47 

/' you not SO much for fear . . it iv. . 485 

leath ! you b the man . 11 vi. . 204 



36 



. D. ofF. Worn. 80 
n . 214 

. Two Voices. 258 
. Vision of Sin 216 
. In Mem. 1. . 6 
. Ode on Well. 72 
. Vivien . 648 

[ylmer's F. 735 



B not thyself too much,' I said, 'nor 2 



vn. . 239 
In Mem. xlviii. 10 



B not thou the wind 

b not thou thy plaintive sons 

Nor b 1 Death, because he bare 

count me all to b if I 

did not wish to b him . 

who should b me then?' 

To/', in 1 iicelot, much to b Elaine 

ire all to b, they arc all to b Sailor Boy . 
() Ringlet, 1 count you much to b The Ringlet 

blamed. 
love be b for want of faith ? . 
b herself for telling hearsay tales 

blameless. 
b is he, centred in the sphere 
the white flower ufa b life 
mild face of the b king . 
Yourself were first the b cause 
The b king went forth . 
fighting for the b king . 

I attempt the b King . 
b King and stainless man?' . 

blamelessness. 
thy white b accounted blame !' . Vivien 



■■ li. 

11 lxxxi. 

11 Con. 
Maud I. XX. 
Vivien 



In Mem. I, 

Vivien 



Ulysses 
Idylls, Dcd. 
Enid . 



Vivien 



39 

24 

1660 
1674 

17::,. 

i8t8 

20 

628 



Bolidicea 



bl audi. 
boom and b on the precipices 

Blanche. 

Two widows, Lady Psyche, Lady/? Princi 

who were tutors. 'Lady A" 

message here from Lady B . 

saw The Lady B's daughter 

Lady B alone Of faded form 

sent for B to accuse her face to face 

Lady />' erect Stood up . 

\t distance followed . 

ere the days of Lady B 
she had authority— The Lady B 
'Ay so?' said B, 'Amazed am I 
/>' had -one, but left Her child 
Not tho' B had sworn 

blanched. 
the /'tablets of her heart 
a day B in our aiinals . 



648 



76 



J liners 


•, 1, . 


127 


II 




229 


ir 


u. . 


298 

300 
424 


„ 


IV. . 


220 
271 


" 


VI. . 


66 
98 
222 
3°4 


11 


Vll. 


4" 
57 


Isabel . 




17 


Princess, vi. 


47 



POEM. LINE. 

How b with darkness must I grow ! In Mem. , l.\. 8 
B with his mill, they found . . En. A rden 364 

blanching. 

scattered b on the grass . . Day-Dm. . 112 

chanted on the b bones of men ?' . Princess, ii. 182 

confluence of water-courses B and Eucretius . 31 

bland. 

Shakespeare b and mild . . Pal. of Art ' 134 

small his voice, But b the smile . Princess, i. 114 

bless thee, for thy lips are b . In Mem., cxviii. 9 

like the bountiful season, b . . Aland, I. iv. 3 

bla ndish ment. 
an accent very low In b . . Isabel . . 20 

blank. 
made b of crimeful record, . . St S. Stylites 156 
As b as death in marble . . Princess, i. 175 

/' And waste it seem'd ... 11 vii. 27 
breaks the b day . . . .In Mem., vii. 12 
B, or at least with some device . Elaine . 194 
his shield is b enough ... 11 . 197 

roll'd his eyes Yet b from sleep . 11 . 816 

blanket. 
When a b wraps the day . . Vision of Sin 80 

blankly. 
Had gazed upon her b . . . Vivien . 17 

blare (s.) 
b of bugle, clamour of men . . Ode on Well. 115 

blare (verb.) 
To b its own interpretation . . Elaine . 939 

Warble, O bugle, and trumpet, b ! IV. toAlexan. 14 

blared. 
trumpet b At the barrier . . Princess, v. 474 

blaspheme. 
So they b the muse ! . . . Princess, iv. 119 

blasphemy. 
troops of devils, mad with b . . St S. Stylites 4 

blast (s.) 
burst thro' with heated b's . D. of F. Worn. 29 

The b was hard and harder . . The Goose . 50 
/' of sparkles up the flue . M. d' Arthur, Ff. 15 

like fitful b's of balm . . Gardener' 's b. 67 

Cramming all the b before it . . Locksley II. 192 
b of trumpets from the gate . . Princess, Pro. 42 
b and bray of the long horn . 11 v. 242 

b's that blow the poplar white . In Mem.,\\\\. 3 
Fiercely flics The b of North . 11 cvi. 7 

shower and storm and b . . The Daisy . 70 
To break the b of winter . To F. I). Maurice 22 
like the b of doom, Would shatter . En. .'1 rden . 770 
b's would rise and rave . . The Voyage 85 

blast (verb.) 
b The steep slate-quarry . . Golden Year 74 

blasted (adj.) 
a sunbeam by the b Pine . . Princess, vii. 181 

blasted (verb. ) 
was b with a curse . . D. of F. Worn. 103 

arc not Time's Had b him . . Aylmer's F. 602 

blasting, 
b the long quiet of my breast . Lucretius . 162 

blatant. 
strong man in a b land . . . Maud, 1. x. 63 
O b Magazines, regard me rather Ilendecasyllabics 1 7 

blaze (s.) 
shadow on the b of kings . InMcm., xcvii. 19 
b upon the waters to the east rep.; En. Arden 505 
distant b of those dull banquets . Aylmer's 
in the b of burning fire . . . Sin 
voice amid the b of flowers . . Lucretius . 101 

blase verb.) 
sun /• on the turning scythe . . Enid . 1 101 

smouldering scandal breal. and /< . Guinevere . 91 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

jB by the rushing brook . . Guinevere . 397 

B, making all the night a steam . 11 . 593 

B upon her window, sun . . The Window 176 

blazed. 
thing was b about the court . . Vivien . 593 

B the last diamond . . . Elaine . 443 
heart's sad secret b itself 
many a fire before them b 
b before the towers of Troy . 

blazo7i 
B your mottos of blessing 

blazoned (adj . ) 
From his b baldric slung . L. o/Shalott, iii. 15 
Sweat on his b chairs . . Walk.tot/ieM. 68 

tvt 7 , , { * Yon mizht have 

No b statesman he, . . i ,..,„„ > „*~ 

' ( 'won, etc. 24 

b lions o'er the imperial tent . Princess, v. 9 

Bright let it be with its b deeds . Ode on Well. 56 
giant windows' b fires . . . The Daisy . 58 

blazoned (-part, and verb.) 



Spec, of Iliad 10 
11 . 18 



W.toAlexan. 12 



. Pal. of Art 
. Godiva 
. Princess, i. 



167 
52 
220 
11 iv. 326 
InMem.jhaacvi. 8 



Elaine 



. Elaine 



Vivien 
Elai?te 



- 9 
1334 



"43 



Ode to Mem. 65 



b fair In diverse raiment 
purple b with armorial gold . 
b like Heaven and Earth 
monsters b what they were . 
prophets b on the panes 
devices b on the shield . 
be b on her tomb . 

blazoning. 

silken case with braided Us . 

bleached. 
wizard brow b on the walls . 
all their bones were b . 

bleat, 
b Of the thick-fleeced sheep . 
bird would sing, nor lamb would b Mariana in theS. 37 

bleating. 
I hear the b of the lamb . . May Qtteen, iii. 2 
a bitter b for its dam . . . Princess, iv. 373 

bled. 
B underneath his armour secretly Enid . 1351 

bleed. 

strainThe heart until it Us 'Clear-headedfriend,' etc. 5 

bleedeth. 
true breast B for both . . . To % S. .63 

blemish, 
b in a name of note . . . Vivien . 681 

blench. 
make thee somewhat b or fail 



blent. 
hatred of her weakness, b with 

bless. 

That God b thee, dear < . 
b him for the sake of him 
b me, mother, ere I go . 
God b the narrow sea . 
thy voice to soothe and b 
b thee, for thy lips are bland 
which we dare invoke to b . 
forty blest ones b him . 

blessed (verb.) v. 

blessedness. 
is there b like theirs ? . 

blessing (part. ] 
b those that look on them 
B her, praying for her (rep.) 
my son that I died b him 

blessing (s.) 
Us beyond hope or thought . 
Us which no words can find . 
Us on his kindly voice (rep.) 
be tended by My bl . 



. In Mem. Ixi. 2 

. Princess, vii. 15 

. Miller's D. 235 
. Dora 68, 92 

. Lady Clare 56 
Princess, Con. 51, 70 
. In Mem. Iv. 26 
11 cxviii. 9 
11 exxiii. 1 
. Aylmers F. 

blest. 



372 



InMejn.xxxu.. 16 



Princess, iii 
En. Arden 



Miller* sD. 

MayQueeu, 
Love and D 



■ 239 

. 880 
. 886 

237 
.238 

iii. 13 

utyZs 



God's b on the day ! 
Us on the falling out 
from Heaven, A b on her labours 
My b like a line of light 
yield all b to the name . 
crown' d with b she doth rise 
prate of the Us of Peace ? 
deaf To b or to cursing . 
a b on his wife and babes 
calling down a b on his head 
your mottos of b and prayer ! 

blest, blessed (part, and 
A thousand times I b him 
soul laments, which hath been b 
b herself, and cursed herself . 
fruit of thine by Love is b 
b them, and they wander' d on 
As if the quiet bones were b 
what may count itself as b . 
b whose lives are faithful prayers 
more b than heart can tell 
B, but for some dark 
As she looks among the b 
from a band of the b 
might as well have b her 
waving of the hands that b . 
b be the King, who hath forgiven 
to Philip that I b him too 
forty b ones bless him . 
made me for a moment b 
desires no isles of the b 



POEM. LIKE. 

Lady Clare 8 
Princess, i. 251 

r a'r "--.455 

In Mem. xvn. 10 
11 xxxvi. 3 
11 xxxbe. 5 

Maud, I. i. 21 
Enid . 1427 

En. Arden 188 
it 324 

IV, toAlexan. 12 

verb. ) 

May Queen, iii. 16 

D. ofF. Worn. 281 

The Goose . 15 

Talking O. 249 

Two Voices 424 

InMcm. xviii. 6 

ii xxvii. 9 

11 xxxii. 13 

Maud, I. xviii. 82 

83 

11 II. iv. 84 

11 III. vi. 10 

Enid . 1427 

Guinevere . 578 

11 . 627 

En. Arden . SS7 

Aylmcr's F. 372 

Coquette, ii. 6 

Wages . 8 



blew. 
breeze of a joyful dawn b free 
B his own praises in his eyes 
b His wreathed bugle-horn . 
Europa's mantle b unclasped 
glass b in, the fire b out 
cap b off, her gown b up 
full-fed with perfume, b Beyond us 
hedge broke in, the banner b 
b from the gates of the sun . 
b the swoll'n cheek of a trumpeter, 
bush-bearded Barons heaved and b 
he b and b, but none appeared 
all the bugle breezes b . 
Altho' the trumpet b so loud 
four-square to all the winds that b ! 
Last, the Prussian trumpet b 
anon The trumpets b 
heralds b Proclaiming his the prize 
a solitary trumpet b 
from the tiny pitted target b 
the wind b ; The rain of heaven . 



Arabian N's. 1 
A Character 22 
Pal. of Art 63 
ir 117 

The Goose . 49 

" - 51 

Gardener'sD. 112 
Day-Dm. . 141 
Poet's So?ig 3 
Princess, ii. 343 

11 v. 20 

11 326 

In Mem. Ixvii. 7 

11 xcv. 24 
Ode on Well. 39 



Elaine 

Guinevere . 
Aylmcr's F. 



127 
453 
499 
525 
93 
427 



blew (blossomed. ) 
A milky-bell'd amaryllis b . . The Daisy . 16 
the first roses b Enid . 1612 

blight (s.) 
B and famine, plague and earthquake Lotos-E's. 160 
b Of ancient influence and scorn . Princess, ii. 152 
like a b On my fresh hope . . Maud, I. xix. 102 
The b of low desires . . . Ayhners F. 673 
b and famine on all the lea . . The Victim 48 

blight (verb.) 
Which would b the plants . . Poet's Mind 18 
Shall sharpest pathos b us . . Love and DuiyZ-z 

blind (ad].) 
All night long on darkness b . . Adeline . 44 
parch'd and wither'd, deaf and b . Fatima . 6 
not b, who wait for day * Love thou thy land* etc. 15 
almost b, And scarce can recognise St S. Stylites 38 



this dreamer, deaf and b 

whose reason long was b 

true eyes b for such a one 

b with rage she miss'd the plank 

shall I take a thing so b 

would not make his judgment b 

not b To the faults 

were I stricken b That minute 



. Two Voices 
11 
Princess, iv. 



175 
370 
116 

..: *59 

. In Mem., iii. 13 

ti xcv. 14 

. Maud, I. xhc. 67 

- Elaine . 425 



TE.Y.YVSO.Y'S WORKS. 



he groped as b, and seemed . 
cried myself welj-nigh b 
mate is b and captain lame . 
b or Jame or sick or sound 

blind (s.) 
your shadow cross'd the b . 

blind (verb. ) 

ferns Should b my purpose . 
'o b the truth and me . 
shall not b his soul with clay 
good king means to b himself 
b's himself and all the Table Round 
Ere yet they b the stars 

blinded. 
whom passion hath not b 
blissful tears b my sight 
b With many a deep-hued 

- b with his shining eye 
b with my tears, Still strove . 
Not with b eyesight poring 

blinder. 
Nature made them b motions 

blindfold. 



POEM. LINE. 

Ay Oner's F. 821 

Grandmother 37 

Tlie Voyage 91 

11 . 93 

Miller's D. 124 

M. d' Arthur 153 

Princess, iii. 96 

11 vii. 3x2 

Viz'it-u . 632 

11 . . 633 

Tithonus . 39 

Ode to Mevt. 117 
Oriana . 23 
Eleduore . 36 
Fatima . 33 
D.c/F.lVom.ioS 
Locksley 11. 172 

Locksley II. 150 

In ill em. , lxx. 7 



the b sense of wrong 

blinding. 
Struck up against the b wall Mariana in the S. 56 
I together in b dew . . Vision of Sin 42 
raised the b bandage from his eyes Princess, i. 240 
b splendour from the sand . . 11 vii. 24 

fire is on my face, B Lucretius . 145 

blindless. 
the b casement of the room . . Enid . .71 

blindly. 
read his spirit b wise 
while now she wonders b 
The stars,' she whispers, '^run 
staggers b ere she sink ? 
mufned motions b drown 
b rush'd on all the rout . 

blindness. 
in this b of the frame 



bliss. 



Then in madness and in b 

Is of the settled b 
Above the thunder, with undying b (Fuo/ie 
Trust me, in b i shall abide . 

Me from my b of life . 
I rose up Kull of his b . 
A man had given all other b . 
central warmth diffusing b . 
iph in conclusive b 

hen all in circle drawn 
in unconjectur'd b 
A withcr'd violet is her b 
fuller gain of after b 
have 1 felt so much of b 
Make answer, .Maud my b . 
My dream! do 1 dream of £7 

■e him, My babe in b . 

My b in being 

blissful. 
here are the b downs 

sight 
down from the b skies . 
neighbourhood . 
With t, treble ringing < lear . 
1 
m through the b climes 
she bends her /' eyes 
. : of a b heir 

blistering. 
her forehead to the b sun 



Two Voices 287 
L. of Bui 

In Mem., iii. 5 
11 xvi. 14 
" xlviii. 15 

Enid . 131 5 

In Mem. xcii. 15 

Madeline . 42 
Miller's D. 233 



130 

. Pal. of Art 18 

. D.ofF. Worn. 210 

. Gardener sD. 206 

Sir L. amlQ.G. 42 

. InMemXxxxSb. 6 

11 lxxxiv. 91 

11 Ixxxviii. 21 

11 xcii. 10 

11 xcvi. 26 

11 c.wi. 4 

11 Con. 5 

. Maud, I. xviii. 57 

11 xix. 3 

. En. A rdeu . 899 

. Lucretius . 219 

. Sea Fairies 22 
. Oriana , 23 
. Lotos-E"s. . 52 
/ 'oices 430 
. S:rI..andQ.G.ii 
. Princess, IV. 10 

In Mem. Lxxxiv. 25 

'i Con. 29 

. IV.toAlcjcan. 27 



. Enid 



1364 



bloat. POEM. LINE. 

b himself, and ooze All over . . Sea Dreams 150 

bloated. 
merry i things Shoulder'd the spigot Guinevere . 265 

block (s.) 
on black b's A breadth of thunder Princess, iii. 274 
as a b Left in the quarry . . 11 vii. 215 

block (verb.) 
b and bar Your heart with system Princess, iv. 442 

block'd. 
knew mankind, And b them out . Princess, vi. 308 

blockish. 
coarse and b God of acreage . . Aylmers F. 651 

blonde. 
rosy b, and in a college gown . Princess, ii. 302 

blood. 
leave as rulers of your b 
no b upon her maiden robes . 
feel the tears of b arise . 
her b was frozen slowly 
swift b that went and came . 
my vigour, wedded to thy b . 
mix'd her ancient b with shame 
phantasms weeping tears of b 
guilt of b is at your door 
simple faith than Norman b . 
ever-shifting currents of the b 



. To the Queen 21 

. The Poet . 41 

. Oriana . 77 

L.ofShallot,\\: 30 

. Fatima . 16 

. Ginone . 158 

. The Sisters 8 

. Pal. of Art 239 

. L.C.V.deVere 43 

56 

D. of F. Worn. 133 

Principles are rained in b ' Love thou thy laud, ' etc. 80 



New Year b and bold 



blithe. 



D.ofthtO. Year 35 



B would her brother's acceptance be Maud, I. x. 



brow Striped with dark b 
morbid devil in his b 
slight she-slips of loyal b 
It was the stirring of the b . 
knows a baseness in his b 
prudent partner of his b 
stays tlie b along the veins . 
bunches red as b . 

. Uion 1 b of God ! 
Whig and Tory stir their b . 

b run quicker 
said he ' the next in b . 
We arc men of ruin'd b 
none of all our b should know 
enrich the b of the world 
b Was sprinkled on your kirtle 
was fawn's b, not brother's . 
blissful palpitations in the /' . 
what mother's b You draw from 
brethren of our b and cause . 
dabbled with the b Of his own son 
there is iron in the b 
faith in womankind Beats with his 
to fail from out my b 
crush her, like a vice of b 
in the chambers of the b 
sacred be the flesh and b 
use may lie in b and breath . 
b creeps, and the nerves prick 
Defects of doubt, and taints of b 
wilt thou rule my b 
Delayest the sorrow in my b 
branches of thy /'; Thy b, my friend 
My b an even tenor kept 
false pride in place and b 
all the years of April b . 
By b a king, at heart a clown 
all my /', a fuller wave . 
the great /Kon sinks in b 
Remade the b and changed the frame 
drip with a silent horror of b 
sweeter b by the other side . 
so warmly ran my b 
household Fury sprinkled with b 
true b spilt had in it a heat . 
soul of the n>sc went into my b 
A cry for a brother's b . 
Am 1 guilty of it ■ 
, hut b 
man of long-cuduring b 



M, d' Arthur 2x2 

Wall:, to the M. 13 

Talking O. . 57 

Two Voices 159 

11 . 3°i 

415 

=4 

64 

Sir Galahad 45 

Will U 'ater. 53 

" . no 

Lady Clare 84 

Vision of Sin 99 

Princess, i. . 8 



Day-Din. 



11. 



164 
254 

256 



» 


v. . 


394 


II 

tr 


VI. . 


55 

S3 
213 


l> u 


VII. . 


310 


In Mem. ii. 


Is 


" 


111. . 


15 


n 


x.\m. 


20 


11 


XXXIU. 


II 


» 


xliv. 


'3 


11 


xlix. 


2 


11 


liii. 


4 


» 


lviii. 


5 


tr 


lxxxii. 


14 


J II 


XXXIU. 


8 


tr 


XXXIV. 


17 


tr 


cv. 


21 


11 


CV1I1. 


12 


11 


ex. 


4 


11 


CXX1. 


12 


it 




16 


mc ir 




11 


Maud, 1. i. 


3 


11 


Mil. 


34 


•I 


.Will. 


3 


H 


MX. 


3= 
44 


11 




33 


11 


II. 1. 




11 


11. 


7! 


•I 


V. 






Well. 


-1 



32 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

To F.D.Maurice 34 
Enid 



Vivien 



Elaine 



Guinevere 

11 
En. A rden 



. 208 

• S3 2 
. 568 

1188 
1625 
1675 
1752 
1775 
■ 194 
. 406 
. 612 

• 798 
. 308 

• 375 
. 516 

. 7l6 

• 799 
- 877 

• 956 
1 126 
1249 

. 38 
. 510 
. 660 



Aylmers F. 62 

» 459 

» 597 

tr 768 

b Sea Dreams 230 

Tithonus . 55 

> The Islet . 35 

B odd ice a . 52 

The Captain 16 



The Victim 
Lucretius . 



lash all Europe into b . 
Prince's b spirted upon the scarf 
quiet night into her b . 
b Of their strong bodies 
no ; I do not mean b 
for his hurt and loss of b 
prideful sparkle in the b 
vicious quitch Of b and custom 
genial courses of his b . 
As clean as b of babes . 
my b Hath earnest in it 
practice burns into the b 
pale b of the wizard at her touch 
rising sun with heathen b 
the b Sprang to her face 
half his b burst forth . 
For twenty strokes of the b . 
far b, which dwelt at Camelot 
b ran lustier in him again 
as though you were my b 
in the fantasy than the b 
what are they ? flesh and b ? 
reverencing king's b in a bad man 
To save his b from scandal . 
down thro' all his b Drew in . 
is but one of all my b . 
kinship to the gracious b 
to flush his b with air . 
redden'd with no bandit's b 
river of b to the sick sea 
swept away The men of flesh and 
felt my b Glow with the glow 
pierces the liver and blackens the 
anger, not by b to be satiated 
Burnt in each man's b . 
scatter'd B and brains of men 
In their b, as they lay dying 
spill his b and heal the land 
the chemic labour of the b . 
all the b by Sylla shed . 
keep him from the lust of b . 
strikes through the thick b Of cattle 
lust or lusty b or provender . 
b in sight of Collatine . 
Into my heart and my b I 

bloodier. 
hands of power Were b 

bloodily. 
B flowed the Tamesa rolling . 
B, b fall the battle-axe . 

bloodless, 
b east began To quicken 
now, the b point reversed 

blood-red. 

dabbled with b-r heath . . . Maud, I. i. 2 

flames The b-r blossom of war . 11 III. vi. 53 

the b-r light of dawn . . . Elaine 1019 

bloody. 
shovell'd up into a b trench . 
raw mechanic's b thumbs 
Where the b conduit runs 
b vengeance on you both 

bloom. 
inlay Of braided b's unmown 
lovely freight Of overflowing b's 
Whence that aeiy b of thine . 

with stately # j the breathing spring The Poet . 27 
violet eyes, and all her Hebe b Gardener sD. 136 
in bud, or blade, or b may find 
slope was rich in b 
brake the wrathful b 

not for thee the glow, the b . In Mem. ii. 

every spirit's folded b . 1, xlii. 2 

sicken' d every living b . u lxxi. 7 

brake and b And meadow, . . 11 lxxxv. 3 

passion pure in snowy b . . u cviii. 11 

azure b of a crescent of sea . . Maud, I. iv. 5 



11 . 195 

» . • 2 35 
TJie Window 193 

Aylmers F. 453 



Boddicea 



Enid . . 534 
The Voyage 71 



. Audley Ct. 41 

Walk, to the M. 67 

. Vision of Sin 144 

. Princess, iv. 513 

. Arabian ?Fs 29 

. Ode to Mem. 1 7 

A deline 



Day-Din. . 206 
To E. L. . 20 
Princess, iv. 364 



POEM. LINE. 

in our sad world's best b . . The Brook . 218 
each a nest in b . . . Aylmers F. 150 

bud ever breaks into b on the tree The Islet , 32 
b profuse and cedar arches . .. Alcaics . n 

bloom (verb.) 
saw the water-lily b . . L. ofShaloit, iii. 39 
b's below the barren peak . . Lotos-E's. . 145 
b's the garden that I love . . Garde?ier , s D. 34 
if it can it there may b . . .In Mem. viii. 23 
from marge to marge shall b . ir xlv. 7 

b to profit, otherwhere ... u lxxxi. 12 

hearts are warm'd and faces b . 11 Con. 82 



low and b foliage 

maid-of-honour b fair 
Cupid-boys of b hue 
her b mantle torn . 



bloomed. 



blooming. 



. Arabian N's. 13 

. Day-Dm. . 48 

tr _. 278 

. Princess, vi. 129 

blossom (s.) 
Bursts into b in his sight . . Fatima . 35 
prest the b of his lips to mine . CEnone . 76 

The b on the blackthorn . . May Queen, ii. 8 

we bear b of the dead l Love thou thy land,' etc. 94 



b fades, and they that loved 

maiden b's of her teens 

In full and kindly b 

the b of the flying terms 

the pouted b of her lips 

Fruit, b, viand, amber wine 

my babe, my b, ah my child 

my little b at nvy feet . 

the b wavering fell 

The tender b flutter down 

flames The blood-red b of war 

With here a b sailing 

rosy b in hot ravine 

like a b vermeil-white 

will strike my b dead 

look'd a paradise Of b 

as Nature packs Her b 

Gather'd the b that rebloom'd 

Into a land all sun and b 

Scatter the b under her feet ! 

tumble the b, the mad little tits ! 



Walk, to the M. 49 

. Talking O. 79 

. Will Water. 24 

Princess, Pro. 163 

11 295 

ir iv. 17 

n v. 79 

1. u 97 

11 vi. 64 

. In Mem. c. 2 

. Maud, III. vi. 53 

. The Brook . 56 

. The Daisy . 

. Enid . 

. Elaine 

. Guinevere 

. En. A rden 

. Aylmers F. 1^2, 

. Sea Dreams 99 

. W. to A lexan. 9 

. The Window 152 



364 
966 

387 
179 



blossom (verb.) 

A little garden b .... Amphion . 104 

buds and b's like the rest . . In Mem. cxiv. 20 

b in purple and red . . . Maud, I. xxii. 74 

wilderness shall b as the rose . Aylmer's E. 649 

blossom-ball. 

Made b-b or daisy-chain . . Aylmer's F. 87 

blossom-belt. 
garden's glowing b-b's . . . Princess, v. 353 

blossom d (adj.) 
white robe like a b branch . . Princess, iv. 161 
On the b gable-ends . . . Maud, I. vi. . 9 

blossom' d (verb. ) 
b up From out a common vein . Princess, ii. 292 
wreath of March has b . . To F. D. Maurice 43 
branch'd And b in the zenith . En. Arden . 587 

blossoju-dust. 
Foot-gilt with all the b-d . . Vivien . 131 

like the working bee in b-d . . En. A rden . 363 

blossom-fragrant. 
b-fs\ipt the heavy dews . . Princess, v. 233 

blossoming. 
the happy b shore . . . Sea Fairies 8 

blot (s.) 

Tis the b upon the brain . . Maud, II. iv. 60 

a throne, And blackens every b . Idylls, Ded. 27 

text that looks a little b . . Vivien . 521 

Far off, a b upon the stream . Elaine 1383 

A b in heaven, the Raven . . Guinevere . 132 

With b's of it about them . . Aylmer's F. C20 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



33 



blot (verb.) poem. line. 
£ out the slope of sea . . . Princess, vii. 23 

blotted. 
bis brush, and b out the bird . Vivien . 328 

blow (s.) 

O cursed hand I O cursed b ! . Oriana . 82 

iron to be shaped with b's . . Princess, v. 200 

elench'd his purpose like a b 1 . n . 296 

The large b's rain'd, as here . . " _. 490 

own b's they hurt themselves . n vi. 33 

brea>ts the b's of circumstance . In Mem. lxiii. 7 

in the present broke the b tr lxxxiv. 56 
shocks of Chance — The b's of Death " xciv. 43 

must have life for a b . . . Maud, II. i. 27 

red life spilt for a private b . . tr v. 93 

Back to France with countless b's Ode on Well, m 

mightful hand striking great b's . Enid . . 95 

So often and with such b's . if . 564 

than a life of b's ! . . Vivien . 719 

slain his brother at a b . . . Elaine . 42 

hardly won with bruise and b . <r 1*59 

like one that had received a b . Sen Dreams 157 

Phantom sound of b's descending. Boadicea . 25 

knife uprising toward the b . . The Victim 71 

blow (to breathe, etc. ) 
loud the Norland whirlwinds b . Oriana . 6 
April nights began to b . . . Miller's D. 106 
m deep gardens, b . . Fatima . 24 
the wind b's the foam . . . QZnonc . 61 
the summer airs b cool . . . May Queen, ii. 27 

I re softly round the open . To J. S. . 1 
Nor ever wind 4's loudly . M.d' Arthur 261 

light as any wind that b's . . Talking O. . 129 
south-breeze around thee b . . 11 . 271 

from all the compass shift and b . Godiva . 33 
B, flute, and stir the stiff-set sprigs Amphion . 63 
Low, low, breathe and b . . Princess, ii. 458 
B him again to me 11 . 462 

B, bugle, b, set the wild echoes (rep.) 11 iii. . 352 
A moment, while the trumpets b . " iv. . 558 

make them pipes whereon to b . InA/cm.xxi. 4 
blasts that b the poplar white . rr Ixxi. 3 

fan my brows and l> The fever . 11 Ixxxv. 8 

A fresh association b tr c. 18 

all the breeze of Fancy b's . . 11 exxi. 17 

mournful martial music b . . Ode onll'tll. 17 
gave order to let t> Mis horns . Enid . . 152 

the trumpet b: They summon me Guinevere 565 
sacrifices thro' the world . Ay/mer's F. 758 
And the wind did b The Captain 34 

Lady, let the trumpets/) 'Lady, let the trumpets,' etc. 5 
"Wet west wind how you b, you bl The Window 119 
B then, b, and when I am gone . 11 . 122 

blow (to blossom.) 
Round thee b, self-pleached deep . A Dirge . 29 

; where the hlies b . . L.o/Shalott,\. 7 

I lint sweet cuckoo-flowers . May Queen, i. 30 

all the flowers that b 11 iii. 7 

b's by every winding creek . . Lotos-Es . 146 

While the gold-lily b's . . . Ed. Morris 146 

saw Your own Olivia b . . . Talking O. . 76 

all about the thorn will b . . Two Voices 59 

wildwced-flowcr that simply b's . Day-Dm. . 202 

>n its mountain . . . Amphion . 94 

violet of a legend i . . . Will Water. 147 

the time when lilies b . . . Lady Clare 1 

in due time the woodbine b's . In Mem. civ. 7 

hen roots the violets b . . n cxiv. 4 

likes, Myriads b together . . Maud, I. xii. 8 

lily and rose That J by night . 11 II. v. 75 

blowing. 

deep myrrh-thickets b round . Arabian N's 104 

winds were b, waters flowing . Oriana . 14 

Aloud the hollow bugle b . .11 . .17 

wind is /' in turret and tree (rep.) . The Sisters 3 

warm airs lull us, b lowly . . Lotos-Es . 134 
a bark that, b forward, bore . M.d' Arthur, 

wind b over meadowy holms . Ed. Morris 95 

b havenward With silks . . Golden Year 44 



B a noise of tongues and deeds 
soften'd airs that b steal 
Summer woods, about them b 
B the ringlet from the braid . 
b bosks of wilderness 
horns of Elfland faintly b ! . 
No joy the b season gives 
O'er the b ships, Over b seas 
south-west that b Bala lake . 
Fear not, isle of b woodland . 
winds were roaring and b 
Old Year roaring and b And New Y 



. Two Voices . 206 
" . 406 

. L. of Burleigh 19 
Sir L.andQ.G. 39 
. Prittcess, i. . no 
n iii. .357 
In Mem. xxx viii. 5 
. Maud, I.xvii. 12 
. Enid . *in 

. Boadicea . 38 
. 1865-1866 . 3 
eaxb it . 12 



blown (adj.) 
petals from b roses . . . Lotos-E's . 47 

set His Briton in b seas . . Ode on Well. 153 

blazon (part, and verb, breathed, etc.) 

b from his silver tongue . . The Poet . 13 

yellow Lotos-dust is b . . . Lotos-Es . 149 

trumpets b for wars . . . D. o/F. Worn. 20 

Death is b in every wind . . To J. S. . 46 

caught And b across the walk . Gardener 1 sD. 124 

billow, b against, Falls back. . Two Voices 316 

b about the foliage underneath . Princess, iii. 105 

b to inmost north ti iv. 412 

rooks are b about the skies, . . In Mem. xv. 4 

b about the desert dust ... 11 Iv. 19 

harp be touched, nor flute be b ti civ. 22 

far-off sail is b by the breeze . Maud, I. iv. 4 

musk of the roses b , • • 11 xxii. 6 

b the lake beyond his limit . . The Daisy . 71 

after trumpet />, Spake to the lady Enid . . 551 

hair b about the serious face . Elaine . 391 

a rumour wildly b about . . Guinevere . 151 

dewy hair b back like flame . . 11 282 

b by baffling winds . . . En. Arden 629 

b across her ghostly wall . . 11 662 

blown (blossom'd. ) 
your branching limes have b L. C. V. de Vere 27 

blo7vzcd. 
Huge women b with health. . Princess, iv. 260 

blue (adj.) 
less aerially b .... Margaret . 51 

blue (s.) 

citron-shadows in the b . . . Arabian N's. 15 

glistening to the breezy b . . Miller's D. . 61 

Shook in the stedfast b . .J). o/F. Worn. 56 

yon sun prospers in the b . . Blackbird . 22 
navies grappling in the central b . Locksley II. 124 

breathed beneath the Syrian b . In Mem. Ii. 12 

little speedwell's darling b . 11 lxxxii. zo 

drown'd in yonder living b . . 11 cxiv. 7 

sweet the vapour-braided b . . The Letters 42 

like a shoaling sea the lovely b . Enid . 1536 

B's and reds They talk'd of: b's were Aylmer's F. 251 

star of morning in their b . . 11 692 

bluebell. 
merry b rings To the mosses . Adeline . 34 

frail b pecreth over . . . A Dirge . 37 

blue-eyed. 
A Prince I was, b-e Princess, i. 1 

W«if(adj.) 
B Harry broke into the spence . Talking O. . 47 

bluff {s.) 
round the hills from b to b . . Golden Year 76 
shadowing b that made the banks In Mem. cii. 21 

blunder 1 d. 

knew Some one had b . . . Lt. Brigade 12 

blunt (adj.) 
So b in memory .... Gardener' sD, 51 

/' and stupid at the heart, . . Fuid . 15^5 

Besought me to be plain and b . Elaine 1293 

Hunt (verb.) 
discourtesy To b or break her passion Elaine . 969 





34 



CONCORDANCE TO 



blurred (adj.) poem. line. 
patched and b and lustreless . Enid . . 649 

blurr*d (verb. ) 
b the splendour of the sun . . In Mem., lxxi. 8 
B by the creeping mist . . . Guinevere . 5 

blush (s.) 
all Suffused with b'es . . Gardener sD. 151 

b is fixed upon her cheek . . Day-Din. . 52 
A flying charm of b'es . . . Princess, ii. 408 
pardon, sweet Melissa, for a b? . 11 iii. 50 
b and smile, a medicine in themselves 11 vii. 47 
sick man forgot her simple b . Elaine . 860 



blush (verb.) 



. L. of Burleigh 63 

. Princess, iii. 51 

11 ; _ 52 

. Maud, I. xvii. 11 

it . 16 

. Vivien . 331 

Hendecasyllabics 18 



. Princess, iii. 84 
. Maud, I. viii. 6 
. T/ie Brook . 214 
. Elaine . 960 

. 7^ Ringlet 36 



Madeline 



45 



with shame she 3Vj 
Said Cyril : ' Pale one, 5 again 
better <£ our lives away . 
Pass and b the news 
i? it thro' the West (rep.) 
should have seen him b 
b to belaud myself a moment 
blush 1 d. 
and how she b again 
suddenly, sweetly, strangely b 
Katie laugh'd, and laughing b 
She neither b nor shook 
She b a rosy red . 

blusliest. 
Again thou b angerly . 

blushing (adj. and part.) 
On a b mission to me . . . Maud, I. xxi. 
apple-blossom, b for a boon . 
chastely down, B upon them b 

blushing (s. ) 
how pretty Her b was . 

bluster. 
B the winds and tides . 
'tis well that I should b I 
b into stormy sobs 

blustering. 
b I know not what Of insolence 

Boddicea. 
B, standing loftily charioted 

Boanerges. 
Our B with his threats of doom . Sea Dreams 243 

board (table.) 
This was cast upon the b . . 
cast the golden fruit upon the b . 
pledge her silent at the b 
at a b with tome and paper . 
subscribed, We enter'd on the b's . 
on the b the fluttering urn 
Arrange the b and brim the glass . 
boil'd the flesh, and spread the b . 
knife's haft hard against the b 
by main violence to the b 
silver on the burnish'd b 

hoard (deck of ship.) 
I leap on b ; no helmsman steers . Sir Galahad 39 
like her? so they said on b . . The Brook \. 223 
a year On b a merchantman . . En. Ardeu . 53 

board (for a game.) 
pushes us off from the b . . Maud, I. iv. 27 



The Brook . 90 
Vivien . 591 

Princess, iii. 85 

D. of P. Worn. 38 
Locksley H. 63 
Elaine 1061 

Princess, v. 386 



Boddicea. 



3> 70 



Ch.uone 


77 


!' 


222 


Will Water. 


2S 


Princess, ii. 


18 


ir 


6o 


In Mem. xciv. 8 


H CVl 


. 16 


Enid . 


W 


tr 


[448 


IT 


[S02 


En. Ardeu . 


743 



board (floor." 
Pattering over the Us . 



Grandmother 79 



boast (s. ) 
shame the b so often made * Love iJwuthy land* etc. 71 
bring her babe, and make her b . In Mem.xxxix.26 

boast (verb.) 

you know it — I will not b . . Princess, iv. 334 

b, ( Behold the man that loved . In Mem. i. . 14 

clipt palm of which they b ; . . TJie Daisy . 26 

b That they would slay you . , Enid . . 922 

boastful. 

ruled the hour, Tho* seeming b . Aylmer*s F. 195 



boat. POEM. LINE, 

leaping lightly from the b . . Arabian XT' s. 92 

Down she came and found a b . L.ofShalott f iv. 6 

just alighted from the b . . AudleyCt. . 6 

B, island, ruins of a castle . . Ed. Morris 6 

sings in his b on the bay . 'Break, break,' etc. 8 

as when a b Tacks . . . Princess, ii. 168 

b's and bridges for the use of men 11 vi. 31 

b is drawn upon the shore . . In Mem. cxx. 6 

market b is on the stream . u -13 

There found a little b . . . Vivien . 47 

the b Drave with a sudden wind 11 -49 

two cities in a thousand b's . . 11 .411 

great river in the boatman's b . Elaine 1032 

rusty fluke, and b's updrawn . En. Arden . 18 

To purchase his own b . n -47 

purchased his own b 11 -58 

sell the b — and yet he loved her . ir . 134 

horse he drove, the b he sold . if . 610 

b that bears the hope of life ir . 831 

boated, 

b over, ran My craft aground . Ed. Morris 108 

They b and they cricketed . . Princess,Pro. 159 



turn away The b-h 

as the b-h wound along 



boat-Jiead. 



. Arabian IT s. 25 
L. ofS/ialott,\v. 24 



The Daisy . 44 



The Sisters 34 
Walk, to the M. 45 
StS.Stylites 28 



Elaine 



Enid 



411 
460 
842 
917 



54i 



boatman. 
great river in a b's hut . . . Elaine, 278, 1032 
make the boatmen fishing-nets . En. Arden . 816 

boatswain. 

China-bound, And wanting yet a b En. Arden . 123 

Boboli. 
walks in B's ducal bowers 

bode. 
there that night they b . 
And Lancelot b a little 
There b the night . 
b among them yet a little space 

bodied, 
b forth the second whole ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 66 

bodily. 
were she the prize of b force 

body. 
wrapt his b in the sheet 
A b slight and round 
strong and hale of b then 
touch my b and be heal'd 
bodies and the bones of those 
lies the b of Ellen Adair 
her b, drest In the dress 
grovell'd on my b . 
and to dance Its b 
return To where the b sits 
cheeks drop in ; the b bows . 
Bare of the />, might it last . 
long since a b was found 
All this dead b of hate . 
blood Of their strong bodies, flowing 
let the bodies lie, but bound 
being weak in b said no more 
long-buried b of the king 
adulteries That saturate soul with t 
b half flung forward in pursuit 
thro' the fire Bodies, but souls 
There lay the sweet little b . 
I look'd at the still little b . 
cast his b, and on we swept 
phantom bodies of horses and men Boddicea 
that break B toward death . 

boggle. 
Theer wur a b in it 

boil. 
hell beneath Made me b over 

boil'd. 
burn'd in fire, or b in oil 
b the flesh, and spread the board 



Day-Dm. 


109 


Ed. Gray 2 


7,35 


L. of Burleigh 98 


Princess, vi. 


12 


11 


122 


In Mem. xii. 


19 


II XXXV. 


3 


11 xlii. 


6 


Maud, I. i. 


5 


11 xix. 


97 


, Enid 


569 


11 . 


945 


Elaiiie 


835 


Ay liners F. 


3 


11 


377 


ii 


587 


ir 


672 


Grandmother 61 


11 


66 


TJie Voyage 


80 


Boddicea 


27 


Lucretius . 


154 


N. Farmer 


30 



StS.Stylites 168 

StS.Stylites 51 
Enid . . 391 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



bold. 
tnorc pure and b and just 
wide in soul and b of tongue 
You are b indeed . 
With what divine affections b 
b to dwell On doubts 
Among the wise and b . 
Am I so b, and could I so 
tho' keen and b and soldierly 

bolder. 
me this knowledge b made . 
no b than a beaten hound 

boldest. 
drawn of fairest Or b since . 



POEM. LINE. 

. To J. S. . 31 
. Two Voices . 124 
. Princess, iii. 233 
. In Mem. xciii. 2 
11 xciv. 29 
. Ode on Well. 52 
. Enid . . 102 
. Aylmer's F. 192 



. To J. S. 

. Etiid . 



5 
910 



Ode to Mem. 90 



boldly. 

for such a face had b died . . D. ofF. Worn. 98 

ired on the liberties . . Princess, , 1. 202 

I offer b: we will seat you . . 11 iii. 143 

£ they rode and will . . . Lt. Brigade 23 
morning of farewell Brightly and* En. Arden 183 

boldness. 

licensed b gather force . . . IttAfem.aaL 13 

bole. 

About my ' Riant b' . . . Talking O. 136 

double in and out the b's . . Princess, iv. 243 

rings of Spring In every b . . » v. 228 

bolt. 

b's are hurled Far below them . Lotos-E*s. . 156 

Appealing to the b's of Heaven . Princess, iv. 353 

out of heaven a b . . . . Vivien . 783 

bond 

dwarf'd or godlike, b or free . Princess, vii. 244 

bond (restraint, etc.) 
force in b's that might endure 
obedience is the b of rule 

iaclcd from b's of sense 
his dearest b is this 
broke the b of dying use 
some strong b which is to be 
our b Had best be loosed 
howling forced them into b's 
as you know, save by the b . 

• .; the b of like to like 
•_ril<:<l From b's or death . 

>t the b of man and wife 
I- iv not the b of man and wife 
b's that so defame me . 
Thou broke all b's of courtesy 
breaks all b's but ours . 
broke the l> which the)- desired 
all her b's Cracked 

bond legal agreement.) 
my will Scal'd nut the b . . Princess, v. 389 
dissolve the precious seal on a b . Maud, 1. xix. 45 

bondslave. 
Your bride, your b ! 

bondsman. 
My will is b to the dark 

bone. 
mighty b's of ancient men 

>re my b's . 
To feed thy b's with lime 
bodies and the b's of those . 
\ ire b's, and what of that ? 
Prom the fashion of your b's 
the first b's of Time . . . Princess, Pro. 15 
blanching b's of men . . n ii. 182 
this epitaph above my b's . . 11 190 

t bulk ... 11 iii. 277 

As these rude b's to us . . . 11 279 

spilt our b's in the flood . . 11 iv. 511 

ire wrapt ablut the b's . In Mem. ii. 4 

As if the quiet b's were blest . n xviii. 6 

grins on a pile of children's Us . Maud, I. i. 46 
b's arc shaken with pain . . 11 II. v. 5 
b's for his o'crgrown whelp to crack 11 55 



Pal. 0/ Art 134 
M .d' Arthur 94 


! "ices 


236 


Princess, vii. 


261 


In Mem. civ. 


12 


" CXV. 


16 


'.' 


191 


Elaine 


594 
•36 


11 


241 


11 


277 
1185 


11 


1200 


Aylmer's F. 


1411 
3 2 3 


Lucretius . 


425 

778 

37 



. Princess, iv. 521 

. /;; Mem. iv. 2 

. M. d' Arthur 47 
. StS.Slylites 193 
. Two Voices 326 
. Day-Dm. . 109 
. Vision 0/ Sin 175 



Echo round his b's for evermore 

because his b's are laid by thine 

apt at arms and big of b 

helmet thro', and bit the b . 

good b Seems to be pluck'd at 

he fears To lose his b 

all their b's were bleach'd 

green Christmas crams with weary b' 

b's long laid within the grave 

bonnet. 
Or the frock and gipsy b 

Bonny Doon. 
a random bar of B D . 



To the Queen 
The Epic . 



<7 
28 
38 

A udley Ct. 58 
StS.Stylites 173 
Locksley H. 172 
A mphion . 82 
Will Water. 195 
Vision of Sin 117 
Princess, Pro. 35 
11 .43 

11 . IPO 

11 ii. 16 

11 iii. 198 

11 v. 1 36 



book. 
this poor b of song 
his King Arthur, some twelve b's 
twelve b's of mine Were faint 
old Sir Robert's pride, His b's 
grow between me and my b . 
poring over miserable b's 
prose O'er b's of travell'd seamen 
Xor yet the fear of little b's 
the priest, above his b Leering 
miracle of women,' said the b 
kept the b and had my finger 
brought My b to mind . 
on lattice edges lay Or b or lute 
can he not read — no b's ? 
brooding turn The b of scorn 
boys Brake on us at our b's . 
to and fro With b's, with flowers 
cramm'd with theories out of b's . " Con. 35 

bind a b, may line a box . InMcmAxxvi. 6 
One lesson from one b ... 11 Ixxviii. 14 
1 liscussed the b's to love or hate . 11 lxxxviii. 34 
With festal cheer, With b's . . 11 cvi. 22 

sits by her music and b's . . Maud, I.xiv. 13 
in the little /> you lent me . . The Daisy . 99 
Read but one b, and ever reading Vivien . 472 

his b came down to me . . 11 . 500 

have the b: the charm is written 11 502 

J 'ou read the b (rep.) . . .11 . 517-526 
bought them needful b's . . En. Arden . 329 
desperately seized the holy B . 11 . 491 

closed the B and slept . 11 . 495 

swear upon the b Not to reveal . 11 . 839 

on the/'. Andonthe^, half-frighted 11 . 843 

After his b's 1 1 flush his blood . Aylmer's F. 459 
Then to his b's again ... 11 . 460 

'Show me the VsV . . . Sea Dreams 144 
' The b's! the b's! but he, he could not 11 . 146 
great B's (see Daniel seven and ten) n . 148 

in the B, little Annie, the message Grandmother 96 

bookless. 
flight from out your b wilds . . Princess, ii. 42 

boom (s.) 
Crashing went the b The Captain 44 

boom (verb.) 
captain's-car has heard them b . Ode on Well. 65 
b and blanch on the precipices . Boiidicea . 76 

boometh. 
At eve the beetle b Claribel . 9 

boon (adj.) 
all the b companions of the Earl . Enid . 1327 

boon (s.) 
iSfrom me, From me, Heaven's Queen Olnone . 124 
At last she begg'd a b . . . Princess, i. . 145 
apple-blossom, flushing for a b . The Brook . 90 
'I o what request for what strange b Vivien .11; 
B, yes there was a b . . » . .136 
ask your />, for b I owe you . . " . .155 
take this /' so strange . . .11 . .159 
Whenevei k'd tius very b 11 . . 172 
Yield my /', Till which I scarce .11.. 201 
never ask some other b ? . . » . . 225 
feels no heart to ask another b 232 



POEM. LINE. 

Ode to Well. 12 
141 



Enid 



Elaine 

s Coquette, iii 

Lucretius . 



573 
1407 
1410 
44 
14 
252 



Maud, I. xx. ig 



The Brook 



36 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

ever be too curious for a b . . Vivie?i . 336 

Lo, there my b I What other? v 344 

snare her royal fancy with a b . Elaine . 72 

tale of diamonds for his destined b w . .92 

boot. 
Leisurely tapping a glossy b . Maud, I. xiii. 19 

booth. 
sport and song in b and tent . . In Mem. xcvii. 28 

bootless. 
proxy-wedded with a b calf . . Princess, i. . 33 

booty. 
chance of b from the morning's raid Enid . 1413 

border (adj.) 
A b fantasy of branch and flower . Elaine . 11 

border (s.) 

broaden' d on the Us of the dark D.ofF. Worn. 265 

on the b's of a territory . . . Enid . . 34 

on the b of her couch they sat . Guinevere . 100 

From out the b's of the morn . On a Mourner 24 

bordered. 
yellow down B with palm . . Loios-Es . 22 

bore (verb, to burrow.) 
hedgehog underneath the plaintain b's Ay Inzer 3 sF. 850 

bore (pret. of bear.) 
winds which b Them earthward . The Poet . 17 
broad stream b her far away L. of Shalott, iv. 17 
b a lady from a leaguer' d town . D. of P. Worn. 47 
b him to a chapel nigh the field . M. d" Arthur 8 
b him thro' the place of tombs . 11 . 175 

blowing forward, b King Arthur . ii Ep. 21 

in her bosom b the baby, Sleep . Gardener* sD. 263 
Dora b them, meekly . . . Dora . . 34 
b this better at the first . . . SiS.Styliies 27 
Not this alone I b * . 11 60 

she Not less thro' all b up . Godiva . 62 

B and forbore, and did not tire . Two Voices 218 
down by smoky Paul's they b . Will Water. 141 
Three fair children first she b him . L,, ofBtirleigh 87 
B to earth her body, drest . ?t 98 

Alight-green tuft of plumes she b SirL. audQ. G. 26 
b her back into the tent . . Princess, iv. 175 

b up in part from ancient love . u . 284 

b up in hope she would be known tr . 301 

b down a Prince, And Cyril, one. . it v. 507 

me they b up the broad stairs . 11 vi. 353 

b thee where I could not see . In Mem. xxii. 17 

thus he b without abuse . . ti ex. 21 

ghost of one who b your name . The Brook . 219 
b The means of goodly welcome . Enid . . 386 
by her that b her understood n 511 

b Down by the length of lance . it . 1311 

b him to the naked hall of Doom . ti . 1418 

b a knight of old repute to the earth Elaine . 491 

b the prize and could not find ir 626 

b her swooning to her tower 11 . 963 

reverently they b her into hall . 11 . 1259 

B him another son, a sickly one . En.Arden . 109 
grieving held his will, and b it thro* m . 167 

weight of the dead leaf b it down . tr . 679 

Enoch b his weakness cheerfully . it . 828 

yet she b it : yet her cheek . . Aylmer*s P. 505 
loneliness in grief B down in flood tr . 633 

her own people b along the nave . 11 . 812 

boundless deep B thro' the cave . Sea Dreams . 90 
motion of the great deep b me on . ?r . 107 

b the blade of Liberty . . , The Voyage 72 

b but little game in hand . . The Victim 44 

boring* 
B a little auger-hole in fear . 



Godiva 



born. 

in a golden clime was b . . The Poet . 1 

in one hamlet b and bred . . Circumstance 8 

wert b, on a summer morn . . Eleanore . 7 

features of her child Ere it is b . CEnone . 249 

never child be b of me ir . 250 



POEM. LINE. 

was b Scorn of herself . . . Pal. of Art 230 
call me before the day is <5 . May Queen, ii. 49 

a thousand times I would be b D. of P. Worn. 204 
never b into the earth . . . To J. S. .32 
B out of everything I heard . Gardener s D. 65 

there was b a boy To William . Dora . . 46 
conceived and b in sin . . . StS. Stylites 120 
b In tea-cup times of hood . . Talking O. . 62 
b too late : the fair new forms . Golden Year 15 
Truth is b Beyond the polar gleam Two Voices 181 
thought and time be b again . Day-Din. . 70 

serving-man As any, b of woman . Will Water. 152 
I'm a beggar b (rep.) . . . Lady Clare 37 
you are not the heiress b (rep.) . 11 -83 

honour Unto which she was not b L. of Burleigh 80 
Every moment one is b . Vision of Sin, 98, 122 

you were b for something great . Princess, iv. 288 
Ere you were b to vex us? . . it vi. 231 

linnet b within the cage . In Mem. xxvii. 3 

light that shone when Hope was b it xxx. 32 
brief lays, of Sorrow b tr xlvii. 1 

dark house where she was b . . 11 lix. 12 

the day when he was b it cvi. 1 

b of love, the vague desire . . ir cix. 19 

I was b to other things . . 11 cxix. 12 

Result in man, be b and think . if Con. 126 
far better to be b To labour . Maud, I. xviii. 33 
the day when Maud was b . . it xix. 40 

Rivulet, b at the Hall . . 11 xxi. 8 
a juggle b of the brain? . . ti II. ii. 42 
maggot b in an empty head 11 v. 38 
three dead wolves of woman b . Enid . . 943 
creatures gently b But into bad hands it . 1040 
anger b Of your misfaith . . Vivien . 3S1 
but b of sickness, could not live . Elaine . 876 
B to the glory of thy name . . ti 1363 
that no child is b of thee . . Guinevere . 421 
children b of thee are sword it . 422 
when her child was b . . En. Arden . 518 
far-off seven happy years were b . 11 . 687 
B of a village girl, carpenter's son Ayhjier's P. 668 
Thy better b unhappily from thee 11 . 675 
A city clerk, but gently b . . Sea Dreams 1 
dead before he was b (rep.) . . Grandmother 59 
naw, naw, tha was not b then . N. Parmer . 29 
that dark world where I was b . Tithonus . 33 
fair child betwixt them b . . On a Mourner 25 

borne (carried.) 
Adown the Tigris I was b . . Arabian N's. 6 
off her shoulder backward b . . Pal. of Art 118 
many a merry wind was b . . Day-Dm. . 178 
on my goodly charger b . . Sir Galahad 49 
bear me with thee, smoothly £ ' Move eastward,' etc. 9 
ovation round Their statues, b aloft Princess, vi. 51 
B down by gladness so complete . InMem.-xxxW. 10 
came b with bier and pall . . 11 lxxxiv. 1 

to glorious burial slowly b . . Ode on Well. 193 
wild Limours, B on a black horse Enid . 1307 

Enoch lives : that is b in on me . En. Arden . 318 
b it with me all these years . 11 . 896 

borne (endured.) 

1 have b Rain, wind, frost . .StS, Stylites 15 
think that I have b as much it 91 
That a calamity hard to be b ? . Maud, I. xiii. 3 
shame The woman should have b . Aylmer*s P. 356 

borough. 
neighbouring b with their Institute Princess, Pro. 5 

borrowed. 
cap of Tyrol b from the hall . . Princess iv. 578 
B a glass, but all in vain . . En. Arden 239 

Bos. 
thundering shores of Bude and B Guinevere . 289 

bosk. 
blowing b's of wilderness . . Princess,!, no 

boskage. 
the sombre b of the wood 



D. of P. Worn. 243 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



bosom. POEM. line. 

b's prcst To little harps of gold . Sea Fairies 3 
From brow and b slowly down MariauaintheS.i\ 
rising, from her b drew ir 61 

Upon her balmy b Miller's D. 183 

From her warm brows and b . CEnone . 173 

from out the A of the lake . . M. a" Arthur 30 
in her b bore the baby, Sleep Gardener s D . 263 
about thy neck And on thy b Love and Duty 42 
li shaken with a sudden storm . Locksley II. 27 
I will pluck it from my b . . tr 66 

shut Within the b of the rose 1 . Day-Dm. . 204 
I will not vex my b . . . Amphion . 102 
of the year That in my b lies . St Agnes' Eve 12 
New lifeblood warm the b . . Will Water. 22 
sun their milky b's on the thatch . Princess, ii. 88 
erring pearl Lost in her b . . 11 iv. 45 

lay me on her b .... it 88 

over brow And cheek and b brake 11 364 

The sacred mother's 6, panting . 11 vi. 132 
hid her b with it . . . it 197 

slips into the b of the lake . . it vii. 172 
slip Inf) my b and be lost . . 11 174 

The b with long sighs labour'd . " _ 210 

Slide from the b of the stars . . In Mem. xvii. 16 
heart Danced in his b . Enid . . 505 
beard Across her neck and b . Vivien . 106 

to her meek and modest b prest . Aylmcr's F. 416 
fondled on her lap, Warmed at her b t n 687 

b beating with a heart renew'd . Tithonus . 36 

bosom-friend. 
My l-f and half of life . . . In Mem. Ivui. 3 

boss. 
the silver b Of her own halo's . The Voyage 31 

boss'd. 
l> with lengths Of classic frieze . Princess, ii. 10 

Botanic. 
They read B Treatises . 

bottom (adj.) 
b agates seen to wave . 

bottom s. ) 
pierce Beyond the /' of his eye 
Tho' anchor' d to the b . 
made a plunge To the b 
kill'd In such a b . 

bough. 
beneath the dome Of hollow b's . 
garlanding the gnarled b's 
thick in ... 

ath thy b's. 
iili thy b's 
till thy b's discern The front . 
■ I gain'd 
holly b's Entwine . 
wood with thorny b's 
.ky with (lying b's . 
the garden 6 shall sway 
broke The lithe reluctant lis 
arm, which, like the pliant b 

bought. 
have b A mansion incorruptible . 
Bt what is it In: cannot buy? 
b the farm we tenanted before 

id sold had b them bread . 
B Annie goods ami stores 
/' them needful books . 

int monsters fir the market 

it gave you's b and sold 

boulder. 
a glen, gray b and black tarn 

bound (adj.) 

j: fii the Hall I am sure 

foray, rolling eyes of prey 
latter he of life 
' Was he so b, poor soul?' 



Amphion . 77 
Princess, li. 306 



. A Character 6 

. Princess, iv. 238 

. En. Arden . yjj 

. Aylmcr's F. 254 

. Arabian N's. 42 
. (Enoue . 99 

209 

Talking O. 36-156 
it . 100 

. Princess, iv. 171 

. lu Mem. xxix. 9 

11 lxviii. 6 

ti lxxi 24 

11 c. 1 

. En. Arden . 378 

. Sea Dreams 278 



Deserted If. 
Maud, I. x. 
The llrook . 

I '.11 id . 
Eii. Arden . 



The Ringlet 



Elaine 



37 



Maud, I. x. 25 
Enid . 1387 
Sea Dreams 147 

ti . 165 



I'OEM. LINE. 

To the Queen 32 
. Ulysses . 32 
■ Two Voices 1^5 
. Princess, iv. 518 
InMcm. lxxxvi. 34 
Con. 124 



bound 1 limit. ] 
make The b's of freedom wider 
utmost b of human thought, 
mete the b's of hate and love 1 

have dared to break our I 
music in the b's of law . 
strike his being into b's . 
shun to break those b's of courtesy Elaine 1214 

bound (spring. ) 
but a single b, and with a sweep . Enid . 1575 

bound (pret and part of bind. ) 
wild winds b within their cell . Mariana . 54 

Two lives fast b in one . . . Circumstance 5 
In front they b the sheaves . . Pal. 0/ Art 78 
earth is every way B by gold chains M. d' Arthur 253 
Art thou so b l'o men . 
only to one engine b 
you think me b In some sort 
was he b to speak ? 
/ b by precontract Your bride 
links that b Thy changes 
Had b us one to the other 
b the suits Of armour on their horses Enid 
They l> to vows of holy chastity ! 
// Her token on his helmet 
free love will not be b . 
' Free love, so /', were freest ' 
I am b: you have my promise 
I am always b to you 
weeping answer'd ' I am b' . 
she knew that she was b 
B in an immemorial intimacy 
nor by plight or broken ring B 
beside his chariot b his own . 
b her in his rosy band . 

boundary. 
Close at the b of the liberties 

bounded, 
b in a shallower brain . 
a spirit b and poor . 

bounteously, 
b made, And yet so finely 

bounty. 
God only thro' his b 
Here he lives in state and b . 
Heav'n in lavish b moulded . 

bourg. 
rustic cackle of your b . 
take the rustic murmur of their b 

bourn. 
rang Beyond the b of sunset 

bow (s. ) 
great b shall waver fn the sun 
every dew-drop paints a b 

benv (part of a ship.) 
ripple feathering from her b's . En. Arden . 540 

beau (verb.) 
B's down one thousand and two . StS.Stylitcs 109 
gay domestic TV's before him . /.. of Burleigh 48 

field of corn B's all its ears . . Princess, i. 234 
She b's, she bathes the Saviour's feet In Mem. xxxii. 1 1 
checks drop in ; the body b's . 11 xxxv. 3 

boiv-bacEd. 
supporters on a shield, B-b with fear Princess, vi, 

baidd. 
group of Houris b to sec 
power in his eye That b the will 
She /' upon her hands (rep. ) 
I nee I are !• iii crypt and shrine 

/' her state to them . . . j'rineess, 11. 150 

/' as if to veil a noble tear . . 11 iii. 272 

handmaid on each side /''toward her » iv. 257 
B on her palms and folded up . 11 s6q 

She /', she set the child . . " vi. 104 

' .lor — while thy head is b ■ In Mem. vi. 14 



. Two Voices 


109 


it 


347 


. Princess, i. . 


157 


11 


179 


It IV. 


520 


. In Mem. xl. 


6 


. Maud, I.xlx 


S8 


s Enid . 


945 


. V ivieu 


S4S 


. Elaine 


372 


n 


1370 


11 


1371 


. En. Arden . 


434 


11 


447 


11 


448 


. Aylmcr's F. 


TO 


11 


136 


. Spec. 0/ Iliad 


3 


. Coquette, i. . 


6 


. Princess, i. . 


170 


. Locksley H. 


ISO 


. Maud, I. iv. 


33 


. Aylmcr's F. 


74 


. St. S.Stylites 183 


. L. o/Burleig 


h S7 


. Aylmcr's F. 


107 


. Enid . 


276 


ii 


419 



Princess, Con. 100 

Pal. 0/ Art. 43 
In Mem. exxi. iS 



■ 339 

Pal. of Art 102 
M.dArthtn 

Dora . . 101 

Sir Galahad 18 

Princess, ii. 



3* 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud) I. iv. 13 



Ezzid 



Vivieii 
Guinevere 



When have I b to her father 

not to her brother I b ; I b to his 

peaks of the wood are b 

redden'd her cheek When I b 

Low b the tributary Prince . 

back turn'd, and b above his work 

lifted adoring eyes, B at her side 

b the all-amorous Earl . 

low b the Prince, and felt 

b black knees Of homage 

b down upon her hands Silent 

b her head nor spake ... 11 .3 

God-fearing man B himself down En. Arden 1 

Enoch was so brown, so b . 11 7 

' My God has b me down . » 8 

bower. 
sloping towards his western b 

Dwelling amid these yellowg. £\? -j 

Autumn in a b Grape-thicken' d 

Then to the b they came 

to that smooth-swarded b 

was left alone within the b 

has wov'n its wavy b's . 

promise of my bridal b . 

mellow brickwork on an isle of b's Ed. Morris 

Pursue thy loves among the Us . Talking O 

Droops the heavy-blossom'd b 

fled she to her inmost b 

even then she gained Her b 

peacock in his laurel b . 

broader-grown the b's Drew the 

light Dies off at once from b 

sweeps with all its autumn b's 

have clothed their branchy b's 

With thy lost friend among the b's 



14 

4 

66 

174 
267 

"54 
1209 
176S 
427 
156 



Mariana . 80 

A spirit haunts,* 

etc. . . 2 

. Elednore . 35 

. CE?wne . 92 

" • 93 

n . 188 

. MayQuee?i,\. 29 

D. o/F. Worn. 218 



. Locks ley H. 
. Godiva 

. Day- Dm. . 

. Princess, vii. 

. l7iMei7i. viii. 

11 xi. 

lxxv. 



moon Of Eden on its bridal b . it Con. 

tends upon bed and b . . . Mated, I. xiv. 

winding under woodbine Us . The Brook . 

walks in Boboli's ducal Us . . The Daisy . 

Us of Camelot or of Usk . . Guinevere . . 
from a b of vine and honeysuckle . Aylmers F. 

havens hid in fairy Us . . . The Voyage 



54 



Enid 



• 199 



music, O bird, in the new-budded £\r \Y.toAlesca71. 11 
make her a b All of flowers . . The Window 25 
out of her b All of flowers . . u 32 

bower*d. 
b close With plaited alleys . . OdetoMenz. 105 

bower-eaves. 
A bow-shot from her b-e . L. o/Shalott/iii. 1 
Look out below your b-e . . Marga7-et . 66 

bowetk. 
Earthward he b the heavy l A spzrithau7its y ' etc. 7 

bowing. 
She spoke and b waved Dismissal Przncess, ii. 84 
b at their own deserts . . . TJie Brook . 128 
b o'er the brook A tonsured head 
b over him, Low to her own heart 

bowl. 
farmer of his b of cream 
Nor b of wassail mantle warm 
bowled. 
a herd of boys with clamour b . Pri7zcess,Pro. 81 

bow-shot. 
A b-s from her bower-eaves . . E.ofShalott/ni. 1 

bow-stri7ig. 
His b-s slacken'd, languid Love . Elea7iore . 117 

box (case.) 
long green b of mignonette . . Miller's D. 83 
and the b of mignonette . . May Queenfi.. 48 

box (a tree.) 
fading edges of b beneath ' A spirit haunts ,' etc, 19 

boy. 

the long and listless b . . . Miller's D. 33 

thought, What ails the bl . . 11 .93 

' No fair Hebrew b Shall smile . D.o/F. Worn, 213 



Pri7icess, v. 
hi Mem. civ. 



214 



POEM 
Dora 



LINE. 
. 46 

■ 55 

■ 64 
. 67 

• 97 



there was born a b To William 

look'd with tears upon her b 

let me take the b . 

may see the b, And bless him 

Well— for I will take the b . 

he took the b, that cried aloud 

Us cry came to her from the field 

saw the b Was not with Dora 

My uncle took the b 

he shall not have the b . 

will have my b, and bring him home 

b set up betwixt his grandsire's knees 

when the b beheld His mother . 

now, Sir, let me have my b . 

with his b Betwixt his knees 

was as a b Destructive 

So seems she to the b . 

Eager-hearted as a b 

beat for ever like a Us ? 11 

A merry b in sun and shade ? (rep.) Two Voices 

A something-pottle-bodied b. . Will Water. 

O well for the fisherman's b . 'Break, bt'eak,' etc. 5 

a herd of Us with clamour bowl'd Pri7icess, Pro. 81 

embowerthenestSome^wouldspyit m . 148 

daughter and his housemaid were the Us 

Wretched b, How saw you not 

enter'd in the bigger b 

' Poor />,' she said, ' can he not read 

when a b, you stooped to me 

more Than growing Us their manhood 

As b's, that slink From ferule 

idle Us are cowards to their shame 

'B's!' shrieked the old king 

rout of saucy Us Brake on us 

little Us begin to shoot and stab . 

Among six Us, head under head 

they controll'd me when a b 

A sober man, among his Us 

When he was little more than b 

Us of thine Had babbled ' Uncle 

Us That crash'd the glass 

like an inconsiderate b 

the b Will have plenty (rep.) 

Read with a Us delight 

take a wanton dissolute b 

the primrose fancies of the b 



102 
109 
112 
117 
120 
128 

134 
149 
Walk, to the M. 32 

» ■ 73 

Talking O. 108 
L ocksley H. 112 
140 
321 
131 



ii. 176 



iv. 409 

■ 437 
v. 36 

• 2 99 

318 

385 

61 

:. 8 3 
In Mem. xxviii. 18 

ir lii. 2 

tr lxi. 6 

11 lxxxiii. 12 

ir lxxxvi. 19 

ir exxi. 14 

. Maud, I. vii. 7 



C07l. 



The Brook 



God-father, come and see your£ To F. D. Maurice 2 



En. A rdc7i 



as free gift, then,' said the b . E7iid 

b return'd And told them of a chamber 

pluck'd at by the village Us . 

two years after came a b 

put the b and girl to school (rep.) 

the youngest, hardly more than b 

like her mother, and the b, my son 

So much the b foreran . 

b might get a notion into him 

girl and b, Sir, know their differences ir 

twenty Us and girls should marry on it 11 

O b, tho' thou art young and proud Sailor Boy 

Cut the Roman b to pieces . . Boddicea 

b began to leap and prance l Hoi7te they brought' etc. 7 

Here is his dearest We take the b . The Victim 42 

boyhood. 
in the b of the year 
Sweet love on pranks of saucy b 
One whispers, here thy b sung 



1071 

1 109 

1408 

S 9 

11 . 311 

M • 564 

M . 792 

Ayhner s F. 80 
271 
274 
37i 
7 
66 



SirL. ajidQ. G. 19 
. Prz'7zcess, vii. 323 
. In Mem. ci. 9 



box. 

Old Ues, larded with the steam 
call thee from the Ues . 
bind a book, may line a b 

brace. 
b Of twins may weed her 
then against his b Of comrades 

bracelet. 
Us of the diamond bright 

bracken. 

when the b rusted on their crags 
Nowt at all but b an' fuzz . 



Will Water. 223 

n . 240 

Di Mem. lxxvi. 6 



Pri7icess, v. 454 
Eizid . .936 



. Day-Dm. 



90 



Ed. Morris 100 
jV. Farmer 38 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



braid. POEM. line. 

wound Her looser hair in b . Gardener's D. 155 

fire-flies tangled in a silver b . Locksley H. 10 

streaming from a b of pearl . . Day-Dm. . 82 

Blowing the ringlet from the b SirL. andQ. G. 39 

the b Slipt and uncoiled itself . Vivien . 737 

braided. 

I thereupon All the devices . . Elaine . 8 

brain. 

arms, or power of b, or birth . To tin Queen 3 

Right 10 the heart and b . . Isabel . 22 

b of tht purple mountain . . Poet's Mind 29 

some odd corner of the b . . Miller's D. . 68 

In my dry b my spirit soon . . Fatima . 26 

Devil, large in heart and b Tu —. With Pal. of Art 5 

grea: thought strikes along the b . D. o/F. Worn. 43 
dawa's creeping beams, Stol'n to my /' 11 262 

burn ng b from the true heart . Margaret . 39 

from the spirit thro' the b . . To J. S. . 38 

a bliid life within the * . . M. d' Arthur 251 

who* b the sunshine bakes . . StS.Stylites 161 

the iarrow b, the stony heart Love and Duty 15 
tear, that weigh'd Upon my b n 44 

thathis^ is over-wrought . . Locksley H. 53 
bouided in a shallower b " 150 

random arrow from the b . . Two Voices 345 

acerets of the /', the stars, . . Day-Dm. , 223 

bars a seasoned b about . . Will Water. 85 

a' his b Began to mellow . . Princess, i. . 177 

ftsides the /' was like the hand . 11 ii. . 134 

d'agg'd my b's for such a song . " iv. . 336 

Vhose b's are in their hands . " . 497 

f>r the unquiet heart and b . .In Mem. v. 5 

narvel what possess'd my b . . u xiv. 16 
nakc a picture in the b ti Ixxix. 9 

rat the canker of the 6 . . 11 xci. 3 

Pallas from the b Of Demons? . 11 cxiii. 13 

think we are not wholly b . . 11 cxix. 2 

life is darkened in the . . « cxx. 8 
keej) a temperate b Maud, I. iv. 40 

a lying trick of the b ? ... 11 II. i. 37 
11 ii. 42 

11 iv. 60 

Beat inl 1 Mid my b . u v. 10 

upon whose hand and heart and b Ode on I Veil. 239 

Perchance, to charm a vacant b . The Daisy . 106 

forethought roll'd about his b . Vivien . 79 

make My scheming b a cinder . 11 . 782 

upon his weary b . En. Arden . 797 

dash the b's of the little one out . Bo&dicea . 68 

scatter'd Blood and b's of men . The Captain 48 

the brute b within the man's . Lucretius . 21 

Ini in-feverous. 
B-f'm his heat and agony . . Elaine . 850 

brain-labour. 
prodigal of all b-l he Aylmer's F. 447 

brainless. 
Insolent, b, heartless ! . . . Aylmer's F. 368 

brainpan. 
if my b were an empty hall . . Princess, ii. 376 

brake (s.) 
Close-matted, bur and b and briar Day-Dm. . 66 
over /' and bloom And meadow . In MemAxxxv. 3 
bristles all the b's and thorns . 11 cvi. 9 

[a every wavering b an ambuscade Enid . . 900 

brake (verb.) 
the crocus // like fire . . . CEnone . 94 
B with a blast of trumpets . Princess, Pro. 42 
the involuntary sigh />' . . . 11 iii. 176 

and bosom b the wrathful bloom . » iv. 364 

titter, out of which there b . . 11 v. 15 

saucy hoys Ii on us at our books . 11 385 

/■out my sire Lifting his grim head 11 vi. 254 

rit ever b the band . . In Mem.xcW. 2 

Hell I . . . Al,u„i, II. i. 9 

thrice they b their spears . . Enid . . 562 
b short, and down his enemy roll'd 11 . xooo 



a juggic born of the b ? 
'Tis the blot upon the /' 



TOEM. LINE. 

and the skull B, from the nape . Elaine . 51 

b a sudden-beaming tenderness . 11 . 327 

then out she b: 'Going? 11 . 922 

next sun b from underground . 11 1131 

i>'from the vastoriel-embowering vine 11 1192 

Stoopt, took, b seal, and read it . tr 1264 

maid, who brook'd No silence, ^ it Guinevere . 158 

storm of anger b From Guinevere n . 359 

there her voice b suddenly . . 11 . 601 
on them b the sudden foe . . The Victim 4 

Suddenly from him b the wife . 11 75 

bramble-rose. 
B-^s, faint and pale . . . A Dirge . 30 

branch (s.) 
Like to some b of stars . . L. of Shalott, iii. 11 
B'es they bore of that enchanted . Lotos-E's. . 28 
With winds upon the b . . . 11 . 72 

b'es, fledged with clearest green, D. ofF. Worn. 59 
dropt the b she held, . . Gardeners' D. 154 

topmost b'es can discern {rep. 95, 151) TalkingO. 31 
From spray, and b, and stem, . 11 190 

white robe like a blossom'd b . Princess, iv. 161 
b'es thereupon Spread out at top, 11 187 

shook the b'es of the deer . . 11 Con. 98 

makes the barren b'es loud ; . . In Mem. xv. 13 
all the b'es of thy blood ; . . lxxxiii. 8 

while these long Pes sway, . . Maud, I.xviii. 29 
and the rotten b Snapt . . . Vivien . 806 

border fantasy of b and flower , Elaine . 11 

Stagger'd and shook, holding the b, En. Arden . 76S 

branch (verb.) 
b'es current yet in kindred veins.' Princess, ii. 227 
friths that b and spread . . In Mem., Con. 115 

branch'd. 
cloisters, & like mighty woods, . Pal. of Art 26 
throve and b from clime to clime, . In Mem. cxvii. 13 
drc-s All b and llower'd with gold, Enid . . 631 
b And blossom'd in the zenith, . En. Arden . 586 
b itself, Fine as ice-ferns . . Aylmer's F. 221 

brauch-lvorh. 
Beneath b-w of costly sardonyx . Pal. of Art 05 

brand '(a mark.) 
had let appear the b of John— . Aylmer's F. 509 

brand {a sword.) 
therefore take my b Excalibur, . M.d' Arthur 27 
drew he forth the b Excalibur, . 11 . 52 

if indeed I cast the b away, . . u . 88 

The great b Made lightnings . 11 . 136 

flash'd and fell the b Excalibur . 11 142 

The I, the buckler, and the spear — Two Voices 129 
hard b's shiver on the steel, . . Sir Galahad 6 
springs from b and mail ; . . 11 -54 

b, mace, and shaft, and shield, . Princess, v. 492 
weapon, save a goldcn-hiltcd b, . Enid . . 166 
Swung from his b a windy buffet 11 939 

brand (verb. ) 
b His nothingness into man . . Maud, I.xviii. 39 
b us, after, of whose fold . . Vivien . 614 

brandish'd. 
by the hilt, and b him (rep. 1. 160) M.d' Arthur 145 

brandishing. 
B in her hand a dart . . . Boadicea . 71 

brass. 

smooth as burnish'd I . . . Pal. of Art $ 

dust, shut in an urn of b! . ■ Lotos-Es. . 11 ; 

A flying splendour out of /' . . Princess, vi. 345 

knightly b'es of the graves, . . / 'i-.-ien . 60a 

Ira-.'c adj.) 

Follow'd by the /< of other lands, . Ode on Well. 104 

1. fi Not even Lancelot i, . . Vivien . 654 

All 6, and many generous, . i» C67 

B the Captain was: , ■. • The Captain 5 



40 



CONCORDANCE TO 



brave (verb.) poem. line. 
never : here I b the worst ;' . . Ed. JS I orris 117 
However we b it out, . . . Maud, I. iv. 30 

braved, 
b a riotous heart in asking . . Elaine . 358 

bravery. 
Lancelot, the flower of b, . . Elaine . 114 

brawl (s.) 
wholly given to Us and wine, . Enid . . 441 

brawl (verb.) 
what the sects may b . . . Pal. of Art 210 
Cease to wail and bl . . Two Voices 199 

drunken king To b at Shushan . Princess, iii. 214 
b Their rights or wrongs like potherbs 11 v. 448 

brawler. 
* What fear ye b's? . . . Princess, iv. 477 

brawling: 
brook o'er a shingly bed B, . . Enid . - 249 

bray. 
loud rung out the bugle's b t . . Oriana . 48 
blast and b of the long horn . . Princess, v. 242 

brazen-headed. 
O'erthwarted with the Uh spear . CEnone . 137 

bread. 
the truth, as I live by b I 
sold to the poor for b, . 
in her veil enfolded, manchet b 
sold and sold had bought them b 
Taking her b and theirs : 
b from out the houses brought, 
breadth, 
fi's of tropic shade and palms 
on black blocks A b of thunder 
need More b of culture 
a b Of Autumn, dropping fruits 
She mental b, nor fail in 
belts of hop, and b's of wheat 
all thy b and height Of foliage 
narrow b to left and right 

break (s.) see break of day. 
a b on the mist-wreathen isle . En. Arden 633 

break (verb. ) 
About thee b's and dances . 
breaking heart that will not b 
athlete, strong to b or bind . 
'No voice b's thro' the stillness 
thought to b a country heart 
b for your sweet sake . 
loud when the day begins to b 
lest a cry Should b his sleep 
old sore Us out from age to age 
Faltering, would b its syllables 
He Us the hedge : he enters 
b it. In the name of wife 
B up the heavens, O Lord ! . 
b In full and kindly blossom 

B lock and seal: betray ' Youmight have won,' etc 18 
B, b, b, On thy cold gray stones, ' Break, break, 1 etc. 1 
b the council up.' .... Princess, i. 88 



. Lady Clare 26 
. Maud, Li. 39 
. Enid . . 389 
11 . . 641 
. En. Arden < in 
. Spec, of Iliad 6 

. Locksley H. 160 
. Pri?icess, iii. 275 



tr vii. 267 

tr Cou. mmm 4S 

In Mem. lxxxviii. 3 

. En. Arden 675 



. Madeline . 30 

. Oria?ia . 64 

. Pal. of Art 153 

» . 259 

. L. C. V. de Vere 3 

11 _ 13 

. May Queen, 1. 10 

Walk, to tlieM. 66 

11 71 

Love and Ditty 39 

. Day-Dm. . 118 

if . 265 

. St Agnes' Eve 21 

Will V/ a ter. 2 3 



wherefore b her troth? . 

b my chain, to shake my mane 

b us with ourselves — . 

rough kex b The starred mosaic. 

did I b Your precinct ; . 

On me, me, me, the storm first Us 

have dared to b our bound . 

she's yet a colt — Take, b her : 

b's, and cracks, and splits 

b them more in their behoof . 

Nemesis B from a darken'd future 

We b our laws with ease, 

your Highness b's with ease . 

Us the Pharos from his base 

in a pause I dared not b 



„-■ 94 

11. 402 

iii. 241 

iv. 59 

. 401 

• 478 
. 518 

v. 446 

. 516 

vi. 45 

. 159 

- 3°3 

■ 3°5 

. ■ 319 

vn. 233 



To evening, but some heart did i 

bald street b's the blank day. 

B's hither over Indian seas, 

my hold on life would b 

b's about the dappled pools : 

b's his birth's invidious bar . 

b The low beginnings of content 

b the livelong summer day . 

b's The rocket molten into flakes 

into silver arrows b 

brine That b's the coast . . t! cvi. 

let his coltish nature b . 

every thought b's out a rose. . n cxxi. 

b from the ruby-budded lime . Maud, I. iv. 

b her word were it even for me ? . . xvi. 

b the shore and evermore Make and b, Ode on Well 260 

To b the blast of winter . To F. D. Mauris 22 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. vi. 8 

if vii. 12 

1 1 xxvi. 14 

if xxviii. 15 

I r xlviii. 4. 

II lxiii. 5 
11 Ixxxiii. 47 
11 lxxxviii. 31 
11 xcvii. 31 



29 



Idylls, lied. 
. Euid . 



B, thou deep vase of chilling tears hi Mem. iv. 11 



B not, O woman's-heart (rep.) 

too vehemently to b upon it. 

often they b covert at our feet. . 11 

fight him, and will b his pride . 11 . 

in April suddenly B's from a coppice 11 

lightly b's a faded flower-sheath . 11 

b his pride, and have it of him. . n 

b his pride, and learn his name, . 11 

I may b his pride . . . . !i . 

b perforce Upon a head so dear . 11 

upon his tongue May b it . . 11 

chance That b's upon them perilously n 

blood B into furious flame . . 11 . 

b her sports with graver fits . . Vivien 

in the slippery sand before it b's ? 11 

from Arthur's court To b the mood. 11 

wave about to b upon me . . n _ . 

gnat can b our dream When sweetest Elaine 

crying Christ and him, And b them ; 11 , 

b faith with one I may not name ? n . . 682\ 

discourtesy To blunt or b her passion 

meant to b the passion in her) . 11 

b those bounds of courtesy . . 11 

To b her passion, some discourtesy ti 

I needs must b These bonds. . 11 

smouldering scandal b and blaze . Guinevere . 

in a wind, ready to b and fly .^ 11 

b the heathen and uphold the Christ, 11 

no heart to b his purposes . . En. A rden , 

your kindness b's me down ; . 11 

not to b in upon her peace . 

Which b's all bonds but ours 

bond which they desired to b, 

trifle makes a dream, a trifle b's. 

ever b's into bloom on the tree 

B, happy land, into earlier flowers ! W. to Alcxan. 10 

b the works of the statuary, . . Boddicea . 64 

heavens B open to their highest, . Spec, of Iliad 15 

that b Body toward death . . Lucretius . 153 

b's As I am breaking now ! . . 11 . 238 

Must I take you and b you, (rep.) The Window 136 

take — b, b, — B you may b my heart, ti 140 

B, b and all's done ... 11 143 



break (verb.) 
beant a-gooin* to b my rule . 
I weant b rules for Doctor . 



AyhneT's F. 425 

778 

Sea Dreams 140 

The Islet . 32 



N. Farmer 



4 
67 

breaker (one who breaks.) 
horn-handed Us of the glebe . Princess, ii. 143 

b of the bitter news from home . Aylmer's F. 594 



breaker (wave, etc.) 



The mellow b murmur* d Ida 
The b breaking on the beach 
hoary Channel Tumbles a b . 
flying the white b . 
hard upon the cry of 'Us' . 
ridge Of b issued from the belt, 
long swells of b sweep . 
rolling b's boom and blanch . 



. Princess, iv. 416 
. InMem.lxx. 16 
Top, D. Maurice 24 
. En. Arden . 2x 
» - 549 

. Sea Dreams 205 
. The Voyage 39 
. Boddicea . 76 



breaker-bea ten. 
leagues along that b-b coast . . En. Arden . 51 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



41 



breaking (part.) poem. line. 

heart is b, and my eyes are dim, . CEnone . 31 

say his heart is b, mother. — . May Queen, i. 22 
thunders b at her feet : . ' Of old sat Frecdom,'etc. 2 

on all sides b loose . . . Tlie Goose . 53 

Just b over land and main ? . . Two Voices 84 

elms came b from the vine, . . Amphion . 45 

b into song by fits, . . . InMem.xxiW. 2 

The breaker b on the beach. . 11 lxx. 16 

b let the splendour fall . . . 11 Con. 119 

cruelly meek, B a slumber . . Maud, I. iii. 2 

S up my dream of delight. . . tr xix. 2 

weeping, and b on my rest ? . . Ode 071 Well. 82 

loud whisper b into storm, . . Enid . . i"j 

b his command of silence . it 1239 

Vivien b in upon him . . . Vivien . 450 

lines of cliff* have left . . En. Arden . 1 

Nor let him be, but often b in, . 11 . 702 

a hope, a light b upon him. . . Aylmer's F. 480 

b that, you made and broke . . Sea Dreams 139 

breaks As I am b now 1 . . Lucretius . 238 

breaking (s. ) 
Until the b of the light ' Clear-headed friend 'etc. 25 



ruin, and the b up of laws 
but from the b of a glass, 

break of day. 
Atbodlhe College Portress came 
climbed the roofs at b o d; . 

breast (s.) 
gleaned wealth into my open b, 
Take the heart from out my b. 
Fold thy palms across thy b, 
fill'd the b with purer breath. 
1 crush'd them on my b, 
snow-cold b and angry check 
ruddy cheek upon my b, 
winters snow'd upon his b 
as I lie upon your b — . 
The polish'd argent of her b 
my true b lileedelh for both ; 
muscular he spread, so broad of 
such a b As pencil never drew, 
health and ueace upon her b ; 
An acorn in her b. 
comes upon the robin's b ; 
press me from the mother's b. 
and he bears a laden b, 
in his b a thunderbolt. . 
Dominion in the head and b.' 
palms are folded on his b: . 
A vague suspicion of the b; . 
Earl's daughter died at my b; 
arms across her b she laid ; . 
bear that heart within my b; 

rest, on mother's b, 
seem'd to stir within my b ; . 
from my b the involuntary sigh 
I smote him on the b; 

ten with some great passion 
heart was molten in her b ; . 
if you loved The b that fed . 
warmth about my barren b . 

thing wild within her b, 
from a dewy b a cry for light : 
dead calm in that noble b 
onward drags a labouring b, 
tenants of a single b. 
Again-,! the circle of the b, . 
faithful answer from the b, . 
warms another living b. 
haunt the silence of the b, 
woolly b's and beaded eyes ; 
A single murmur in the />, 
in my b Spring wakens loo ; . 
enter in at b and brow, 
warmth within the 6 would melt 
jewel-thick Sunn'd itself on his b 

that is lord of her b, 
ruddy shield on the Lion's*. 
shook her b with vague alarms— 



Guinevere . 423 
Sea Dreams 240 

Princess, ii. 1 

The Daisy . 61 



Ode to Mem. 


23 


Adeline 


8 


A Dirge 


2 


Miller's D. 


92 


Fat i 'ma 


12 


(Enone 


140 


The Sisters 


20 


Pal. of Art 


139 


MayQueen, iii. 59 


D. of F. Worn 


158 


To 7. S. . 


62 


Gardener's D. 8 


u 


138 


A ndley CI. 


67 


Talking 0. 


228 


Locksley JI. 


>7 


11 


90 


11 


143 


if 


192 


Two Voices 


21 


11 


247 
33<5 

=5 


Lady Clare 


Beggar Maid 1 


Princess, ii. 


3'3 


11 


466 


11 iii. 


28 


n 


»75 


11 iv. 


146 


11 


368 


" vi. 


J03 


H 


.65 


11 


185 


11 vii. 


222 


11 


2 37 


In Mem. xi. 


19 


II XV. 


18 


11 xvi. 


3 


11 xliv. 


3 


11 lxxxiv. 


»4 


II 


116 


11 xciii. 


9 


11 xciv. 


12 


it ciii. 


7 


11 cxiv. 


'7 


11 exxi. 


11 


11 exxiii. 


13 


Maud,!. Jim. 


13 


11 xvi. 


13 


.. IH.vi. 


it 


The Letters 


38 



POEM. 


LINE. 


Enid . 


• 75 


11 


. £6 


11 


. in 


11 


. 121 


11 


■ 5=7 


11 


• 574 


ti 


• 935 


J ivien 


• 759 



massive square of his heroic b t 

noble b and all-puissant arms, 

tears upon his broad and nuked b, 

thro' his manful b darted the pang 

sweet head upon her gentle b ; 

and set foot upon his b, 

spear a cubit thro' his b 

Her arms upon her b across, 

silent court of justice in his b, . Sea Dreams 170 

Chop the b's from off the mother, Boddicea . 68 

heart so near the beauteous b . Coquette, ii. 7 

stood out the b's, The b's of Helen, Lucretius . Co 

blasting the long quiet of my b , ir . 162 

Beat b, tore hair, cried out it . 273 

breast (verb.) 
b's the blows of circumstance, . luMem.lx'm. 7 

breast-dee^. 
all night long b-d in corn, . . Princess, ii. 365 

breath, 
b Of the fading edges of box 'A spirit haunts J etc. 18 
b Of the lilies at sunrise? . . Adeline . 36 
There is frost in your b . . . Poet'sMind 17 
I lose my colour, I lose my b, . Elednore . 137 
fill'd the breast with purer b. . Miller's D. . 92 
half-asleep his b he drew, . . The Sisters 28 
Long labour unto aged b, . . Lotos-E's. . 130 
first warbler, whose sweet b . . D. ofF. Worn. 5 
poison with her balmy b, 11 . 271 

empty b And rumours of a doubt? Jlf. d' Arthur 99 
King Arthur, drawing thicker b: . ti . 148 

Clothed with his b, and looking, . 11 . 1S2 

ears cuuld hear Her lightest b's: . Ed. Morris 65 
ever at a b She lingered, . . Godiva . 44 
life that breathes with human b . Two Voices 395 
b to heaven like vapour goes : . St Agnes' Eve 3 
( rreet her with applausive b, . Vision 0/ Sin 135 

While we keep a little b .' . 11 192 

rush'd Among us. out of b; . . Princess, iv. 356 
b of life ; O more than poor men . n . 439 

sweet and bitter in a b, , . . In Mem. iii. 3 
scarce endure to draw the b, . h xx. 15 

And so the Word had b, it xxxvi. 9 

use may lie in blood and /', . . ir xliv. 1 ^ 

spirit does but mean the b: . . 11 lv. 7 

Death's twin-brother, times my b; 11 Ixvii. 2 

new life that feeds thy b . . u Ixxxv. jo 

East and West, without a b, . t> xciv. 62 

where he breathed his latest b, . it xcvii. 5 

wakenest with thy balmy b . 11 xcviti. 13 

trust I have not wasted b, u cxi.x. 1 

quickend with a livelier 3, . . 11 exxi. 13 

Awe-stricken Us at a work divine, Maud, I. x. 17 
Prickle my skin and catch my /', . it xiv. 36 

Catch not my b t O clamorous heart, it xvi. 31 

live a life of truest b, . . 11 xviii. 53 

mine from her first sweet b, . . n xix. 41 

mix'd my b With a loyal people . 11 III. vi. 34 
low b Of tender air made tremble The Brook . 201 
ceased the kindly mother out of b; Enid . . 732 
fits of prayer, at every stroke a b. n . 1004 

never since I first drew /', . . 11 .^^ 1467 
the b Of her sweet tendance . . " . *773 

b's of anger puff'd Her fairy nostril Vivien . 697 

At last he got his b and answer'd . Elaine . 421 

whereat she caught her b; it . 620 

King's b wander o'er her neck, . Guinevere . 576 
/» of heaven came continually . En. Arden . 531 
latest b Was spent in blessing . " . 884 

On January panes Made by a b. . Ayhners F. 223 
body that never had drawn a b. . Grandmother 62 

brcatlic. 

odorous wind B's low . . . Eleauore . 124 

should /' a thought of pain . . Miller's D. . 26 

b's low with mellower tone : . . Lotos-Ks. . 147 

How hard he b's I . . . D.oftheO. Year 37 

to sit, to sleep, to wake, to b,' , Ed. Morris 40 

not b, Not whisper, any murmur . StS.Stylites 2t 

that, which b's within the leaf, . Talking O. . 187 



4 2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



As tho' to b were life. . 

better not to b or speak, 

To b and loathe, to live and sigh, 

life that b's with human breath 

yearn to b the airs of heaven 

love-whispers may not b 

Low, low, b and blow . 

b for one hour more in Heaven' 

your Highness b's full East . 

Where shall lb? . 

each May b himself, and quick ! 

b upon my brows ; 

To let the people 3? 

b thee over lonely seas . 

b a thousand tender vows, 

slightest air of song shall b . 

b's a novel world, the while . 

while we b beneath the sun, . 

b my loss is more than fame, 

hourly-mellowing change May b, 

does not b Some gracious memory 

landmark b's of other days, . 

Thro' which the spirit b's no more 

tho' my lips may b adieu, 

b's in converse seasons. 

only b Short fits of prayer, . 

b but accusation vast and vague, . 

keener hunter after glory b's. 

b's not one of you Will deem 

could not b in that fine air . 

carefuller in peril, did not b . 

b it into earth and close it up 



POEM. LINE. 

Ulysses . 24 

Two Voices 94 

11 . 104 

» • 395 

Sir Galahad 63 

Princess, ii. 203 

■ 458 

" 111. 53 

" . 215 

11 v. 74 

II __. 306 

if vii. 332 

m Con. 104 

In Mem. xvii. 4 



tr xlviii. 7 

ir lxi. 9 

tr Ixxiv. 14 

11 lxxvi. 15 

ir xc. 10 

11 xcix. 3 

11 ciii. ti 

1 1 civ. 20 

11 cxxii. 11 

The Brook . 196 

Enid . 1003 

Vivien . 551 

Elaine . 156 

" - 539 

Gumevere . 638 

En. Arden . 50 

Coquette, iii. 12 



breaiJted. 
b in sleep a lower moan . Mariana in the S. 45 

slowly to a music slowly b, . . (Enone . 40 
B, like the covenant of a God, . Gardener'sD. 204 
b In some new planet : . . . Ed. Morris 114 
I b upon her eyes .... Talking O. 210 
low wind hardly b for fear . . Godiva . 55 
he had b the Proctor's dogs ; . Princess,Pro. 113 

look on Spirits b away . . . InJIIem.xxxix. 2 
b beneath the Syrian blue : . . 11 li. 12 

all things round me b of him. . 11 bcxxiv. 
where he b his latest breath, 
b the spirit of the song ; 
words of life B in his ear. 
while I b in sight of haven, . 
twice they fought, and twice they b Enid . 
Queen's fair name was b upon, . 11 
rays, that lighten'd as he b; . Elai?ie 

on him b Far purelier . . . Aylmer's F. 457 



ir xcvii. 
11 cxxiv. 

11 Co?i. 
The Brook . 



3 2 

5 

10 

53 

157 

567 

1709 

296 



breather. 



In Mem. cxvii. 6 



b's of an ampler day 

breathing (part.) 
B Light against thy face . . Adeline . 56 
Old letters, b of her worth, . Mariana in the S. 62 
B like one that hath a weary dream Lotos-E's. 6 
spoke King Arthur, b heavily . M.d" Arthur 113 
answer made King Arthur, b hard : h 162 

from the boat, And b of the sea. . Audlcy Ct. . 7 
Sleep, b health and peace . 11 -67 

Sleep, b love and trust ... ti .68 

A hint, a whisper b low, . . Two Voices 434 
b down From over her arched brows, Princess, ii. 24 
B and sounding beauteous battle . 11 v. 154 

Angel instincts, b Paradise, . . ti ™-„. 3° 2 
b thro' his lips impart . . .In Mem. xviii. 15 
slowly b bare The round of space, 11 lxxxv. 4 

meadows b of the past, . . " xcviii. 7 

Bright English lily, b a prayer . Maud, I. xix. 55 
bear him b low and equally. . . Enid . 1221 

beast hard-ridden, b hard. . . Aylmer's F. 291 

breathing (s.) 
b's are not heard In palace chambers Day-Dm. 93 
the heavy b's of the house, . . Enid . 1251 

the placid b's of the King, . . Guinevere . 69 
warm-blue b's of a hidden hearth . Aylmer's F. 155 



brca th ing-sj>ace 


POEM. LINE. 


shall have scope and b-s ; 


Eocksley H. 


167 


ballad or a song To give us b-s 


Priucess,Pro 


235 


brea thing-ivh He 






when for a b-w at eve, . 


Aylmer's F. 


449 


bred. 






in one hamlet born and b; . 


Circumstance 8 


upon the board And b this change 


; CEuone 


223 


for his sake I b His daughter 


Dora . 


*7 


her will B will in me 


Princess, v. 


34 1 


out the doors where I was b, 


In Mem. cil. 


2 


not being b To barter, . 


En. Arden . 


248 


clerk, but gently born and b ; 


Sea Dreams 


1 


brede. 






in glowing gauze and golden b, . 


Princess, vi. 


118 


breed (s. ) 






b That with the napkin dally ; 


Will Water 


117 


we men are a little b. . 


Maud, I. iv. 


30 



breed (verb. ) 
graze and wallow, b and sleep ; . Pal. of Art 202 
like b's like, they say. . . Walk.totheM. 55 

Assurance only b\ resolve.' . . Tivo Voices 315 
much loth to b Dispute . . Princess, i. 155 

in thunderstorms, And b up warriors ! 11 v. 430 
earth's embrace May b with him, hi Mem. lxxxi. 4 
could he understand how money b's TJte Brook 6 

breeze. 



Claribel . 2 

Arabian N's. 1 

L.qfShalott,\. 11 

Mariana in the S. 43 

Eleanore . 10 

11 . 24 

Day -Dm. . 138 

Princess,Pro. 88 

11 iv. 411 

40 



11 vi. 

In Mem. xvii. 
11 lxvii. 
ii Ixxiv. 
11 xciv. 
ii cxxi. 
; 11 Con. 
Maud, I. iv. 
11 xviii. 
11 xxii. 
The Letters 
T/ie Voyage 



The b's pause and die, 
b of a joyful dawn blew free 
Little b's dusk and shiver 
heard her native b's pass, 
b's from our oaken glades, 
Coming in the scented b, 
b thro' all the garden swept, 
Made noise with bees and b . 
long b's rapt from inmost south 
music in the growing b of Time, 
such a b Compell'd thy canvas, 
all the bugle b's blew Reveillee 
round thee with the b of song 
A b began to tremble o'er 
all the b of Fancy blows, 
tells The joy to every wandering b 
blown by the b of a softer clime, 
sighing for Lebanon In the long b 
For a b of morning moves, . 
Low b's fann'd the belfry bars, 
broke the b against the brow, 

brethren. 
all My b marvell'd greatly. . 
of her b, youths of puissance ; 
Arac, nor the twins Her b, . 
The b of our blood and cause, 
To where her wounded b lay ; 
let me have him with my b 
grieve Thy b with a fruitless tear 
till Doubt and Death, 111 b . 
his burnish'd b of the pool ; . 
My £have been all my fellowship, 
came her b saying, ' Peace to thee 
two b slowly with bent brows 
two b from the chariot took 
friends in testimony, Her b 

Breton. 
on the B strand ! B, not Briton 
Back from the B coast, 11 

touching i? sands, they disembarked. Vivien 

brew'd. 

found a witch Who b the philtre 
brewer. 
gloomy b's soul Went by me, 
bribe. 
a costly b To guerdon silence, 
which for£ had winked at wron_ 

bribed. 
B with large promises the men . Enid 



StS. Stylites 68 

Prificess, i. 36 

tr - 153 

" vi. 55 

11 . 74 

if . 107 

InMetn. lvii. 10 

ti lxxxv. 12 

E?iid . . 650 

Elaine . 669 

11 . . 990 

it . 1132 

if . 1140 

11 . 1292 

29 
4J 
5i 

16 
55 



Maud.ll. ii. 



Lucretius 
Talking O. 



Prificess, i. 200 
Enid . 1787 



• 453 



TENNYSON'S WORA'S. 



43 



brick. POEM. LINE. 

When wc made b's in Egypt. . Princess, iv. no 

brick-work. 
Tudor-chimnied bulk Of mellow b Ed. Morris 12 

bridal. 

Then reign the world's great b's, . Princess, vii. 278 

Evil haunts The birth, the b ; . InMem. xcvii. 14 

Memories of A, or of birth, . 11 xcviii. 15 

for her b's like the sun.' . . Enid 231, 836 

bridal-gift. 

harsh groom for b-g a scourge, . Princess, v. 368 

bride. 

like a * of old In triumph led, . Ode to Mem. 75 
merry b's are we : . . . . Sea Fairies 33 
thy heart, my love, my b . . Oriana . 1,1 
down I went to fetch my b: . Miller's D. 145 

far-renowned b's of ancient song . D. 0/ F. Wont. 1 7 
And gain her for my b. . . Talking O. 284 

'Who is this? behold thy b,' . LoveandDuty^a 

Draw me, thy b, a glittering star . St Agnes' Eve 23 
The Bridegroom with his b I . 11 36 

I myself, my b once seen, . . Princess, i. 71 
chating me on fire to find my b) . 11 . 164 

prince to gam His rightful b . 11 iii. 145 

/ bound by precontract Your b, . » iv. 521 

fight in tourney for my b, 11 v. 343 

the poor b Gives her harsh groom 11 . 367 

My b. My wife, my life. . . 11 vii. 338 

checr'd with tidings of the /', In Mem. xxxix. 23 
metimes lovely like a b, . i» lviii. 6 

1 their b's in other hands ; . nlxxxix. 14 

1 must give away the b ; . . 11 Con. 42 

O happy hour, behold the b . 11 .69 

drinking health to b and groom . <i .83 

Bound for the Hall, and I thinkfora<5. Maud, I. x. 2 <> 
.My b to be, my evermore delight, 11 xviii. 73 

dead man there to a spectral b ; . m II. v. 80 

ereyou wed with any, bring your/', Enid . . 228 
mended fortunes and a Prince's b : 11 . . 718 
sweeter than the b of Cassivclaun, 11 . . 744 
promise, that whatever b I brought, 11 . . 783 
did her honour as the Prince's b, . 11 . . 835 
own dear b propping his head, . 11 1432 

glowing on him, like a b's . . Vivien . 466 
never wrong'd his b. I know thetale. 11 . . 579 

hat his fair /• is and docs, i» . 631 

Blissful A of a blissful heir, . . W.loAlexan. 27 

- heir ofthe kings of the sea — 11 28 

Hope and Memory, spouse and b, On a Mourner 23 

dess b, divine Tranquillity, Lucretius . 262 

bridegroom. 

■■ the Heavenly B waits, . St Agnes' Eve 31 

The B with his bride ! . . . 1, -36 

learning this, the b will relent. . Guinevere . 170 

heard the b is SO sweet ... n . 175 

bridge. 

from the frequent b, . . Ode to Mem. 102 
from the l< I Ican'd to hear . . Miller's D. . 49 
Kohin leaning on the b . . . May Queen, i. 14 
the brazen b of war — . ' 'Love thou thy 'land, 'etc. 76 
b Crown'd with the muster-tower.-,. Gardener's!). 43 
half has fall'n and made a b ; Walk. totheM. 24 

Curves of mountain, b, Boat, . Jut. Morris 5 

>\ti'tus and porters on t/te b, Godiva . 2 
By b and ford, by park and pale, . Sir Galahad 82 
under arches of the marble b . Princess, ii. 434 
o'er a b of pinewood crossing, . t, iii. 317 
knell to my desires, Clang'd on the b; » iv. 157 
for the use of men. . » vi. 31 
cataract flashing from the b, . . InMemAxx. 15 
paced the shores. And many a b, . » lxxxvi. 12 
half a hundred bs. . . . The Brook . 30 
There is Darnley^, it has more ivy; <» # 36 
old b, which half in ruins then, . n -79 
b that spanned a dry ravine . . Enid . 246, 294 
Earl Vniol's, o'er the b Yonder.' . 11 . . 291 
went her way across the b 383 

! by me on the /', ..•».. 429 

tries the he fears may fail, . ■■ . 1 1 52 



Arabian X's. S6 
J 'act's Mind 5 
7 



POEM LINE. 

naked marriages Flash from the b, Aylmer's F. 766 

all night upon the b of war . . Spec. 0/ Iliad 9 

bridle. 
gemmy b glitterM free, . L.o/Shalolt, iii. 10 

b bells rang merrily ... it -13 

bridle-rein. 

rings With jingling b-r's. . . SirL.andQ.G.-fi 

tied the b-r's of all the three . Enid . 947, 1032 

sadly gazing on her b-r's . . 11 . 1343 

brief. 

days were £ Whereof the poets talk Talking O. . 185 

In endless time is scarce more b . Two Voices 113 

b is life but love is long, . . Princess, iv. 93 

b the sun of summer in the North, ■■ . 94 

/> the moon of beauty in the South. 11 . 95 

fall'n leaf, isn't fame as b? (rep.) . Skillful Let. 9 

brier. 
bur and brake and b Day-Dm. . 66 

little life of bank and b, 'you might have won,' etc, 30 
drench'd with ooze, and torn with b' s,l 'rinccss, v. 27 
I have heard of thoms and b's. . The IViudcnv 197 
Over the thorns and b's . . 11 . 198 

Brigade. 
' Forward, the Light B! (rep.) . Lt. Brigade 5 
Honour the Light B, . n - 54 

bright. 
diamond-plots Of dark and b. 
Clear and b it should be ever, 
B as light, and clear as wind. 

so full and b— Such eyes ! . . Miller's D. . 86 
made my dagger sharp and b. . The Sisters 26 
but none so b as mine. . . . May Queen, i. 5 
Remaining betwixt dark and b: . Margaret . 28 
shine, Make b our days 'Of old sat Freedom? etc. 22 
b and fierce and fickle is the South, Princess, iv. 79 
/' As our pure love, . . .In Mem. ix. 10 
Thy marble b in dark appears, . 11 lxvi. 5 

voice was low, the look was b: . 11 lxviii. 15 

flat lawn with dusk and b; . . nlxx.wiii. 2 

b the friendship of thine eye ; . if cxviii. 10 

To-day the grave is /' for me, . 11 Con. 73 

^andhghtasthccrestOfapeacock, Maud,I.xvi. 16 
soft splendours that you look so b? 11 xviii. 79 
of Eden b over earth and sky . » II. i. 8 
in a weary world my one thing b ; « III. vi. 17 
B let it be with its blazon'd deeds Ode on Well. 56 
Geraint with eyes all b replied, . Enid . . 494 
strange^anddreadfulthing,acourt, 11 . , 616 
she knew That all was b; ir . . 658 

one so b in dark estate, . 11 . 786 

keep him b and clean as heretofore, o . 1785 

face, b as for sin forgiven, . . Elaine 1096 

B was that afternoon, Sunny . En. Ardcn. . 670 
B with the sun upon the stream . Sea Dreams 95 

brighten. 

brightcn'd as the foam-bow b's, . (Enone . 60 

seem to b as they pass j . . May Queen, \, 34 

b like the star that shook . /// Mem. Con. 31 

eyes /' slowly close to mine, . . Tithouns . 38 

Irs and darkens down on the plain, The Window 2 

b's and darkens and b's like my hope 11 . 18 

b's and darkens like my fear, . n . 19 

brightened. 

b as the foam-bow brightens . CF.r.one . 60 

pretty sports have/' all again . Vivien . 154 

For so mine own was b : . . Aylmer's F. 683 

Till the face of Bel be /', . . BoBdicta . 16 

brightening. 

Like sheet lightning, Ever b . Poets Mind 26 

B the skirts of a long cloud, , . M. a" Arthur 54 

is b to his bridal morn. . . Gardener's D. 7a 

I.nid llstcn'd /' as she lay : . . Enid . . 735 

brightest. 

b, when they dwelt on hers . 



Aylmer's F. Co 



44 



CONCORDANCE TO 



brightly. poem. line. 

faced this morning of farewell B . En. Arden. 183 

brightness. 
as babies for trie moon, Vague b ; Princess, iv. 409 
Of my contrasting b, overbore . Enid . . 801 

brilliance. 
star The black earth with b . 



Ode to Mem. 20 

. Arabian N^s. 16 
D. oftJie O. Year 19 
. T/ie Voyage 25 



brim (s.] 
garden porches on the b, 
froth'd his bumpers to the b ; 
stars all night above the b . 

brim {verb. ) 
b with sorrow drowning song. . In Mem. xix. 12 
Arrange the board and b the glass ; if cvi. 16 

brimftil. 
heart, B of those wild tales . . D.ofF.Wom. 12 

brimmed. 
B with delirious draughts . . Eleanore . 139 
beaker b with noble wine. . . Day-Dm. . 56 

brine. 

gulf him fathom-deep in b ; . . In Mem. x. 18 

darken on the rolling b . . m cvi. 14 

the low coast and quivering b . The Voyage 42 

bring. 
Music that b's sweet sleep . . Lotos-E's. . 52 
in its season b the law ; ' Love thou thy land' etc. 32 
of knowledge b the sword, . 11 87 

nature b's not back the Mastodon, . T/ie Epic . 36 
lightly b me word . M d 'Arthur 38, 44, 81 

b the colour to my cheek . Gardeners!), 192 

have my boy, and b him home ; . Dora . . 120 
b me offerings of fruitand flowers : StS. Stylites 126 
Love himself will b The drooping Love and Duty 2^ 
hours that b us all things good, , n 

hours that b us all things ill, . ir 

Nay, but Nature b's thee solace 
latest rival b's thee rest 
B truth that sways the soul . 
b the fated fairy Prince. 
t B the dress and put it on her, 
B me spices, b me wine ; 
And b her in a whirlwind : . . Princess, 



b's our friends up from the underworld, 



In Mem. ii. 



seasons b the flower again, 

b the firstling to the flock ; . 

So b him : we have idle dreams : 

not the burthen that they b. 

one should b me this report, 

all was good that Time could b, 

b me sorrow touch'd with joy, 

b's no more a welcome guest 

b her babe, and make her boast, 

often Us but one to bear, 

I b to life, I b to death : 

b an opiate trebly strong, 

verse that Us myself relief, . 

B orchis, b the foxglove spire, 

Demanding, so to b relief 

take the imperfect gift I b, . 

every hour his couriers b. 

She may b me a curse. . 

how God will b them about ? 

wed with any, b your bride, . 

bid him b Charger and palfrey.' 

by Valence to b home the child. 

one dark hour which Us remorse, 

win, and b it in an hour 

let me b your colour back ; . 

b as what he is and how he fares, 

b fair weather yet to all of us. 

that we shall b you round.' . 

arose Eager to b them down, 

b Their own gray hairs with sorrow Ayhner's F. 776 



an' doesn b ma the yaale ? 

bringer. 
something more, A b of new things ; 



56 

» 57 

Locks ley H. 87 
89 
Day-Dm. . 72 
. 7 6 
L. of Burleigh 95 
Vision of Sin 76 



ir xm. 
ii xiv. 
11 xxiii. 
if xxviii. 
if xxix. 
11 xxxxix, 
11 liv. 
ti lv. 

11 lxx. 
if lxxiv. 
ir lxxxii. 
11 Ixxxiv. 
ti 

If cxxv. 
Maud, I. i. 



Enid 

Vivien 



Elaine 



En. Arden 



6 

117 

4 

73 
44 
228 
1249 
568 
613 
204 
386 
546 
191 
842 
873 



N. Farmer . 65 



Ulysses 



2S 



bringest. 
b the sailor to his wife, 
Come quick, thou b all I love. 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. x. 5 
11 xvii. 8 



bringing, 
b me down from the Hall . . Maud, I. xxi. 2 

bringing-up. 
It is but b-u : no more . . Princess, Pro. 129 
give his child a better b-u . . En. Arden £7 
give his babes a better b-u u . 298 

brink. 
green b and the running foam, . Sea Fairies 2 
with oar and sail Moved from the b, M d Arthur 266 
Passion from the Us of death ; . Princess, vii. 141 
voices hail it from the b ; . .In Mem. cxx. 14 
man who stands upon the b . . Enid . 1321 

the woman walk'd upon the b : . Sea Dreams 108 
now shake hands across the b * My life isfull,' etc. 6 

briony. 
about my feet The berried b . TalkingO. . 148 

bindweed-bells and b rings ; . T/ie Brook . 203 

briony-vi?ie. 
b-v and ivy- wreath Ran forward . Amphion . 29 

bristle (verb.) 

half stands up And Us . . Walk, to tlic M. 24 

Us all the brakes and thorns . hi Mem. cvi. 9 

hoar hair of the Baronet b up . Ayhner's F. 42 



Britain. 
name of B trebly great — * You ask me why, 
keeps our B, whole within herself, Princess, C 
B's one sole God be the millionaire : Maud, III 
over many a windy wave To B f . Enid . 
Roman Cassar first Invaded B y . it 
dread Pendragon, B's king of kings, Elaine 
the golden dragon clung Of B; . Guinevere 
Girt by half the tribes of B, . . Boadicea 
call us B's barbarous populaces, . n 
Tear the noble heart of B, . . ?i 
Bark an answer, B's raven ! . n 

B light upon auguries happier? . 11 



etc. 22 
on. 52 



- 746 

• 423 

• 589 

• 5 

• 7 



British. 

With a stony B stare. . . . Maud, I. xiii. 22 

curse me the B vermin, the rat . 11 II. v. 58 

Briton. 

Breton, not B: here . . . Maud, II. ii. 30 

set His B in blown seas . . Ode on Well. 155 

up my B's, on my chariot, . . Boadicea . 69 

Britoness. 

haled the yellow-ringleted B — . Boadicea 



55 



broach. 
Pull off, pull off, the b of gold, , Lady Clare 39 
earn our prize, A golden b ; . . Princess, iii. 284 

broad. 
Grows green and b, and takes no care, Lotos-E's 73 
Make b thy shoulders to receive . M.d 1 Arthur 164 
muscular he spread, so b of breast Gardener's D. 8 
Alas, I was so b of girth, . . Talking O. 139 
makes thee b and deep ! . . m 280 

were a whole Atlantic b . . Princess, Con. 71 

those that saunter in the b . . Ayhner's F. 744 

broad-based. 
B-b upon her people's will, . . To the Queen 35 
B-b flights of marble stairs . . Arabia?iN's. 117 

broad-blown, 
b-b comeliness, red and white, . Maud, I. xiii. g 

b road-brim ?n'd. 
b-b hawker of holy things, . . Maud, I. x. 41 

broadcast. 
fiery grain Of freedom b . . Princess, v. 412 

broaden. 
Freedom Us slowly down ' '~ You ask me why,* 'etc. n 
b into boundless day. . . .In Mem. xciv. 64 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



45 



broadened. poem. line. 

Morn£ on the borders of the dark, D.ofF. Worn, 265 

broadening. 
b from her feet, And blackening, . Guitievere . 81 

broader. 
Sun Grew b towards his death . Princess, iii. 346 

broa der-grown . 
b-g the bowers Drew the great . Princess, vii. 33 

broad-faced. 
B-f with under-fringe of russet . Enid . 1386 

broad-flung. 
in its £;/" ship-wrecking roar, . Maud, I. iii. 11 

broad-limbed, 
b-l Gods at random thrown . . To E. L. . 15 

broad-shouldered. 
great b-s genial Englishman, . Princess, Con. 85 

brocade. 
an ancient dame in dim b ; . . Enid . . 363 
stood from out a stiffs . . . Ay Inter's F. 204 

Broceliande. 
in the wild woods of B, . . Vivien 2,53 

broidered. 
'red sleeve B with pearls,' . . Elaine . 372 
£ with great pearls, 11 . 602 

broidery-frame. 
take the b-f and add A crimson .Day-Dm. . 15 

broidry. 
Rare £ of the purple clover. . /? Dirge . 38 

broke, 

thro' wavering lights and shadows £, Lotos-E's. 



f ''Love thou thy 
\ land,' etc. 89 
Gardener'sD. 146 
Dpra . . 32 
ti . . no 
.£>£ Morris 131 
Talking O. . 47 



• T 3 2 



love the gleams of good that b 

b the stillness of that air 

bit his lips, And b away. 

She b out in praise To God, . 

b a close with force and arms : 

Bluff Harry b into the spence 

staff against the rocks And b it, — Golden Year 6 

What time the foeman's line is b, . Two Voices 155 

out my sullen heart a power B . 11 . 443 

hedge b in, the banner blew, . Day-Dm, . 141 

The linden b her ranks, . . Amphion . 33 

nor b, norshunn'd a soldier's death, Princess, Pro. 38 

when the council b, I rose . 11 i. 8o 

b and buzz'd in knots of talk ; 

6 out interpreting my thoughts : , 

b the letter of it to keep the sense 

in the furrow b the ploughman's head 

at our disguise B from their lips . 

b A genial warmth and light 

courts of twilight b them up . 

b our fair companionship, 

idly b the peace Of hearts 

in the present /' the blow. 

strangely on the silence b 

b the bond of dying use. 

the sunlight b from her lip? . 

horrible bellowing echoes b . 

vinded tale, and b him short; 
if they b In thunder, silent ; . 
Right thro' the line they b ; . 

entence in his heart . 
b the bandit holds and cleansed . 
storm fi on the mountain 

id B the strong lance, . 
b into a little so irnful laugh, 
our good Arthur b The Pagan 
next day /' from underground, 
heard mass, b fast, and rode away: 
fairy-circle wheel'd and /' (rep.) . 
after tempest, when the long wave b 

I one, who/; The vasl 1 
my sorrow b me down ; 
wiili jubilant < rie ■ B from their elders 
b The lithe reluctant boughs 



II IV. 


3'9 


1 II V. 


212 


II 


262 


II VI. 

ip Con. 


264 
"3 


In Mem. xxii. 13 


11 lvii. 


S 


11 lxxxiv. 


5b 


II XC1V. 


25 


II CIV. 


12 


Maud, I. vi. 
I- II. i. 

The Brook . 


86 
24 
109 


Ode on Well. 


176 


Lt. Brigade 
Enid . 


33 
890 


Vivien 
Elaine 


1792 

353 
26 


11 


121 


ii 


279 


ti 


412 


Guinci'cre . 


414 

2SS 


• ii 


288 


n 


661 


En. Arden . 


3'6 


11 • 


375 
378 



POEM. LINE. 

tide of youths with a phosphorescence Aylmer'sP. 1 16 

B from a bower of vine . 

Then b all bonds of courtesy, 

B into nature's music . 

b the bond which they desired 

tumbled down and b The glass 

you made and b your dream : 

B, mixt with awful light, 

ever when it b The statues . 

His angel b his heart. . 

b the breeze against the brow, 

Burnt and b the grove and altar 

yearning never b her rest 

broken. 
my sleep was b thro* 
Let what is b so remain, 
all the man was b with remorse ; 
Oh, his. He was not b. 
Half shown, are b and withdrawn, 
clouds are b in the sky, 
was b, When that cold vapour 
horses that have b fence, 
Your oath is b : we dismiss you : 
axe was b in their arms, 
iron will was b in her mind ; . 
laws are b: let him enter 
will never be b by Maud, 
means were somewhat b into 
My pride is b: men have seen 
b down, for Enid sees my fall ! ' 
had b on him A lance . 
From which old fires have b, 
There was I b down : . 
have b up my melancholy.' . 
false voice made way b with sobs, 
cried ' They are b, they are b ' 
It can be b easier, 
limb was b when they lifted him ; 
so foolish and so b down, 
sunrise b into scarlet shafts . 
so brown, so bowed, So b — . 
grief and solitude have b me ; 
tented winter-field was b up 
creeper when the prop is b, . 
great Hall was wholly b down 
Spars were splinter'd ; decks were b The Cap tain 49 

bronzed, 

on the cheek, And bruised and b, Elaine . 259 

brood (s. ) 
many Lilias in the b, 
Swallow, that thy b is flown : 
sees his b about thy knee, 
Because her b is stol'n away 
sound to rout the b of cares . 
Heathen, the b by Hengist left ; 

brood (verb.) 
and b and live again in memory. , 
b's above the fallen sun, 
About him b's the twilight dim, , 
change their sky To build and b; 
nevermore to b On a horror . 

brooded. 
air Which b round about her : 
b thus And grew half-guilty 

brooding. 
where the sunbeam b warm . 

broodeth (part, 
rims of thunder b low, 
b in the ruins of a life, 
Across my fancy, b warm, 
b turn The book of scorn 
b on the dear one dead, 
over all things b slept . 
tempest b round his heart, 

brood iu^ '*.) 
wordless b's on the wasted cheek- 



n 


156 


it 


323 


it 


694 
778 
138 


. Sea Dreams 


M 


139 


tr 208 


228 


if 


216 


If 


269 


. The Voyage 


9 


. Boddicea 


2 


. Coquette, ii. 


2 


. Millers D. . 


39 


. Eotos-E's. . 


125 


. Dora . 


161 


Walk, to the M 


. 12 


L Two Voices. 


306 


. Sir Galahad 


73 


. Vision of Si; 


57 


. Princess, ii. 


364 


if iv. 


341 


11 vi. 


35 


11 


102 


if 


297 


. Maud, I. ii. 


2 


. Enid . 


455 


if 


57s 


ir 


590 


II 


937 


ir 


1670 


11 


1699 


. Vivien 


u6 


it 


706 


. Elaine 


310 


11 


1202 


En. Arden . 


107 


ii 


315 


M 


593 


if 


70s 


if . 


858 


. Aylmer's P. 


no 


if 


810 

846 



Princess, Pro. 146 
11 iv. 90 
" • 559 

In Mem. xxi. 28 
11 Ixxxviii. 17 

Guinevere . 17 

. Lotos-Es. . no 
. To J. S. . si 
. Two Voices 263 
In Mem. cxiv. 16 
. Maud, I. i. 55 

. Gardener's 7?. 147 
. Guinevere . 404 

. In Mem. xc. 14 

) 

. Pal of Art 75 
I '/■</ Duty 1 2 
. Day-Dm, . 10 
. Princess, v. 115 
. lu.l/t-w.xxwii. 17 
11 l.v.wii. 7 
. Enid . . 8fio 

- Princess, vii. 97 



J 



46 



CONCORDANCE TO 



brook (s.) POEM. LINE. 

Past Yabbok i the livelong night { ' <%££$?„ 
b that loves To purl o'er matted . Ode to Mem. 58 
deep b groan'd beneath the mill ; Miller's D. 113 
thirsted for the b's, the showers . Faiima . 10 
long £ falling thro' theclov'n ravine CEnone . 8 

O mountain b's, I am the daughter 11 . 36 

torrent b's of hallow' d Israel . D.o/F. Worn. 181 

leap the rainbows of the b's . . Locksley H. 171 
drown'd within the whirling b : . Princess, Pro. 47 
Spring that swells the narrow b's, InMem.lxxxiv. 70 
The b alone far-off was heard, . 11 xciv. 7 

swoll'n b that bubbles fast . . tr xcviii. 6 

b shall babble down the plain, . it c. 10 

Here by this b we parted ; , . The Brook . 1 
yet the b he loved, ... ir . 15 

*0 b,' he says, 'O babbling b,' . ti .20 

the b, why not ? replies. . tr .22 

Philip's farm where b and river meet. 11 . 38 

chatterM more than b or bird ; . ir . 51 

Beyond the b, waist-deep in . ir . 118 

bowing o'er the b A tonsured head if . 199 

slopes a wild b o'er a little stone, . Enid . . 77 
broad b o'er a shingly bed if . 248 

at the inrunning of a little b . . Elaine 1379 

by the rushing b or silent well. . Gut7ievere . 397 
Little about it stirring save a b ! . Aylmer's P. 32 
b Vocal, withhereandthereasilence tr . 145 

Cataract b's to the ocean run, . The Islet . 17 
b's of Eden niazily murmuring, . Milton . 10 

is it the by or a pool, . . . The Window 4 

brook, (verb.) 

1 would not b my fear . . . D.o/F. Worn.. 154 
We b no farther insult . . . Princess, vi. 322 
scarce could b the strain and stir . In Mem. xv. 12 
shall I b to be supplicated ? . . Boddicea . 9 

broo/Yd. 

She the appeal B not . 
little maid, who b No silence, 
B not the expectant terror . 
but she b no more : 
She b it not ; but wrathful, . 



. Princess, vi. 
. Guinevere . 
. En. A rde7i . 
. Ayhner's F. 
. Lucretius . 



brookiizg. 

i> not the Tarquin in her veins, . Lucretius . 234 

broom. 

walks were stript as bare as b's Princess, Pro. 182 

broth. 

wicked b Confused the chemic labour Lucretius 19 

brother (v. brethren. ) 

vexed eddies of its wayward 2> . Isabel . . 33 

Each to each is dearest b ; . . Madeline . 21 

Oh rest ye, b mariners, . . Lotos-E's. . 174 

I knew your b : his mute dust . To J. S. . 29 

miss the b of your youth? . . tr • 59 
Thy b's and immortal souls. ' Love thou thy land,' 'etc. 8 
I and he, B's in Art ; . Gardener's D. 4 

She is my b's daughter : . . Dora . . 15 

Come, blessed b, come. . . StS. Stylites 201 

flies forward to his b Sun ; . . Golden Ve/ir 23 

Men my b's, men the workers, . Locksley H. 117 

b's of the weather stood Stock-still Will Water. 135 

Hob-and-nob with b Death L . Vision of Sin 194 

no men, Not even her b Arac, . Princess, i. 152 

i yiybV ' Well, my sister.' . n ii. 171 

lies ah by a sister slain, tr . 190 

That was fawn's blood, not b's, . tr . 256 

to save A prince, a b ? . tr . 271 

/ give thee to the death My b J . tr . 288 

one of those two b's, half aside . it v. 292 

O b, you have known the pangs . u . 364 

B' s, the woman's Angel guards you, it . 400 

saved my life : my b slew him . 11 vi. 92 

Help, father, b, help ; . it . 286 

Your b, Lady, — Florian, — ask . ti . 293 

the Prince Her b came ti . 325 

those twin b's, risen again . . \t vii, 74 



POEM. LINE. 

My friend, the b of my love ; • .In Mem. ix, 16 
More than my b's are tome. (rep. Ixxviii. 1.) n . 20 
'Where wertthou, b, those four days?' tr xxxi, 



Roves from the living b's face, 

met her to-day with her b, . 

not to her b I bowed. . 

chuckle, and grin at a b's shame ; 

Her b, from whom I keep aloof 

Blithe would her b's acceptance be. 

All, all upon the b. 

b lingers late With a roystering 

Her b is coming back to-night, 

only Maud and the b Hung 

This b had laugh'd her down, 

her b comes, like a blight 

b ran in his rage to the gate . 

A cry for a b's blood : . 

My dearest b, Edmund, sleeps, 

b James is in the harvest-field : 

two b's, one'a king, had met 

each had slain his b at a blow, 

yet unblazon'd shield, His Its; 

rosy-kindled with her b's kiss — 

Sir Modred's b, of a crafty house, tr 

Came on her b with a happy face ir 

should I quit your b's love, . . 11 

b's heard, and thought With shudderingi 

' Sweet b's, yesternight I seem'd 11 

' Fret not yourself, dear b, 



tr xxxu. 
Maud, I. iv. 



xni. 
xiv. 
xix. 



II. 



5 

7 
*4 
*4 
29 
46 
27 
43 
14 

1 

35 
60 



34 



The Brook . 187 



Elaine 



. 227 
. 40 
. 42 

• 379 

• 392 
- 557 
. 787 

• 940 
1015 
1028 
1068 



Ayhners F. 57 



341 
35i 
364 
398 
<°4 
607 
667 



Lucretius . 194 



Leolin, his b, living oft 
his, a b's love, that hung 

thro' the bright lawns to his b's ran n 
c B, for I have lov'd you more as son Than b 

b, where two fight The strongest . n 

' O b, I am grieVd to learn . . it 

low his b's mood had fall'n, . . 11 

Sent to the harrow'd b, ti 

thy b man, the Lord from Heaven ti 

b rotlier-bru te. 
ever butted his rough b-b 

brother-hands. 
I, clasping b-h, aver . . In Mem. lxxxiv. 102 

brother-like. 
kiss'd her with all pureness, b-l . Enid , 1732 

brother-oak. 
honours that, Thy famous b-o, . Talking O. 296 

brother-sister. 
are you That b-s Psyche, 

brought. 
from the outward to the inward b . Elednore 
the oriental fairy b, 
my mother b To yield consent 
the loss that b us pain, . 
light-foot Iris b it yester-eve, 
I won his love, I b him home. 
b Into the gulfs of sleep, 
where'er I came I b calamity, 
then at my request He b it ; 
every morning b a noble chance, . 
every chance b out a noble knight 
Autumn b an hour For Eustace, 
B out a dusky loaf . . . Audley Ct. . 21 
bailiff^ A Chartist pike. . Walk, to the M. 62 

b the night In which we sat together Love and Duty 58 



Princess, ii. 236 



Miller's D. 



4 

14 
137 
229 
81 
14 



CEitone 
The Sisters 
D.o/F. Worn. 51 
96 
The Epic . 48 
M d 'Arthur 230 
" 231 

Garde7iet > sD. 202 



all the mothers b Their children, 
how the mind was b To anchor 
pint, you b me, was the best 
Lord Ronald b a lily-white doe 
doe Lord Ronald had b 
he b, and I Dived in a hoard, 
which b My book to mind : . 
these b back A present, 
He b it, and himself, a sight 
She b us Academic silks, 
b a message here from Lady 
Queen's decease she b her up 
b her chain'd, a slave . 
Home they b her warrior dead : 



Godiva 
Two Voices 
Will Water. 
Lady Clare 

Princess, Pro. 



14 
458 

75 
3 

6t 

28 
119 

43 
197 



in. 70 

v. 133 

532 



TEX.VYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



47 



b but merchants' bales . 
precious relics b by thee ; 
he that b him back is there. . 
b an eye for all he saw ; 
b the harp and flung A ballad 
b a summons from the sea : . 
Large elements in order b, 



. To the Queen 7 

. Mariana . 56 
r . j 'Clear-headed 
'{ friend J etc. 11 



POEM. LINE. 

In J/em.x'ui. 10 
11 xvii. 18 
11 xxxii. 4 
n Ixxxviii. 9 
11 _ 27 

n CU. 16 

11 cxi. 13 

b to understand A sad astrology, . Maud,\. xviii. 35 
b sweet cakes to make them cheer Enid . . 388 
and he b me to a goodly house ; . 11 . . 713 
like a madman b her to the court, 11 . . 725 
promise, that whatever bride \ b 11 . . 783 

a a mantle down and wrapt her . 11 . . 824 
Prince had b his errant eyes Home 11 . 1094 

b upon their forays out . 11 1415 

b in whole hogs and quarter beeves, 11 . 1450 

miss'd, and b Her own claw back, Vivien . 349 

scatter'd theirs and b her off, . 11 . 414 

He b, not found it therefore : . 11 . 569 

1 by mere mischance have b, . Elaine . 189 

Broider'd with pearls,' and b it : . 11 . 372 

b the yet-unblazon'd shield, 11 . 378 

b his horse to Lancelot . . 11 . 492 

shield was b, and Gawain saw . 11 . 659 

have b thee, now a lonely man . 11 1361 

barge that b her moving down, . 11 1382 

Modred b His creatures . . Guinevere . 102 
my tears have b me good : . . 11 . 200 

with what she b Buy goods . . En. Arden . 137 
b the stinted commerce of those days ; 11 , 818 

letterwhichhe£, and swore besides Aylmer's F. 522 

She b strange news Sea Dreams 258 

bread from out the houses b . . Spec, of Iliad 6 
£him home at even-fall : ' Home they brought,' etc. 2 

brow. 
laurel greener from the b's . 
Upon her bed, across her b. . 

I ,r! hood shall bare her plaited b 

Frowns perfect-sweet along the b Madeline . 15 
o'er black b's drops down . . 11 34,46 

a £ of pearl Tress d with . . ArabianN's. 137 
as a maid, whose stately b . . Ode to Mem. 13 
With thy soften'd, shadow'd b, . Adeline . 46 
Her beautiful bold b . . . The Poet . 38 
broad clear b in sunlight glow'd ; L. q/ShalollM'i. 28 
I p. in //and bosom slowly down Mariana in tlieS. 14 

:<--forc him, striking on my b Fatima . 25 
the charm of married b's. . . CEnone . 74 
drew From her warm b's and bosom 11 . 173 

our b's in slumber's holy balm ; . Lotos E's. . 66 
tlie other with a downward b: . D.ofF.lVom.wj 
dead, my crown about my b's. . 11 . 162 

dropping bitter tears against his b M.d' Arthur 211 
the full day dwelt on her b's, Gardener's D. 135 

Love with knit b's went by, . 11 240 

.111 silent hours become St. SStyliies 162 
waited long ; My b's arc ready. . 11 . 203 

Look up the fold is on her b. . Tiuo Voices 192 

gain'd a laurel for your b ' You might kaveivon .' , ■/. \ 
Hi sweet face from b to chin : . /,. of Burleigh 62 
slcepylight upon their/Arand lips — Vision of Sin 9 
Fiat cap upon her b's. . 11 . 142 

Prom over her arch'd b's, . . Princess, ii. 25 
and the Roman b's Of Aggripina. 11 . 70 

gaunt old baron with his beetle b . » . 222 

1 bind my throbbing b, . n 232 

answering under crescent els ; . " . 406 

lilyliki iop'd her Us ; . 11 iv. 143 

manlike, but his b's Had sprouted, n . 186 

With hooded b's I crept into the hall, " .206 

single jewel on her b Burn , . 11 . 254 

over b And cheek and bosom brake 11 . 364 

cloak from Vs as pale and smooth 11 v. 70 

Hid prone she sank, " . 104 

laid A feeling linger on my b's, . 11 vi. 105 

With /' li> /' like night and evening 11 . 115 

breathe upon my os ; ... m vii. 332 
Vs of Olivet, , In Mem. xxxi. 1a 
Urania speaks with darkeu'd b; . n xxxvii. j 



POEM. LINE. 

took the thorns to bind my b's, . In Mem. Ixviii. 7 
Lift as thou may'st thy burthen'd b's 11 lxxi. 21 
dearest, now thy b's are cold, . 11 lxxiii. 5 

black and brown on kindred b's. . 11 Ixxviii. 16 

fan my b's and blow The fever . 11 Ixxxv. 8 

large and lucid round thy b. . . 11 xc. 8 

enter in at breast and b, n exxi. 1 1 

A band of pain across my b; . The Letters 6 

seeing cloud upon the mother's b, Enid . . 777 
wizard b bleach' d on the walls : . / 'ivien . 447 

two brethren slowly with bent b's . Elaine 1132 

kiss'd her quiet b's, and saying . 11 , 1144 
Arthur who beheld his cloudy b's . 11 . 1344 

Annie with her Us against the wall En. Arden . 313 
o'er his bent b's linger'd Averill, . Aylmer's F. 625 
placed upon the sick man's b , 11 . 700 

glimmer steals From thy pure b's, Tithonus . 35 
broke the breeze against the b, . The I 'oyage 9 
King bent low, with hand on b, . The Victim 57 

browbeat. 
clerk B-b's his desk below . . To J. M. K. 12 

brozu-bouud. 
B-b with burning gold. . . . D.ofF.Wom.12% 

brown. 
streaming curls of deepest b . Mariana in theS. 16 
beauties every shade of b and fair Princess, ii. 414 
all her autumn tresses falsely b n . 426 

black and b on kindred brows. In Mem. Ixxviii. 16 
under b Of lustier leaves . . 11 xcvii. 24 
that beech will gather b, . . ti c. 3 

watch the twilight falling b . ToF. D.Maurice 14 
B, looking hardly human, . . En. Arden . 639 
Enoch was so b, so bow'd, . . 11 . 704 

browsed, 
b by deep-udder'd kine . . . Gardener's D. 45 

bruise. 
hardly won with b and blow, . Elaine 1159 

bruised. 
cursed and scorn'd, and b with stones: Two Voices 222 
that there Lie b and maimed, . Princess, vi. 56 
b the herb, and crush'd the grape, In. Mem.XXXV.22 
swordcut on the cheek, And b . Elaine 259 

Brunelteschi. 
Arno, and the dome Of II ; . . The Brook . 190 

brunette. 
A quick b, well-moulded . . Princess, ii. 91 

brush (pencil.) 
took his b and blotted out the bird, Vivien . 328 

brush (tail of fox.) 
'Peter had the /', My Peter, . Alymcr's F. 254 

brush'd. 
when, this gad-fly b aside . . Princess, v. 404 
b Thro' the dim meadow . . Aylmer's F. 530 

brushing. 
b ankle-deep in flowers, . In Mem. Ixxxviii. 49 

brandish'd plume B his instep, . Enid . 1209 

brushwood.- 
lean Upon the dusky b . . D. ofF. Worn. 58 

brute. 
Take my b, and lead him in, . Vision of Sin 65 
madest Life in man and £; . . In Mem. Pro. 6 
No longer half-akin to b, . . 11 Con. 133 
had not been a sultan of b's, . Maud, 1 1. v. 81 

b's ofmountain back That carry kings Vivitn . 426 

Brutus. 
The Lucius Junius B of my kind ? Princess, ii. 264 

bubble (s.) 

scem'd to watch the dancing /', . Princess, iii. 8 

bubble (verb.) 
swoll'n brook that b's last . . In Mcm.xc\\\\. fi 
And yet b's o'er like a city, . . Maud, I. iv, S 

I b into eddying bays . , . I he Brook 41 



J 



CONCORDANCE TO 



. Golden Year 
In Mem. cxiv. 
Boadicea 



8 3 



Gidnevere . 289 



Enid . 



939 



bubbled. poem. line. 

at mine ear B the nightingale . Princess, iv. 247 
milk that b in the pail, . . InMem.\xxxvui. 51 

bucket. 
rope that haled the b's . . . StS.Stylites 63 

buckled. 
B with golden clasps before ; Sir L. andQ. G. 23 

buckler. 

The brand, the b, and the spear — ■ Two Voices 129 
Clash the darts and on the b beat Boadicea . 79 

bud(s.) 
chesnuts, when their b's Were glistening Miller 'sD. 60 
flowers, and b's and garlands gay, May Queen, i. 11 
leaf is woo'd from out the b . . Lotos-E's. . 71 
Sweet as new b's in Spring. D. ofF. Worn. 272 

all-too-full in b For puritanic stays : Talking- O. 59 
While thou abodest in the b. . Two Voices. 158 

In b or blade, or bloom, may find, Day-Din. . 206 
burst In carol, every b to flower . u . 256 

While life was yet in b and blade, Princess, i. 31 
Pretty £ .' Lily of the vale ! . . vi. 176 

longs to burst a frozen b, . InMem.\xxx\\. 15 
when her life was yet in b, . . h Con. 33 
half-opening b's Of April, . , Tithouus . 59 
b ever breaks into bloom . . The Islet . 32 

bud (verb.) 
when some new thought can b, 
b's and blossoms like the rest, 
out of tyranny tyranny b's. . 

Bude. 
thundering shores of B and Bos, 

buffet (s.) 
from his brand a windy b 

buffet (verb. ) 
echo flap And b round the hills 
Strove to b to land in vain. . 

bugle (adj.) 
b breezes blew Reveillee 

bugle (s.) 
Aloud the hollow b blowing, . Oriana . 17 

loud rung out the b's brays, . ir .48 

A mighty silver b hung, . L. ofShalottm. 16 

Blow, b, blow set the wild (rep.) . Princess, iii. .352 
horn And serpent-throated b, . tt v. 243 

March with banner and b and fife Maud, I. v. 10 
blare of b, clamour of men, . . OdeonlVell. 115 
Warble, O b, and trumpet, blare ! W. toAlcxan. 14 

bugle-horn. 

blew His wreathed b-h. . . Pal of Art. 64 

sound upon the b-h . . . Locksley H. 2 

sounding on the b-h ... 11 145 

build, 
b up all My sorrow with my song, CEnone . 38 
built When men knew how to b, . Ed. Morris 7 
b Far off from men a college Princess, Pro. 134 

She had founded ; they must b. . 11 ii. 129 

lent my life to b up yours, . . n iv. 332 

b some plan Foursquare to opposition, ir v. 221 

b's the house, or digs the grave, In Mem. xxxvi. 14 
change their sky To b and brood ; 11 cxiv. 16 

Godlike men we b our trust. . Ode on Well. 266 

builded. 
house was b of the earth, . . Deserted H. 15 

built, 
b up everywhere An under-roof . Dying Swan 3 
b my soul a lordly pleasure-house, Pal. of Art 1 
Thereon I b it firm. ... it -9 

great mansion, that is b for me, . 11 . 19 

spacious mansion b for me ?r . 234 

So lightly, beautifully b : . . ir . 294 

b When men knew how to build . Ed. Morris 6 
b herself an everlasting name. . Godiva . 79 

B for pleasure and for state. . L. of Burleigh 32 



. Golden Year 76 
. Princess, iv. 167 

. InMemAxvn. 8 



POEM. LINE. 

Rhodope, that b the pyramid, . Princess, ii. 68 

crowned towers B to the Sun : . i» iii. 327 

plan was mine. I b the nest ' . n iv. 346 

conscious of what temper you are b, n . 381 

Far off from men I b a fold . . tr v. 380 

tho' he b upon the babe restored ; 11 vii. 60 

towers fall'n as soon as b — . . In Mem. xxvi. 8 

b him fanes of fruitless prayer, . ir lv. 12 

New as his title, b last year, . Maud, I. x. 19 

B that new fort to overawe . . Enid . . 460 

Had b the King his havens, . . Vivien . 24 

b their castles of dissolving sand . En. Arden . 19 

b, and thatch'd with leaves of palm, 11 . 560 

bulbul. 
Died round the b as he sung ; .Arabian IPs. 70 
O B, any rose of Gulistan . . Princess, iv. 104 

bulge. 
cheek B with the unswallow'd piece, Enid 1479 

bulk. 
Tudor-chimnied b Of mellow brickwork Ed. Morris 1 1 
bones of some vast b that lived . Princess, iii. 277 
those two b's at Arac's side, . . ir v. 488 

grown a b Of spanless girth, . n vi. 19 

Dark b's that tumble half alive . InMemAxix. 11 

bulkd. 
an old-world mammoth b in ice, . Princess, v. 142 

bull{s.) 

The mild b's golden horn. . . Pal. of Art 120 

oil'd and curl'd Assyrian B . . Maud, I. vi. 44 

shaking vassals call'd the B, . Enid . 1288 

Bull (Inn Sign.) 
The B, the Fleece are cramm'd . A udlcy Ct. . 1 

Bull (surname.) 
Edwin Morris and with Edward B Ed. Morris . 14 
said the fat-faced curate Edward B 11 42, 90 

bullet. 
B's fell like rain ; . . . . The Captain 46 

bulrush. 
sword-grass and the b in the pool. May Queen, ii. 28 

bidrush-bed. 
plunged Among the b-b's, . . M.d' Arthur iy$ 

bulwark. 
When now they saw their b fallen, Enid . 1017 

bummin'. 
b awaay loike a buzzard-clock . N. Farmer 18 

bitmp'd. 
b the ice into three several stars, . The Epic . 12 

bumper. 
froth'd his b's to the brim ; . D. of the O. Year 19 

bunch. 
With b and berry and flower . CEnone . . 100 

grapes with b'es red as blood ; . Day-Dm. . 64 

bundle. 

now hastily caught His b . . En. A rden 237 

buoy. 

left behind the painted b . . The Voyage 1 

buoyed. 
vapour b the crescent-bark, . . Day-Dm. . 186 
B upon floating tackle . . . En A rden . 552 

bur. 
b and brake and briar, . . . Day-Dm. . 66 
like a wall of b's and thorns ; . Sea Dreams 115 

burden (v. burthen.) 
people here, a beast of b . . Pal. of Art . 149 
The daily b for the back. . . In Mem. xxv. 4 

burgeon. 
space to b out of all Within her— . Princess, vii. 255 
b's every maze of quick . . InMcm. cxiv. 2 

burglier. 
Knight and b, lord and dame, L. ofShalott, iv. 43 



TEAWYSON'S WORKS. 



49 



burial [aA}.) 
kills her babe for a b fee, 

burial (s.) 
hears his b talked of 
to glorious b slowly borne, . 
IV.ty f >r my soul, and yield me b. 
Fresh from the b of her little one, 
summer b deep in hollyhocks ; 

buried, 
b her like my own sweet child, 
have they not b me deep enough? 
see that she be b worshipfully.' 
maiden b, not as one unknown, 
same week when Annie b it, . 
when the b him the little port 
b now seven decads deep 
b in some weightier argument, 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud, I. i. 45 

Princess, vii. 137 
Ode on Well. 193 
Elaine 1273 

En. Arden . 280 
Ay Inter's F. 164 

Lady Clare 27 

Maud, II. v. 96 

Elaine 131 9 

" I3 2 4 

En. Arden . 270 

ir . 91s 

. Aylmer's F. 442 

, Lucretius . 9 

Burleigh. 
if B, fair and free, . . L.of Burleigh 58 
l)ceply mourn'd the Lord of B, . 11 . 91 

Bit rleigh-ltouse. 
Bit by Stamford-town. . . . L.oJ "Burleigh 92 

burlesque. 
seem'd to wrestle with b, . . Princess, Con. 16 

burn. 
cricket chirps : the light b's low : D.o/tlte O. Year 40 
.ToJ.S. . 71 
. StS.Stylites 193 
. Princess, iii. 30 
11 iv. 64 

11 . 255 

. In Mem. vi 34 
11 xciv. 5 
11 c. 4 

. Maud, I. xviii. 39 
. Enid 775, 1283 
. 612 
538 



While the stars b, the moons 
And b a fragrant lamp before 
but my cheek Began to b and b, 
b's Above the unrisen morrow :' 

jewel on her brow B . 
with the thought her colour b's ; 
calm that let the tapers b 
The maple b itself away ; 

■ res, yet with power to b 
cheek b and either eyelid fall, 

t practice b's into the blood, Vivien 

. Guinevere . 

b the threshold of the night, . . The Voyam 18 

v heretic, b, B, b. . The Ringlet 53 

Wherefore in me b's an anger, . Boiidicea . 52 

I the gates, and b the palaces, 11 . 64 

fires b clear, And frost is here, . The Window 46 

burn'd. 
B like one burning flame together, 
/- The red anemone. 
/- in fire, or boil'd in oil, 
th.it which in me b, The love. 
eye, That b upon its object, . 
S'ht, when the sunset / 
one low light betwixt ihem b 
fire. That i as on an altar. . 
At times the whole sea /', 
still the focman spoil'd and b 

burning. 
A love still b upward, . 

Unions b, mellow 
pers /' fair .... 
lifelong injuries b unavenged, 

burnish. 
to scream, to /', and to scour, 

bumish'd. 
b without fear The brand 
glitter * by the frosty dark ; 

burnt. 
B like a fringe of fire 
b His 1 Arthur . 

it', much better b, 

?iir Ralph had b them all— . 
cast no shadow 
the grange, nor buss'd 
other thought* than Peace B in us, 
So b he was with passion, 

him all within, 
and in it Far cities b 
and b, Now chafing at his own 



L.efSlialotl,\n. 22 
D. of '/•'. Worn. 71 
StS.Stylites 51 
Talking O. 10 
LoveandDuty 62 
Mnud, I. vi. 8 
Guinevere . 4 
En. Arden . 72 
The Voyage 51 
Tlte Victim 17 



. Isabel . .18 
. Lockslcy II. 159 
. Sir Gala/tad 32 
. Enid . 1544 

. Princess, iv. 499 



Two Voices 
J'rinccss, v. 



128 



Pal. of Art 48 

Tlte Epic . 27 

11 . 40 

Princess,Pro. 229 

11 i. 6 

11 v. 213 

236 

Sob 

95° 

83 

536 



Enid . 

Guinevere 

Aylmer's F. 



beaker. 
B and broke the grove and altar 
B in each man's blood. 

burr. 
When b and bine were gatherM ; 

burst (s.) 
Preluded those melodious b's, 



POEM. LINE. 

Boiidicea . 2 
Tlte Captain 16 

Aylmer's F. 113 

D. o/F. Worn. 6 



more than mortal in the b Of sunrise, Princess, Pro. 40 
given to starts and b's Of revel ; . 11 i 

B's of great heart and slips . . 11 v 

storm, its b of passion spent. . Vivien 

Caught in a b of unexpected storm, Aylmer's F. 

burst (verb.) 
B's into blossom in his sight. . Fatima. 

high shrine-doors b thro' . . D. o/F. Worn. 29 
the old man b in sobs . . . Dora . . 155 
with hoggish whine They&ny prayer. StS. Stylitesija 
Or to b all links of habit — . . LocksUyH. 157 
every bird of Eden b In carol . Day-Dm. 
heaven b's her starry floors, . 
great organ almost b his pipes, 
rose of Gulistan Shall b her veil 
b and flood the world with foam : 
clad in iron b the ranks of war 
in the saddle, then b out in words 
b the great bronze valves, 
b The laces toward her babe ; . 11 
longs to b a frozen bud, . In Mem. lxxxii. 

fiery-hot to b All barriers . . 11 cxiii. 

yearn'd to b the folded gloom, . 11 exxi. 

Ready to b in a colour'd flame ; . Maud, I. vi. 
b and drown with deluging storms 11 II. i. 
make your Enid b Sunlike . . Enid . 
pavement echoing, b Their drowze 11 
pearl-necklace of the Queen That b Vivien 
half his blood b forth, . . . Elaine 
b away To weep and wail in secret 11 
b away In search of stream . , En. Arden 63 
B his own wyvcrn on the seal, . Aylmer's F. 516 
high on waves that idly b . . Tlte Voyage 69 
B the gates, and burn the palaces, Boiidicea . 64 

burthen (load.) 
Less b, by tcn-hundrcd-fold, . StS.Stylites 24 

to lift a b from thy heart . Love and Duty 93 

With the b of an honour . , L.oJ 'Burleigh 79 
drew My b from mine arms, . Princess, iv. 174 

not the /' that they bring. . . luMcm. xiii. 20 
turns his b into gain. ... 11 lxxix. 12 
breathless b of low-folded heavens Aylmer's F. 612 
One b and she would not lighten it ? » 703 

weep their b to the gTound, . . Tithouus . 2 
burthen (refrain.) 



53 

191 
810 

- 5 

35 



. StAgttes'Eve 27 
. Princess, ii. 450 
iv. 105 

453 

483 

v. 265 

vi. 59 



■5 

13 

3 

19 

42 

788 

1 1 20 

302 

516 
1237 



they shrick'd the b ' Him 1' 

like a b, 'him or death.' 

As tho' it were the b of a song, 

bury. 
You'll b me, my mother, 
b me beside the gate, . 
I will /' myself in myself, . 
b All this dead body of hate, 
cannot even b a man ; . 
come to b me, b me Deeper . 
b the Great Duke (rep.) 

burying. 
Driving, hurrying, marrying, b, 

bush. 
all kiss'd Beneath the sacred b 
I [ear how the b'es echo I 
Holding the I, to fix it back, 
underneath the barren b 



. Ed. Morris 123 
. Elaine . £99 
. En. Arden . 798 

May Queettj ii. 29 

. Princess, ii. 189 

. Maud, I. i. 76 

11 xix. 96 

11 II. v. 22 

II 103 

. Ode on Well. 1 

. Maud, II. v. 12 



. The Epic . 
Gardener's D. 

In Mem. xc. 



He dragg'd his eyebrow b'es down, Vivien 
in the b beside me chirrupt . 
What?— that the b were leafless? 
luslt-letirded. 
b-b Barons heaved and blew, 
I usiness. 

in the tangled b of the world, . Prin 

b often cafl'd her from it, . . En. Arden . 



3 

97 

126 

3 

656 

Grandmother 40 

Lucretius . 203 

Princess, v. 20 



'57 

263 



5° 



CONCORDANCE TO 



bziSS. POEM. LINE. 

V me, thou rough sketch of man, . Vision of Sin 189 

bussed. 
nor b the milking-maid, . . Princess, v. 213 

bust. 
showed the house, Greek, set with b's : Princess,Pro, 11 
stood a b of Pallas for a sign, . 11 i. 219 

busying. 
B themselves about the flowerage Aylmer's F. 203 

butler. 
sits the B with a flask . . . Day-Dm. . 45 
The b drank, the steward scrawl'd, ir . 142 

butt (s.) 
like a b, and harsh as crabs. . Walk, to the M. 41 

from b's of water on the slope, . Princess, Pro. 60 
straddling on the b's While the wine Guinevere . 266 

butt (verb.) 
how you b against my wish, . 

butted, 
b his rough brother-brute 



. Enid . 1525 

Lucretius . 194 
N. Farmer . 31 



Adeline . 28 
Talking O. . 220 



butter-bump. 
Moast like a b-b, for J 'eerd 'un 

butterfly. 
Hast thou heard the butterflies 
round her lip Like a golden b ; 

buy. 

Bought? what is it he cannot b? . Maud, I. x. 32 

Go to the town and b us flesh . Enid . . 372 

B goods and stores — set Annie forth En. Arde?i . 138 

b strange shares in some Peruvian Sea Drea?ns 15 

buying. 
less Than what she gave in b 



. En. Arden . 255 



btizz. 



It ties wildly round the point ; . Vivien . 282 

vermin voices here May b so loud — Elaine • 140 

shake off the bee that ties at us ; . if . . 781 

buzzard-clock. 
bummin* awaay loike a b-c . . iV. Farmer 18 

buzz'd. 
palace bang'd and b, and clackt, . Vay-Dm. . 146 
b in knots of talk . ... Princess, i. . 132 

b abroad About the maid of Astolat, Elaine . 718 

buzzing. 
b's of the honied hours. . . In Mem. lxxxviii. 52 

bygones. 
trim our sails, and let old b be, 

by-lane. 

filthy b-l rings to the yell 

byre. 
thorpe and b arose in fire, 



Princess, iv. 51 



Maud, I. i. 
The Victim 



byway. 
where this b joins The turnpike? . V/alk. to the M. 4 

byword, 
fatal b of all years to come . . Godiva . 67 

c 

cabin. 
Shaking their pretty c, . 

cabinet. 
moving toward a cedarn c, . 

cabin-window. 
I see the c-w bright ; 

cackle. 

With c and with clatter. . . The Goose . 12 

c of your bourg The murmur . Enid . . 276 

c of the unborn about the grave, . Vivien . 357 

cackled. 
It clack'd and c louder. . . The Goose . 24 



En. Arden . 173 
Enid . .136 
In Mem. x. 3 



POEM. LINE. 

Walk, to the M. 47 

Golden Year 53 

729 



Aylmer's F. 



Lucretius 



Enid 



Elaine 



. 781 
- 837 

• 965 
*794 

• 2 3 

• z 97 



Elaine 



D. ofF. Worn. 139 
. Enid . . 745 

. Princess, vii. 32 
. In Mem. xxvii. 3 



cade?ice. 
a foot Lessening in perfect c, 
in mimic c answered James . 
when the preacher's c liow'd . 

Cadmean. 

dragon warriors from C teeth, 

Caerleon. 
Held court at old C upon Usk. 
When late I .eft C 
all that week was old C gay. 
at C the full-tided Usk, 
With Arthur to C upon Usk. 
That at C ; this at Camelot : 
at C had he help'd his lord, . 

Caerlyle. 
this dealt him at C ; 

Ccesar. 

That dull cold-blooded C . 
for whose love the Roman C first 

cage (s.) 
silent in the muffled c of life : 
linnet born within the c, 

cage (verb. ) 
c a buxom captive here and therej 

cageling. 
As the c newly flown returns, 

Cain. 
lust of gain, in the spirit of C, 

cairn' d. 
the c mountain was a shadow, 

caitiff (&dj.) 
bandit earls, and c knights, . 
tell him all their c talk . 

caitiff {s.) 
striking great blows At c's . 
would track this c to his hold, 
waiting for them, c's all ; 

cake. 
sweet c's to make them cheer, 

calamity. 
Where'er I came I brought c.' 
That a c hard to be borne ? 
all C's hugest waves confound, 
heart foreshadowing all c, 

calculation. 
Abhorrent of a c crost, . 

calendar d. 
registered and c for saints. 

calf {of the leg. 
proxy-wedded with a bootless c 

Caliphat. 
great Pavilion of the C. 

call (s.) 
I saw a lady within c, . 
Whistle back the parrot's c, . 
She answered to my c, . 
When they answer to his c, . 

stable wench Came running at the c Princess, i. . 224 
martial song like a trumpet's c ! . Maud, I. v. 5 
Hope at Beauty's c would perch 

call (verb.) 
thro' wild March the throstle c's, 
to the billow the fountain c's : 
saw me fight, she heard me c, 
c aloud in the dreamy dells, . 
C to each other and whoop . 
if any came near I would c, 
will she answer if I c ? . 
must wake and c me early, (rep.) 
If you do not c me loud, 
They cme cruel-hearted, 
If you're waking? me early, (rep.) 



, Vivien 


• 392 


. Vivie?i 


■ 75° 


. Mmid, I. i 


• 23 


. Vivie7i 


. 488 


. Enid . 


• 35 


tr 


• 9'5 


. Enid . 


. g6 


11 


• 415 


M 


• 9°7 



Enid 



D.ofF. Worn. 96 
Maud, I. xiii. 3 
Will . . 5 
En. Arden . 684 



En. Arden . 470 
St S. Stylites 1 30 



Princess, 



33 



. Arabian N's. 114 

. D. ofF. Worn. 85 

. Locksley H. 171 

. Will Water. 106 

L. of Burleigh 50 



. Coquette, i. . 


3 


. To tlie Qneen 


14 


. Sea Fairies 


<> 


. Oriana 


■3,2 


. Tlie Merman 


2°> 


11 . 


26 


. The Mermaid 38 


. Miller s D. 


Il8 


May Queen, i, 1 


4 1 


ir 


10 


11 


19 


11 11. 1, 


5^ 



TEiV.VYSON'S WORKS. 



5* 



POEM. LINE. 

C me before the day is bom. May Queen ii. 49 

I heard the angels c ; . . . 11 iii. 25 

I heard them c my soul. . . » .28 

that Rosamond, whom men c fair, D. o/F. Worn. 252 

those who c them friend ? . . M. a" Arthur 253 

a word with her he c^ his wife, . Dora . . 42 

Father ! — if you let me c you so — ir . . 137 

' They c me what they will,' . Golden Year 14 

as of old, the curlews c, . . Locksley II. 3 

.., my merry comrades c me, . 11 . 145 

c thee from the boxes. . . . Will Water. 240 

when he ds, and thou shalt cease . m . 241 

would c them masterpieces : . Princess, i. 144 

Brutus of my kind ? Himyourgreat : 11 ii. 265 

Should I not c her wise, . . ir . 374 

c down from Heaven A blessing . ir . 454 

She ds her plagiarist, ... 11 iii. 7S 

nebulous star we c the Sun, . . rr iv. 1 

c her Ida, tho' I knew her not, . ir vii. 81 

c hur sweet, a.s if in urony. . - n .82 

c her hard and cold ... 11 .83 

children c, and I Thy shepherd pipe, 11 . 202 

c To what I feel is Lord . . In Mem. liv. iS 

clap their cheeks, to c them mine ; 11 lxxxiii. 18 

c The spirits from their golden day, 11 xciii. 5 

1 thousand memories c, 11 ex. 10 

that those we c the dead . . 11 c.xvii. 5 

you may c it a little too ripe, . Maud, I. ii. 9 

Whatever they c him, what care I, 11 x. 64 

shall c me ungentle, . . » xiii. 14 

Scarcely, now, would I c him a cheat ; 11 . 29 

That heard me softly c, . " II. iv. 76 

What do they c you?' 'Katie.' . The Brook . 211 

I him £ you fairest fair, . Enid . . 720 

leard C herself false : . .11 . . 963 

C for the woman of the house, 1 ,11 . 1112 

bad the host C in what men . 11 1135 

I c mine own self wild, . . " 1160 

c it lovers' quarrels, yet I know . 11 . J173 

C the !> ost and bid him bring . 11 . 1249 

nid the Fair, . . " . 1810 

The p ihel : . . Vivien . 166 

will c Thai (J mg . . " . . 16S 

well, I will not c it vice : . " . 218 

Envy it** you Devil's son, n 3' 7, 347 

Master, sh all we c him ovcrquick 11 . . 574 

c him were it not for womanhood) 11 . . 635 

Could c him the main cause . ■■ . 637 

lily maid In earnest, . . Elaine . 385 

iu c great : . . .11 . . 445 

<• me wilful, . 11 . 746 

i c her friend and sister 11 861 

v death, who c's for me . . 11 . 101 1 

C and I follow, I follow! . . 11 . 1012 

I know not what you c the highest ; 11 . 1074 

bid c the ghostly man . . 11 . 1093 

I c my friends In testimony, . . 11 . 1291 

how dare I c him mine? . . Guinevere . 610 

voice that c's Doom upon kings, . Aylmcr's F. 741 

not C him, love, Before you prove Sea Dreams 166 

populaces, Boddicea . 7 

From childly wont and ancient use I c — Lucretius 206 

call to visit.) 
say the neighbours when they c, . A mphion . 5 

call'd. 

Old voices c her from without. . Mariana . 68 

me from the cleft, . . (Enone . 53 

ly his name, complaining loud, M, d'Arthumo 

' the years to come, . Gardener' 'sD.ij6 

day When Allan < his son. . . Dora . . 9 

rhimCrichton, for he seem'd All-perfect Ed. Morris 22 

merry boy they c him then, . . Two Voices 322 

c mine host To council, . . Princess, i. . 171 

..... n . 222 

the chapel bells f us: . . . 11 ii. 447 

■ ter girl was c to trial : , . 11 iv. 209 

he's child to cast . 11 . 218 

1 mtilt ... ip . 475 

pique at what she c The raillery . 11 . 564 



POF-M. LINE. 

C him worthy to be loved . . Princess, v. 537 
,: them dear deliverers, ... 11 vi. 76 

or c On flying Time from all . 11 vii. S9 

c me in the public squares . . InMem. lxviii. 11 
c me fool, they c me child : . . 11 13 

c old Philip out To show the farm : The Brook . 120 
c her like that maiden in the tale, Enid . . 742 
c For Enid, and when Yniol . .11. . 755 
hastyjudger would have c her guilt 11 . 3282 

whom his shaking vassals c the Bull, 11 . 12S3 

r for flesh and wine to feed his spears. 11 . 1449 

They c him the great Prince, ,11 . 1809 

The people c him Wizard ; . . Vivien . 26 

c herself a gilded summer fly . 11 . . 107 

Vivien c herself P,ut rather seem'd 11 . . no 
Who c her what he c her — . . u . . 713 
C her to shelter in the hollow oak 11 . . 743 
if I be what I am grossly c . .11. . 764 
c him dear protector in her fright, 11 . . 795 
c him lord and liege, Her seer, 11 802 

c his wound a little hurt . . Elaine . 848 

Approaching thro' the darkness, c: 11 . . 994 
c hersong'TheSongofLoveandDeath,'ii . . 999 
c The father, and all three in hurry 11 . 1017 

sometime c the maid of Astolat, . 11 . 1266 

c him the false son of Gerlois : . Guinevere . 286 
he, the King, C me polluted : . 11 . 613 

His hope he c it ; . . . . ,1 . 625 

business often c her from it, . . En. Arden . 263 
C him, father Philip ... 11 . 351 

Father Philip (as they c him) . 11 . 362 

' After the Lord has c me , . 11 . 811 

c aloud for Miriam Lane. . . 11 . 837 

C to the bar, but ever c away . Aylmcr's F. 59 
C all her vital spirits into each ear 11 . 2or 

the great Sicilian c Calliope . . Lucretius . 93 

callest. 
C thou that thing a leg? . . Vision oj Sin Eg 

calling- (part.) 
hear the dewy echoes c . . Lotos-E's. . 139 

C thyself a little lower Than angels. Two Voices 198 
Maud, They were crying and c. . Maud, I. xii. 4 
Were crying and c to her, . . 1, .26 

chafing his pale hands, and c to him. Enid 1430-3 
Moaning and c out of other lands, Vivien . 811 

pursued her, c' Stay a little I .Elaine 680 

c down a blessing on his head . En. Arden . 324 
c, here and there, about the wood. 11 . 380 

calling (s.) 
came so loud a c of the sea, . . En. Arden . 909 

Calliope. 
called C to grace his golden verse — Lucretius . 94 

calm (adj.) 
lower down The bay was ody c : . Audley Ct. . S5 
world's great bridals, chaste and c : Princess, vii. 278 
C is the morn without a sound, . In Mem. xi. r 
C as to suit a calmer grief, . . 11 .2 

His eye was c, and suddenly she took Vivien . 703 

calm (s. ) 
summer c of golden charity . . Isabel . . S 
No tranced summer c is thine, . Madeline . 2 
shallop through the star-strown c, Arabian N's. 36 
' There is no joy but c !' . . Lotos-E's. . 68 
some have striven Achieving c . Two Voices 209 
Put on more c and added suppliantly ; Princess, vi. 198 
if c at all, If any e, a calm despair : In Mem. xi. 15 
dead c in that noble breast . . 11 . 19 

touch of change in c or storm ; . 11 xvi. 6 

c that let the tapers burn . . 11 xciv. 5 

tracts of c from tempest made, . 11 cxi. 14 

moulded in colossal c. . u Con. 10 

Long have I sigh'd for a c: . . Maud, 1. ii. 1 
whom she answer'd with all c. . Elaine . 991 

follow'd c's, and then winds variable, En. Arden 541 
mock'd him with returning c . Lucretius . 25 

centcrM in eternal c. ... 11 . 79 

Their sacred everlasting c I . . 11 . no 

so fine, nor so divine a e , , « . 111 



5 2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



cahjiing. POEM. line. 

C itself to the long-wish'd-for end, Maud, I. xviii. 5 

Caipe. 
From C unto Caucasus they sung, The Poet . 15 

calumet, 
celts antic's, Claymore andsnowshoe, Princess t Pro. 18 

Sweeter tones than c ? . . . A Dirge . 17 

throne of Indian C slowly sail'd . Pal.ofArt , 115 

came. 
the oxen's low C to her : . . Mariana . 29 
whence that glory c Upon me, . Arabia?i N's. 94 
c upon the great Pavilion . . ir 113 

fall to the ground if you c in. . Poet's Mi?id 23 
shrink to the earth if you c in. . tr 37 

if any c near I would call . . TheMermaid 38 
C two young lovers lately wed ; L. ofS/ialott,n. 34 
sun c dazzling through the leaves, 11 iii. 3 

Down she c and found a boat, . ir iv. 6 

Out upon the wharfs they c, ir 42 

c a sound as of the sea ; 
c and sat Below the chesnuts. 
went and c a thousand times, 
off the wold I c, and lay 
swift blood that went and c . 
Hither c at noon Mournful CEnone CE7ione 
C up from reedy Simois 
to embrace him coming ere he c. 
speech C down upon my heart. . 
to the bower they c y Naked they c 
c, they cut away my tallest pines 
panthers roar c muffled 
The Abominable, that uninvited c 
to care from whence I c. . L. C. V. de Vere 12 
As I c up the valley . . . MayQueen t i. 13 
Till Charles's Wain c out . . n ii. 12 

To die before the snowdrop c, . if iii. 4 

There came a sweeter token . if .22 

c a swell of music on the wind. . 11 32, 36 

once again it c, and close beside . 11 .39 

In the afternoon they c unto a . Lotos-Ks. . 3 
melancholy Lotos-eaters c. ir 27 

You c to us so readily, . . D. of the O. Year 7 
voice Crollingon the wind. l Of old sat Freedom* etc. 8 
C on the shining levels . . M. d' Arthur 51 



Mariana in the S. 
. Miller's D. 



Fatima 



to the barge they c. 

c a bark that, blowing forward, . it Ep. 

C, drew your pencil from you, Gardener 'sD. 

C voices of the well-contented doves, if 

some sweet answer, tho' no answer c, 11 

More musical than ever c in one, if 

c Memory with sad eyes, 11 

farewells — Of that which c between, ti 

c 2l day When Allan call'd his son, Dora 

then distresses c on him ; 

evil c on William at the first 

the farmer c into the field 

when the morrow c, she rose and took 

And the boy's cry c to her . 

the day when first she c, 

they c in : but when the boy 

never c a-begging for myself, 

love c back a hundredfold 

c again together on the king . Atidley Ct. 

C to the hammer here in March — 11 

I went and c ; Her voice fled . Ed. Morris 

out they c Trustees and Aunts . 11 

those that c To touch my body . StS. Stylites 77 

c To rest beneath thy boughs. — TalkingO. 35, 99, 155 



205 

21 

26 

88 

156 

228 

238 

247 

8 

47 

59 

72 



with him Albert c on his. 

here she c, and round me play'd, 

c Like Death betwixt thy dear 

c a colour and a light, . 

C out clear plates of sapphire 

if thro' lower lives I c — 

answer c there none : 

C little copses climbing. 

C wet-shot alder from the wave 



if . 105 

» • i33 

Love and D ] ?ity 47 

, Locks ley H. 25 

. Two Voices 12 

" . 364 

11 . 425 

Amphwn . 32 

n . 41 



C yews, a dismal coterie ; 
elms c breaking from the vine, 
Cruelly c they back to-day . 
best That ever came from pipe, 
since I c to live and learn, 
I think he c like Ganymede, 
C crowing over Thames, 
went Long since, and c no more. 
In there c old Alice the nurse, 
And he c to look upon her, . 
C in a sun-Ht fall of rain. 
Bare-footed c the beggar maid 



. Ampkion 


42 


. Ed. Gray . 
. Will Water. 


45 
18 
76 


11 . 


81 


11 


119 


11 . 
11 


140 
186 



. Lady Clare 13 
. L. of Burleigh 93 
SirL. andQ. G. 4 
Beggar Maid 3 



youth c riding toward a palace-gate. Vision of Sin 2 

from the palace <ra child of sin, 

C floating on for many a month 

there c a further change : 

satiated at length C to the ruins. Prhicess, Pro. 

C murmurs of her beauty 

spake of why we c, And my betroth' d 

stable wench C running at the call, 

when we c where lies the child 

the College Portress c : 

c to chivalry : When some respect 

(what other way was left) I c* 

arrow-wounded fawn C flying 

as you c, to slip away, To-day, 

so rapt, we gazing, c a voice, 

Sheba cto ask of Solomon.' . 

if you c Among us, debtors . 

Will wonder why they c : 

c Melissa hitting all we saw 

C furrowing all the orient 

was agreed when first they c ; 

Then c these dreadful words out 

your sister c she won the heart 

Hither c Cyril, and yawning 

who we were, And why we c ? 

c a message from the Head. 

On a sudden my strange seizure c 

c to where the river sloped . 

many weary moons before we c f 

crossing, c On flowery levels 

rosy heights c out above the lawns. 

How c you here ¥ I told him : 

as we c, the crowd dividing clove 

Then c your new friend : 

What student c but that you planed 

Then c these wolves : . 

c to tell you : found that you 

c a little stir About the doors, 

C all in haste to hinder wrong, 

C in long breezes rapt from . 

A man I c to see you : . 

that I c not all unauthorized 

c On a sudden the weird seizure 

went by As strangely as it c 

touch of all mischance but c 

washed with morning, as they c 

batter'd at the doors ; none c: 

message and defiance went and c _ 

Then c a postscript dash'd across 

like a flash the weird affection c ." 

c As comes a pillar of electric cloud, 

Like summer tempest c her tears — 

C Psyche, sorrowing for Aglaia. . 

enemies have fall'n, have fall'n : they c 

on they c, Their feet in flowers, 

At distance follow' d : so they c : . 

When first she c, all flush'd you said 

c to woo Your Highness — . 

the Prince Her brothers; . 

maidens c, they talked, They sang, 

down she c, And found fair peace 

with her oft Melissa c ; 

When Cyril pleaded, Ida c behind 

oft she sat : Then c a change 

a touch C round my wrist, . 

when she c From barren deeps 

There c a minute's pause 

looking back to whence I c t 

I murmur/ d as I c along 



S 

54 

207 

9i 
- 35 
. 118 
. 224 

• 255 

1 
. 119 
. 199 
. 252 
. 276 

• 297 
. 325 

• 333 
. 410 

• 443 



. 4i 

• 7i 
. 107 
. 120 
. 152 
. 167 

• 273 
. 302 

- 317 
. - 347 
iv. 202 

. 264 

• 279 
. 296 
. 302 

- 323 
. 354 
. 382 
. 411 
. 421 
. 447 

• 538 
. 546 
. 55o 

v. 254 
. 327 
. 360 
. 414 
. 466 
. 512 

• 546 
vi. 13 

22-27 

. 61 

. 67 

• 233 
. 308 

..* 325 

vlu 7 

. 28 
. 41 
. 63 

- 77 
. 123 



Con. 4 
In Mem. xxiii. 7 
ir xxxvii. 21 



TENNYSOiVS IVOKA'S. 



lxxxiv. 

II lxxxix. 13 

11 xciv. 39 
II xcv. 16 

11 cxxiii. 23 
11 Con. 10 

Maud, I. i. 49 
11 vi. 20 
. . 64 
11 viii. 1 
11 x. 37 

36 
28 

49 

61 



xiu. 
xviii. 



XIX. 

II. i. 



The Brook 



T/ie Daisy . 
Lt. Brigade 
Enid 



POEM. LINE 

path wc c by, thorn and flower, . In Mem. adv. 5 

r In whispers of the beauteous world. 11 lxxviii. n 

truth c borne with bier and pall, 

if they c who past away, 

c on that which is, and caught 

c at length To find a stronger faith 

out of darkness c the hands . 

went and c. Remade the blood 

if an enemy's fleet c yonder . 

when the morning c In a cloud, 

C out of her pitying womanhood, 

She c to the village church, . 

c one to the county town 

However she c to be so allied 

snow-limb'd Eve from whom she 

no one ask me how it c to pass ; 

at last, when each c home, . 

He c with the babe-faced lord ; 

ghost That never c from on high 

C glimmering thro' the laurels 

Everything c to be known : . 

he c not back From the wilderness 

whether he c in the Hanover ship, 

here I c, twenty years back — 

evermore her father c across 

said Katie, ' we c back.' 

how we c at last To Como ; . 

C thro' the jaws of Death 

Remembering when first he c 

Before him c a forester of Dean 

Cquickly flashing through the shallow 11 

thither c Geraint, and underneath 11 

C forward with the helmet . . 11 

c again with one, A youth . . 11 

thitherfthe twain, and when Geraint 11 

errant knights And ladies c, . .11 

c a clapping as of phantom hands. 11 

c A stately queen whose name was 11 

therewithal one c and seized on her, 11 

C one with this and laid it in 

c among you here so suddenly, 

There c a fair-hair'd youth . 

c near, lifted adoring eyes, . 

but that your father c between 

Suddenly c, and at his side all pal 

her desolation c Upon her, , 

C riding with a hundred lances 

ere he c, like one that hails . 

out of her there ra power upon him; 11 

Neigh'd with ail gladness as they c, 11 

C purer pleasures unto mortal kind 11 

o'er her meek eyes c a happy mist 11 

you c — But once you c, — 

thither rThe King's own leech 

tyrants when they c to power) 

They said a light c from her 

and his book c down to me.' 

C to her old perch back, 

neck glittering went and c ; . 

c the lily maid by that good shield Elaine 

when none knew from whence he c, 

Arthur c, and labouring up the pass 

fan old, dumb, myriad-wrinkled man, 

c a cloud Of melancholy severe, 

as she c from out the tower. . 

€ on him a sort of sacred fear, 

c the hermit out and bare him in, 

C round their great Pcndragon, 

since the knight C not to us, . 

c at but, t li. >* late, to A>tolat: 

e The lord of Astolat out, 

dame C suddenly on the Queen 

C on her brother with a happy face 

She c before Sir Lancelot, 

c her father, saying in low tones 

c her brethren, saying, ' Peace to thee n . . 990 

the Kin>; C girt with Knights : . 11 . 1254 

Lancelot later c and mused at her, 11 . 1261 

grim faces <- and went Before her, Guinevere . 70 

whan she c to Almesbury she spake 11 . 137 

rumour wildly blown about C, 11 ■ 132 



Vivien 



13 
35 
77 
5' 
53 
59 
77 
108 

221 

69 

46 
140, 842 
. 148 

. 167 
. 241 

• 285 

• 385 

• 539 

• 546 
. 566 
. 666 

■ 673 

• 699 

• 794 
1050 

"53 
1 163 

1359 
1367 
1388 
1389 
1461 
1603 
1613 
1617 
1693 
1770 
. 368 

• 4'7 
. 500 

• 752 
. 809 
. 28 

• 34 
. 48 
. 170 

• 323 

• 345 

■ 353 

• 5i8 

• 527 

• 543 
. 615 
. 623 
. 726 

• 787 

• 9°4 



POEM. LIKE. 

Her first thought when she c, . Guinevere . 180 

when at last he c to Camelot, . ii . 258 

no man knew from whence he c ; . 11 .287 

There c a day as still as heaven, . 11 . 290 

Lancelot c. Reputed the best knight 11 . 378 

C to that point, when first she saw 11 . 400 

then c silence, then a voice, . . 11 . 416 

c they shameful sin with Lancelot ; 11 . 483 

c the sin of Tristram and I solt ; . 11 . 484 

c a kingdom's curse with thee — . 11 . 546 

two years after c a boy . . . En. A rden . 89 

c a change, as things human . 11 . xoi 

hearing his mischance, C, . 11 . 121 

moving homeward con Annie pale, 11 . 149 

wife and babes Whatever c to him : 11 . 189 

last of those last moments c, . . 11 . 217 

day, that Enoch mention'd, c . 11 . 238 

Expectant of that news which never c 11 . 257 

c to ask a favour of you.' . . 11 . 284 

I c to speak to you of what he . 11 . 290 

the favour that I c to ask. . . 11 . 312 

you c in my sorrow broke me . 11 . 316 

the woman when he c upon her, . 11 . 342 

no news of Enoch c . 11 . 358 

know not when it first c there, . 11 . 398 

c the children laden with their spoil ; 11 . 442 

new mother c about her heart, . 11 . 520 

breath of heaven c continually . 11 . 531 

upon the cry of ' breakers' c The crash 11 . 549 

rainy seasons c and went . . n . 624 

lonely doom c suddenly to an end. ti . 628 

None of these c from his county. . 11 . 654 

and he c upon the place. . . 11 . 682 

and c out upon the waste. . . 11 . 778 

langoure Upon him, gentle sickness, 11 . 824 

c so loud a calling of the sea, . 11 . 909 

C from a grizzled cripple, . . Aylmer's F. 8 

half a score of swarthy faces c. . 11 . 191 

like a storm he c, And shook . 11 -215 

The next day c a neighbour. . 11 . 251 

c Her sicklier iteration. . . 11 . 298 

when this Aylmer c of age — . 11 .407 

C at the moment Lcolin's emissary, 11 . 518 

passionately restless c and went, . 11 . 546 

c upon him half-arisen from sleep, 11 . 584 

when he c again, his flock believ'd — 11 . 600 

c a Lord in no wise like to Baal. . 11 . 647 

when the second Christmas c, escaped 11 . 838 

C, with a month's leave given . Sea Dreams 6 

forth they c and paced the shore . 11 . 32 

when I c To know him more, I lost 11 -71 

1 It c,' she said, 'by working . 11 , no 

C men and women in dark clusters 11 . 219 

c but from the breaking of a glass, 11 . 240 

Wc c to warmer waves, . . The Voyage 37 

to colder climes we c , . 11 ,89 

Up there c a flower, . . . The Floiuer 3 

great in story, Wheresoe'er he c . . The Captain 20 

Joyful c his speech : . . . n .30 

Fancy c and at her pillow sat, . Coquette, i. 5 

c the rendcrncss of tears, . . 11 ii. 9 

it seemed that an answer c : . . The Victim 24 

blood by Sylla shed C driving . Lucretius . 48 



c's knelt Unbidden, 



camel. 



Vivien 



425 



Camelot. 

To many-tower'd C (rep.) . . L.ofShatott,\. 5 

gardens and the halls Of C . . M.d 'Arthur 21 

Shot thro' the lists at C, . . 11 . 224 

cat in Arthur's hall at C . . Enid . . 432 

Adown the crystal dykes at C . « 1319 

In Arthur's arras hall at C : . • Vivien . 99 

That at Caerlcon ; this at C: .Elaine . 23 

let proclaim a joust At C, . . n . 78 

Shall I appear, O Queen, At C, . 11 . 143 

joust as one unknown At C . . 11 . 191 

ride to C with this noble knight : . 11 . 220 

lived a knight Not far from C, . » . 401 

' the lists By C" in the meadow, . 11 . 428 



54 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

' What news from C, lord? . . Elaine . 617 

To C, and before the city-gates . n . 786 

far blood, which dwelt at C; . 11 . 799 

At C, ere the coming of the Queen.' Guinevere . 221 

when at last he came to C, . . n . 258 

in thy bowers of C or of Usk . u . 499 

earnest, 

not as thou e of late, . . . Ode to Mem. 8 

c with the morning mist . . 11 12, 21 

c to thy goal So early, . . . In Mem. cxiii. 23 

camp. 

the courts, the c's, the schools . Vision of Sin 104 

at her head a follower of the c, . Princess, v. 57 

a murmur ran Thro' all the c . 11 . 107 

Back rode we to my father's c, . it . 321 

be no traitors in your c : 11 . 415 

r and college turn'd to hollow shows ; 11 . 467 

' Follow me, Prince, to the c, . Enid . 1656 

reached the c the King himself . u 1726 

campanzlz. 

slender c grew By bays, 



. The Daisy . 13 

Camulodune. 

near the colony C, Boadicea . 5 

lo their colony, C / . . . 11 17, 31, 53 

city and citadel, London, Verulam, C. 11 . 86 



Will Water. 149 
11 . 171 

Vision of Sin 95 
11 . 131 

A rabian N's. 25 
» - 45 

Godiva . 72 

ZW Voices 42 

In Mem. lxxi. 20 

ti xciv. 44 



'Tis but a steward of the c, . 
truth, that flies the flowing c, 
Fill the cup, and fill the c: (rep.) 
Fill the c, and fill the cup : (rep.) 

canal. 
boat-head down a broad c 
c Is rounded to as clear a lake. 

canceled. 

c a sense misused ; 

c in the world of sense?* 

And c nature's best : 

At length my trance Was c, . 

cancer. 
Cured lameness, palsies, c's. . StS. Stylites 81 

candle-light. 

with solemn rites by c-l — . . Princess, v. 282 

cane, 
court-Galen poised his gilt-head c, Princess, i. . 19 

canker (s. ) 
As but the c of the brain ; . . 1 71 Mem. xci. 3 

canker (verb.) 
No lapse of moons can c Love, . In Mem. xxvi. 3 

Canning. 

stow'd (when classic C died) . Will Water. 101 

canno?i. 
wires and vials fired Ac: . . Princess, Pro. 66 
woven across the ds throat . . Maud, III. vi. 27 
volleying c thunder his loss ; . Ode on Well. 62 

Roll of c and clash of arms, . . n .116 

c's mouldei on the seaward wall ; . if . 173 

C to right of them, C to left (rep.) Lt. Brigade 18, 39 

cannon-bullet, 
c-b rust on a slothful shore, . . Maud, III. vi. 26 

Canopns. 
lit Lamps which outburn'd C. D. ofF. Worn. 146 

canopy. 
in the costly c o'er him set, . . Elaine . 442 

canvas. 

glimmering lanes and walls of c, . Princess, v. 6 

such a breeze Compell'd thy c, . In Mem. xvii. 2 

In the north, her c flowing, . . The Captain 27 

ca?ivass. 
last night she fell to c you : . . Princess, iii. 24 
our narrow world must c it ; . . Aylmers F. 774 



neither c of lies, 



canvassed. poem. line. 

He c human mysteries, . . A Character 20 

canzonet. 
A rogue of cs and serenades. . Princess, iv. 117 

cap. 

c blew off, her gown blew up, . The Goose . 51 

do not hear the bells upon my c, . Ed. Morris 56 

hue Of that c upon her brows. . Vision of Sin 142 

knightlike in his c instead of casque, Princess, iv. 577 

c and bells for a fool. . , . Maud, I. vi. 62 

capability. 
drained My capabilities of love ; In Mem. lxxxiv. 12 

capable. 

. En. Arden 250 

cape (headland. ) 
By grassy c's with fuller sound SirL. andQ. G. 14 
lake and lawn, and isles and c's — Vision of Sin 11 
fold to fold, of mountain or of c ; . Princess, vi. 366 
olive-hoary c in ocean ; . . The Daisy . 31 

c That has the poplar on it : . Elaine 1033 

a long tumble about the C . , En. Arden 528 
past long lines of Northern c's . The Voyage 35 
So they past by cs and islands . Tlie Captain 21 

cape (part of cloak. ) 
ermine c's And woolly breasts . InMe?n. xciv. 11 

caper. 
Making a roan horse c . . . Elaine . 788 

captain. 
hearts Of c's and of kings. . D. ofF. Worn. 176 

The c of my dreams Ruled . n . 263 

Communing with his c's of the war. Pri?icess, i. 66 
young c's flash'd their glittering teeth n v. 19 

lightly pranced Three c's out ; . ir . 245 

every c waits Hungry for honour, it . 303 

a lord, a c, a padded shape, . Maud, I. x. 29 

Foremost c of his time, . . Ode on Well. 31 

our dead c taught The tyrant, . ti .69 

for their c after fight, . . . Aylmer's F. 226 
Without the c's knowledge : . 11 . 717 

mate is blind, and c lame, . . The Voyage 91 
Brave the C was : ... T/ie Captain 5 

cruel Seem'd the C's mood. . . 11 . 14 

the C's colour heighten'd, . 11 .29 

beneath the water Crew and C lie ; 11 .68 

captain' s-ear. 
His c-e has heard them boom . Odeon Well. 6$ 

captive. 

'sdeath ! and he himself Your c, . Princess, v. 267 

The c void of noble rage, . . In Mem. xxvii. 2 

cage a buxom c here and there, . Vivien . 392 

car. 
people behold The towering c, . Ode on Well. 55 
Stood by their c's, waitingthe Spec, of Iliad 22, note. 

carca?iet. 
Make a c of rays, .... Adeline . 59 

carcase. 
make the c a skeleton, . . . Boadicea . 14 

card. 
Insipid as the Queen upon a c; . Alymer's F. 28 

care (s.) 
the c That yokes with empire, . To the Queen 9 
nor carketh c nor slander ; . . A Dirge . 8 
little other c hath she, . . . L. ofS/ialott,u. 8 
green and broad, and takes no c, . Lotos-E's. . 73 
low voice, full of c, Murmur'd D.ofF. Worn. 249 
tookwithc, and kneeling on one knee M.d' Arthur 173 
C and Pleasure, Hope and Pain, . Day-Dm. . 75 
Thy c is, under polish'd tins, . Will Water. 227 

takes a lady's finger with all c, Princess,P?-o. 171 
each by other drest with c . . 1? iii. 3 

had the c of Lady Ida's youth .11 .69 

either she will die from want of c, 11 v. 82 

out of long frustration of her c, . 11 vii. 86 

breadth, nor fail in childward c, . u . 267 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



55 



once she foster'd up with c ; . 
this the end of all my c T . 
any c for what is here Survive 
c is not to part and prove ; . 
falling with my weight of c's 
sound to rout the brood of c's, 
song that slights the coming c, 
c's that petty shadows cast, . 
Ring out the want, the c, 
if the song were full of r, 
take c of all that I think, 
Come, when no graver c's employ 
Forgetful of his princedom and its 
thought, ' In spite of all my c, 
her line c had saved his life. . 
Cast all your c's on God ; 
cared for it With all a mother's c : 
no c, No burthen, save my c for y 
common c whom no one cared for, 
the shallow c's of fifty years : 



I'OEM. LINE. 

. luMeiu.v'm. 16 



11 xn. 

11 xxxviii. 
11 xlvii. 
11 liv. 

11 Ixxxviii. 
11 xcviii. 



11 civ. 13 

11 cv. 17 

11 exxiv. 9 

Maud, I. xv. 7 

ToF. D. Maurice 1 



I s. 



Enid 



54 



f 1 -: 



59 



Elaine 
En. Arden 

m . 262 

>U 11 . 416 

Ay-liner's F. 688 

11 . 814 



care fvcrb.) 
c not what the sects may brawl. . Pal. of Art 210 
Too proud to care from whence L.C. V.de Vere 12 
I c not what they say, . . . May Queen, \. 19 
I e not if] ^'o to-day. ... " iii. 43 

c indeed to listen, hear . Golden Year 20 
be happy ! wherefore should I c? Locksley H. 97 
choose your own you did not c; . Day-Dm. . 242 
that for which I c to live . . » . 268 

What c I for any name ? . . Vision of Sin 85 
c ni longer, being all unblest : ' Come iiotwhen,etc.' '8 
c not while we hear A trumpet . Princess, iv. 62 
myself, what c 1, war or no? . 11 v. 268 

right or wrong, I c not : . . 11 . 280 

ilk, \\ 11I1 Death and Morning 11 vii. 188 
c's to fix itself to form. . . In Mem. xxxiii. 4 

I c for nothing, all shall go. . 11 lv. 4 

u these fading days . . " lxxiv. 9 

• er they call him, what c I, Maud, I. x. 64 

now shine on, and what c I, 11 xviii. 41 

hou t'j reply : . .nil. iii. 7 

Him who c's not to be great, . Ode on II 'ell. 199 



C not for tin; I aid . 

did I c or dare to speak with you, 11 
He c's not for me : only here . Eta 
c's For triumph in our mimic wars, it 
she cried, ' 1 c not to be wife, n 

er great he be, . 11 

hould greatly c to live ; . Guinevere 

; but rather 11 

low, and no man c's for him. En. Arden 
if my children C tO s<;e me (lead, 
c no !■. 1 lin's walking 

Well -I c not for it 
I not for it either ; 
what do 1 care for Jane, 

wealthymen whofnot howthcygivc. Tithtmus . 
■hall we c to be pitiful f . . . Bo&dicta 

is creeds; Coquette, i. . 
take th no more. . 11 ii. 

c to sit beside her where she sits — 11 iii. 
need he c Greatly for them, . . Lucretius . 
*C not thou! What matters? . 11 



cared. 
you had hardly c to see. 

ird of her, nor c to hear. 

I or scion ! 
t the affection of the house ; 
.1 clamour . 
r knew it. . 
yet 

iide 
it that she c fir me, . 

■shell for her lord. . 

on the mount tin and I , not fir it. 
•bout 1 ' for it : 

if he <- For her <>r hi, dear children, 
sicklier, tho' the mother e for it . 



"■37 
1719 
127 
3" 
933 
1063 

449 

491 

851 

. 889 

Ay liner's F. 124 

11 . 238 

11 . 248 

Grandmother 51 

'7 



L.c.r.dei;- 


1-^32 


Ed. Morris 


ns 


A mphion 


12 


Princess, i. . 


26 


II IV. 


465 


11 VI. 


m 


In Mem. vii] 


20 


11 cut. 


7 


Maul, I. xi\ 


■ 2S 


Enid . 


1213 


■ • 


1372 


/ r.-ien 


353 
358 

I63 


En. Arden . 


11 


26X 



I'OEM. LINE. 

C not to look on any human face, En. A rden 

aught of what he c to know. . . 1, 

head high, and c for no man, 

prov'n or no, What c he '! 

Me ':— but I c not for it. 

slowly lost Nor greatly c to lose, 

common care whom no one c for, 

ever c to better his own kind, 



Aylmer's F. 



281 

655 
849 

55 

11 . 244 

" . 568 

•1 . 688 

Sea Dreams 196 



careful. 
So c of the type she seems, . 
'So c of the type?' but no. . 
you, so c of the right 
All in quantity, c of my motion, Hendecasyllabics 5 

carefuller. 
A c in peril, did not breathe . En. Arden . 

careless. 
like Gods together, c of mankind, Lotos-E's. . 
Rapt inhersong, andcof thesnare. Princess, i. . 
/// Mem. liv. 
Vivien 



In Mem. liv. 7 

11 lv. 1 

To F. D. Maurice 10 



5 > 



, WIUI 

So c of the single life 
eats And uses, c of the rest ; . 
answer'd Merlin c of her words. 
Merlin answer'd c of her charge, 
Enoch's comrade, c of himself, 
c of the household faces near, 
that holds The Gods are c, . 
ye Gods, I know you c, . 

ca rcless-ordcr'd. 
All round a c-o garden . 

caress (s.) 

trance gave way To those c\s t 
Or for chilling his ces . 

caress (verb.) 
may c The ringlets waving balm — Talking O. 
not wrathful with your maid; Cher: Vivien 

caressed. 
C or chidden by the dainty hand, Coquette t i. 

cartst, 

c not How roughly men may woo Lucretius 



'55 
218 



3i3 

11 . 550 

11 . 604 

. En. Arden . 569 

. Aylmer's F. 575 

. Lucretius . 150 

11 . 205 

ToF. D.Maurice 15 

Love and Duty 64 

. M cilldy I. XX. 12 



178 



2C8 



cart-worn. 



contracting grew C and wan ; 

Carian. 
The C Artcmcsia strong in war, . Princess, ii 



. En. Arden . 484 

'7 



caring, 
c to embalm In dying songs . 
not for his own self c but her, 

carketh. 
Thee nor c care nor slander ; 

carnival. 
Love in the sacred halls Held c 

carol (s.) 
forth on a c free and bold ; . . Dying Swan 30 
Heard a c, mournful, holy, . L. of Slialott, iv. 28 
as her c sadder grew, . . Mariana in the S. 13 

her c I stood pensively, D. of F. Il'om. 245 
fluting a wild c ere her death, 
bird of Eden burst In c, 
hall with harp and c rang. 

Caroline. 
and Mary, there's Kale and C '. 

carolling, 
c as he went A true-love ballad, 



In Mem. Con. 13 
En. Arden . 165 



A Dirge . 8 
Princess, vii. 70 



M. d Arthur 2(7 
. Day-Din. . 256 
. /// Mem. cii. 9 

May Queen, i. 6 



Elaine 



700 



' Soul, make merry and c , . 
long and largely wee , 

carp. 
Near that old home, a pool of golden c ; Enid . 648 



Pal. of Art 3 
Will Water, 91 



carpenter. 
Cooper he was and c, . 
Born of a village girl, c's son, 

carriage. 
as I found when her c post, . 



En. Arden . 815 
Aylmer's i 

Maud, I. ii. 3 



56 



CONCORDANCE TO 



carried. poem. line. 

see me c out from the threshold . May Queen, ii. 42 

carrier-bird. 
As light as c-i's in air ; . . . In Mem. xxv. 6 



For whom the c vulture waits i ' Vou ™% ht have 
( won, etc. 35 



c crows Hung like a cloud . . Vivien 
Blacken round the Roman c, . Boadicea . 14 

carry. 

king of them all would c me, . The Mermaid 45 

Warriors c the warrior's pall, . Odeon Well. 6 

That c kings in castles, . . Vivien . 427 

carve. 
may c a shrine ahout my dust, . StS. Stylites 192 
to c out Free space . . . Two Voices 136 
good blade ds the casques of men, Sir Galahad, 1 
males that c the living hound, . Princess, iii. 293 
ds A portion from the solid present, Vivien . 311 

carved. 
Caucasian mind C out of nature . Pal. of Art. 127 
A million wrinkles c his skin ; . tt . 138 

c my name Upon the cliffs . . AudleyCt. . 47 
thou, whereon I c her name, . Talking O. 33, 97 

name I c with many vows . . n 154 

Wept over her, c in stone ; . . Maud, I. viii. 4 
c himself a knightly shield of wood, Vivien . 323 

our Lady's Head, C of one emerald, Elaine . 295 
scarlet sleeve, Tho' c and cut, . 11 . 803 

carven. 
•Jiield of Lancelot at her feet Be c, Elaine . 1332 

carven-work. 
from the c-w behind him crept . Elaine . 435 

Caryatid. 
great statues, Art And Science, C's Princess, iv. 183 

Caserne. 
What drives about the fresh C, . Tlte Daisy . 43 

case (covering.) 

warm'd in crystal ds. . . .A mphion . 88 

fashion'd for it A c of silk, . . Elaine . 8 

barr'd her door, Stript off the c, .it .16 

Stript off the c, and gave the naked 11 . 973 

shield was gone ; only the c it . 984 

silken c with braided blazonings, . n 1143 

case (circumstance, etc. ) 
profits it to put An idle c? . . InMem. xxxv. 18 
blabbing The c of his patient — . Maud, II. v. 37 

casement. 
at the c seen her stand? . . L. q/Shalott,i. 25 
all the c darken'd there. . . Miller's D. 128 
fires your narrow c glass, it . 243 

from a c leans his head . . D. o/F. Worn. 246 
lodge, With all its c's bedded, . Audley Ct. 17 
Many a night from yonder ivied c, Locksley H. 7 
arose, and I released The c, . Two Voices . 404 

Flew over roof and c: . . . Will Water. 134 
c slowly grows a glimmering square ; Princess,iv. 34 
All night has the c jessamine stirr'd Maud, I. xxii.15 
clamour'd from a c, ' run ' . . The Brook , 85 
through the blindless c of the room Enid . . 71 
Clear through the open c it . 328 

In Arthur's c glimmer'd chastely . Vivien ■ 590 

Unclasping flung the c back, . Elaine ■ 975 

in her anguish found The c : . Guinevere . 581 

casement-curtain. 
drew her c-c by, . . . . Mariana . 19 

casement-edge. 
That morning, on the c-e . . Miller's D. . 82 

cask. 
when their c's were filled they took En. Arden . 647 

casque. 
And loosed the shatter'd c. . . M. d' Arthur 209 
blade carves the c's of men, . . Sir Galahad 1 



POEM. LINE. 

knightlike in his cap instead of c, Princess, iv. 577 

unlaced my c And grovelled . tt vi. 11 

the c Fell, and he started up . Enid . 1237 

saw the c Of Lancelot on the wall : Elaine . 801 

Cassandra. 

Talk with the wild C, . . . CEnone . 259 



cassia. 
turning round a c, full in view 



Love and Death 4 



Cassiopeia. 
had you been Sphered up with C, Princess, iv. 418 

Cassivelaun. 
sweeter than the bride of C, Flur, Enid . . 744 
hear it, Spirit of C ! . . . Boadicea . 20 

cast (mould.) 
Not only cunning c's in clay : . In Me7n. cxix. 5 
take the c Of those dead lineaments Coquette, iii. 3 



Lies the hawk's c, 



cast. 



. Aylmer's F. 849 



cast (verb.) 

on her knees herself she c, . Mariana in the S. 27 

c me down, nor thought of you, . Miller's D. 63 

' This was c upon the board, . CEnone . 77 
c the golden fruit upon the board, 11 . 222 

That are c in gentle mould. . . To J. S. . 4 

Memory standing near Cdownher 11 . 54 
if indeed I c the brand away, . M . d'A rthur 



Dora c her eyes upon the ground, Dora 



Audley Ct. . 
Talking O. 
Two Voices 
Will Water. 
Princess, i. 



87 
43 
85 

5 
103 

7 



In Mem. liii. 
11 lx. 

tt lxi. 



c and balance at a desk. 

since I first could c a shade, 

' Let me not c in endless shade, 

c upon its crusty side 

burnt Because he c no shadow, 

entering here, to c and fling The tricks, 11 

suns, that wheeling c The planets : it . 103 

Psyche's child to c it from the doors ; tt iv. 219 

c A liquid look on Ida, . . 11 _• 349 

c as rubbish to the void, 

if thou c thine eyes below, . 

if an eye that's downward c 

chances where our lots were c . it xci. 

cares that petty shadows c . . 11 civ. 

I seem to c a careless eye . . " cxi. 

moving, c the coverlet aside . Enid . 

she c her eyes upon her dress, 

c it on the mixen that it die.' 

c aside A splendour dear to women, tt 

c about For that unnoticed failing it 

c him and the bier in which he lay tt 

c his lance aside, And doff 'd his helm, 11 

poor gown I will not cast aside . tt 

a living man, And bid me c it. . 11 

and she c her arms About him, . 11 

c his eyes On whom his father Uther tt 

Where children c their pins and nails, Vivien 

gentle wizard c a shielding arm. . 11 

if his own knight cast him down, . Elaine 

c his eyes on fair Elaine : tt 

Leafafterleaf, andtore, and<: themoff 11 . 

tr him as a worm upon the way ; . Guinevere 

C all your cares on God ; . . • En. Arden 

C his strong armsabouthis drooping tt 

' Enoch, poor man, was c away . tt 

muttering 'c away and lost ;' . " 

c back upon him a piteous glance, Aylmer s F. 283 

that c her spirit into flesh, . . " • 4 Sl 

c the curtains of their seat aside — 11 • 8o 3 

Shall Babylon be c into the sea ; . Sea Dreams 

one stormy night H c his body, . The Voyage 

I c to earth a seed. . . . The Flower 

c her arms about the child . . The Victim 33 

mountain there has this cloudy slough, Lucretius 177 

Castalies. 
led you then to all the C . . Princess, iv. 27s 



S 

13 
7 
. 73 
. 609 
. 672 
. 807 
. 895 
1420 
1443 
1553 
1555 
1609 
1780 
. 280 

• 757 

• 313 
. 637 

"93 
. 36 
. 222 
. 227 

• 7i4 
. 716 



8o 



caste. 
stamps the c of Vere de Vere 



. L.C.V.deVere6fl 



\ 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



57 



castle (adj.) poem. line. 

stood upon the c wall, . . . Oriana . 28 

Atween me and the c wall, . . ir . 35 

splendour falls on c walls . . Princess, iii. 348 

rode Geraint into the c court, . Enid . . 311 

while he waited in the c court, 11 326 

Moving to meet him in the c court; Elaine . 175 

castle (s.) 

c, built When men knew how . Ed. Morris 6 

See the lordly c's stand : . . L. of Burleigh 18 

lady of three c's in that land : . Princess, i. . 78 

Well, Are c's shadows ? . . . 11 ii. 392 

three c's patch my tatter'd coat? . ir . 394 

dear are those three c's to my wants, 11 . 395 

Seeing his gewgaw c shine, . . Maud, I. x. 18 

that fair port below the c . . The Daisy . 79 

on one side a c in decay, . . Enid . . 245 

keeps me in this ruinous c here, 11 462 

That carry kings in c's, . . Vivien . 427 

Ran to the C of Astolat, . . Elaine . 167 

and again By c Gurnion . . ir . . 293 

fly to my strong c overseas : . Guinevere . 112 

strong c where he holds the Queen ; 11 . 192 

built their c's of dissolving sand . En. Arden . 19 

castle-vjcll. 
pool or stream, The c-vj, belike ; . Elaine . 215 

casually. 
Howbcit ourself, foreseeing c, . Princess, iii. 300 

cat. 
c's run home and light is come, . The Owl, i. 1 
yelp'd the cur, and yawl'd the c ; The Goose . 33 
like dove and dove were c and dog. Walk, to tlie M.50 
gay-furr'd c's a painted fantasy, . Princess, iii. 170 
the two great c's Close by her, . 11 vi. 337 

Within the hearing of c or mouse, Maud, II. v. 48 

catacomb. 
water falls In vaults and c's . . InMetn.Wu. 4 

catalepsy. 
paw'd his beard, and mutter' d 'e' Princess, i. . 20 

catapult. 
Your cities into shards with c's . Princess, v. 132 

cataract. 

In c after c to the sea, . . . CEnone . 9 

snowy peak and snow-white c . 11 . 207 

ocean-ndges roaring into d *. . Lockslcy II. 6 

Dashed downward in a c. . . Day-Cm. . 148 

the river sloped To plunge in c, . Princess, iii. 274 

the wild c leaps in glory. 11 . 351 

c and the tumult and the kings . 11 iv. 542 

1 a c on an island-crag, ir v. 337 

[ng from the bridge, . InMemAxx. 15 

I If the c seas that snap . Maud, II. iv. 26 

thr</ the crash of the near c hears Enid . 1021 

C brooks to the ocean run, . . The Islet . 17 

catch. 

Whereof I c the issue, . . . CEnone . 244 

C me who can, and make the catcher Golden Year 18 

C the wild goat by the hair . . Lockslcy II. 170 

Ira [on in a cherry net . Princess, v. 162 

band in wild delirium, . 11 vii. 77 

c The far off interest of tears . In Mem. i. 7 
c at every mountain head . . 11 Con. 114 

Prickle my skin and c my breath, Maud, I. xiv. 36 
Cnot my breath, O clamorous heart, 11 xvi. 31 

iid of mine one stormy day ; 11 II. v. 85 
' ( rverquick are you To c a lothly plume Vivien . 577 
C her, goatfoot ; nay, Hide . . Lucretius . 200 

catcher. 
and make the c crown'd — . . Golden Year 18 

catching. 
Secm'd c at a rootless thorn, . Enid . 1227 

caterpillar. 
Picks from the colcwoi t a green c, Guinevere . 33 

cat -footed. 
C-/thro' the town and half in dread Princess, i. . 103 



than a cycle of C . 



Cathay. poem. line. 

. Lockslcy H. 184 

cathedral. 

laves The lawn by some c . . D. of F. Worn. 190 

c towers, Across a hazy glimmer . Gardener sD. 213 

in the vast c leave him. . . Ode on Well. 280 

huge c fronts of every age, . . Sea Dreams 211 

Catieuchlanian. 

Hear Icenian, C, hear Coritanian (rep.) Boadicea 10 

Gods have answer'd, C, Trinobant . 11 . 22 

Shout Icenian, C, shout Coritanian, 11 . 57 



A dwarf-like C cower'd. 



Cato. 



. Princess, vii. in 



catspaw. 
Him his c and the Cross his tool, . Sea Dreams 186 

cattle. 

The c huddled on the lea ; . . In Mem. xv. 6 

c died, and deer in wood, . . The Victim 18 

strikes thro' the thick blood Of c . Lucretius . 99 

Catullus. 
All composed in a metre of C, Hendecasyllabics 4 
Thro' this metrification of C, 11 10 

Caucasian. 
the supreme C mind Carved 
our C's let themselves be sold. 

Caucasus. 
From Calpe unto C they sung, . The Poet . 15 

caught. 

eddying of her garments c from thee Ode to Mem. 31 

there a vision c my eye ; _ . Millers D. 76 



Pal. of Art 126 
Ay liner's F. 349 



C in the frozen palms of Spring. 
c the white goose by the leg, 
dropt the goose, and c the pelf, 



it him by the hilt, and brandish'd M.d Arthur 145,160 



the last night's gale had c, 

c the younkcr tickling trout — 

c me up into thy rest 

Abaddon and Asmodcus c at me. 

C up the whole of love . 

truths of science waiting to be c 

page has c her hand in his . 

C the sparkles, and in circles 

C each other with wild grimaces, 

c the blossom of the flying terms 

the flood drew : yet I c her ; 

on this we drove and c . 

falling on my face was c 

as iff at once from bed 

Kneeling, I gave it, which she c, 

things that being c feign death, 

c within the record of her wrongs, 

thro' the gates, and c his hair. 

not less one glance he c 

Fancy light from Fancy c, . 

c once more the distant shout, 

c The deep pulsations of the world ; 

C and cuff'd by the gale : 

c By that you swore to withstand 

I c a glimpse of his face, 

often I c her with eyes all wet 

c His weary daylong chirping, 

C at the hilt, as to abolish him : 

Yniol c His purple scarf, 

men had c them in their flight, 

Her by both hands he c. 

Cm a great old tyrant spider's web. 

one of Satan's shepherdesses c 

c And set it on his head, 

heathen c and reft him of his tongue 

him they c and maimed 

whereat she c her breath ; 

now hastily c His bundle, 

C at his hand and wrung it . 

C at and ever miss'd it, 

pock-pittcn fellow had been c ? 

C in a burst of unexpected storm, 



The Blackbird 24 

T/ie Goose . 9 

'3 



Gardener's D. 123 
Walk.totheM.23 
StS.Stylitcs 18 
n . 169 

Love and Duty Eo 

Golilen ) 'ear 1 7 
Day- Dm. . 49 
Vision of Sin 30 

• 35 

Princess, Pro. 163 

11 iv. 164 

n . 170 

11 . 251 

11 . 266 

11 . 449 

11 v. 105 

11 • 137 

11 • 33o 

11 . 332 

InMcm. x.nui. 14 

11 lxxxvi. 9 

11 xciv. 39 

Maud, I. vi. 5 



II XIII. 

The Brook '. 
Enid . 



Vivien 



79 
27 
23 

• 52 
. 210 

• 376 
. 642 

• 778 
. 108 
. £08 

• 54 

• 273 

• 275 
620 
236 
32S 

•' , • 753 

Aylmer'sF. 256 

11 . 28s 



Elaine 



En. A rden 



5S 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

upon the prow C the shrill salt, . The Voyage 12 
reach'd the ship and c the rope, . Sailor Boy . 3 
c her away with a sudden cry ; . The Victim 74 

cause. 
embattail and to wall about thy c . To J. M. K. 8 



This woman was the c. . D. of F. Worn. 

love were c enough for praise.' Gardener s D . 

Nor in a merely selfish c — . . Two Voices 

some good c, not in mine own, 

well might harm The woman's c. . Princess, 

falling, protomartyr of our c, 

twice I sought to plead my c. 

betrayed her c and mine — 

storming in extremes Stood for here, 

the c's weigh'd, Fatherly fears- 

in our noble sister's c ? 

Is not our c pure ? 

sole men to be mingled with our c, 11 

vanquish'd and my c For ever lost, tr vi. 

whose arms Champion'd our c . it 

The brethren of our blood and c, . 11 

dream thy c embraced in mine, . if 

not to judge their c from her . ir vii. 

know The woman's c is man's : . ir 

such compelling c to grieve In Mem. xxix. 

Ring out a slowly dying c, . . m cv. 

war be a c or a consequence? . Maud, I. x. 

cleaved to a c that I felt to be pure ir III. vi. 

haveprov'd we have hearts in ac, . it 

hoc; James had no c : but when I 

prestthec, .... The Brook . 

Am I the c, I the poor c . . Enid . 
I am the c because I dare not .11.. 
* Graver c than yours is mine ir 

you that most had c To fear me . it 
Yourself were first the blameless c tr 
her good man jealous with good c. Vivien 
c had kept him sunder d . it 

him the main c of all their crime ; tr 
remains But little c for laughter : . Elaine 
that I gave No c, not willingly, . n 
her c of flight, Sir Modred ; . Guinevere , 

who most have c to sorrow for her — Aylmer's F. 
more c to weep have I : . . Coquette, iii. 

cauve (calve.) 
Wi 'auf the cows to c . . . N. Farmer 



1672 
1674 
455 
565 
637 
595 
1290 

9 

678 

6 



52 



cavalier. 
A c from off his saddle-bow, . D. o/F. IVom. 46 

C avail. 
chiefly for the baying of C. . . Enid . . 185 

cave. 
sweet is the colour of cove and c, . Sea Fairies 
hear me O Hills, O C's . _ . CEnone 

within the c Behind yon whispering tr 
rock-thwarted under bellowing c's, Pal. of Art 
dewy echoes calling From c toe . Lotos-E's. 
Thro' every hollow c and alley lone n 
clash' d his harness in the icy c's . M d' Arthur 1 
on a dull day in an Ocean c . Vivien 

into some low c to crawl, . . n 
massive columns, like a shorecliffY, Elaine 
red fire and shadows thro' the c . 11 
across the poplar grove Led to the c's : n 
city to the fields, Thence to the c : it . 844 

c ran in beneath the cliff: . . En. Arden . 23 
a c Of touchwood, . . . Aylmer'sF. 511 

sand and cliffand deep-inrunning<r, Sea Dreams 17 
in and out the long sea-framing t ' 
c's that run beneath the cliffs. 
boundless deep Bore thro' the c, 
the landward exit of the c, . 
by rock and c and tree . 
In c's about the dreary bay, 



• 733 

• 405 

• 4i3 

. 801 



» • 33 

tr . 88 

if . 90 

11 . 94 

V. ofCauteretz 9 
Sailor Boy . 10 



cavern. 
under gloom Of c pillars ; 
creep Into some still c deep . 
Half hut, half native c. 



ToE.L. _. 18 
, Maud, II. iv. 96 
En. Arden . 561 



POEM. LINE. 

. Lucretius . 202 



May Queen, ii. 17 



cavern -shadowing 
wilderness, And c-s laurels, . 

caw. 

The building rook 'ill c . 

cease. 
I shall c to be all alone, . Mariana in theS. 95 

And the wicked c from troubling, May Queen, iii. 60 
fold our wings, And c from wanderings, Lotos-E's. 65 
ripen, fall and c: .... tr 97 

midnight bells c ringing suddenly, D.ofF. Worn. 247 
'Twere better I should c . . To J. S. .66 
the wise of heart would c l Love thou thy land,' etc. 81 
Shall I c here ? Is this enough . Gardener 'sD '.231 
will not c to grasp the hope . . StS. Stylites 5 
c I not to clamour and to cry, 
wither'd palsy c to shake?' . 
C to wail and brawl ! 
make him sure that he shall c ? 
muse on joy that will not c . 
c To pace the gritted floor, . 
cannot c to follow you, . 
her father c to press my claim, 
c to move so near the Heavens, 
c To glide a sunbeam . 
have their day and c to be : . 
jaws Of vacant darkness and to c. 
cold crypts where they shall c. 
the man I am may c to be ! . 
Pass and c to move about ! . 
tyranny now should bend or c, 
And c not from your quest, . 
c, Sweet father, and bid call . 

Judge of us all when life shall c ; . Grandmother 95 
blasts would rise and rave and c, . The Voyage 85 
dream of life this hour may c. . Requiescat . 6 

ceased. 
She c, and Paris held the costly fruit CEnone 



. Two Voices 


4 1 

57 


11 
. Sir Galahad 


199 
282 
6S 


. Will Water. 


241 


. Princess, iv. 


43S 


II vu. 

M 


72 
180 


II 


180 


. hiMem.Pro 


18 


II XXXIV. 


16 


it lvii. 


8 


. Maud, I. x. 
„ II. iv. 
11 III. vi. 


68 

59 
20 


. Elaine 


547 




1092 



Here she c And Paris pondered 

all these things have c to be . 

She c in tears, fallen from hope 

Before he c I turned 

A little c, but recommenced . 

I c, and sat as one forlorn. . 

I c, and all the ladies, each at each, / 

Scarce had I c when from a tamarisk 

She c: the Princess answer'd coldly 

I c ; he said ' Stubborn, but . 

C all on tremble : piteous was 

when we c There came a minute's 

We c: a gentler feeling crept 

had c to share her heart, 



• 133 

. 164 

. MayQuee?i,\\\. 48 

. D.ofF. JVom.25j 

. Ga7'dene7 J sD . 120 

. Two Voices 318 

it . 400 

riucess, iv. 99 

ti . 239 

ir . 340 

H V. 428 

it vi. 126 

3 



Con. 
. hi Mem. xxx. 17 
Maud, I. xix. 30 



c the kindly mother out of breath ; Enid . . 732 
She c, and made her lithe arm . Vivien . 464 

Scarce had she c, when out of heaven 11 . . 783 
He spoke and c: the lily maid . Elaine . 242 

Shec: her father promised ; . tr . 1124 

when he c, in one cold passive hand tr . 1195 

He c; and Miriam Lane Made such En. Arden. 902 
then the motion of the current c . Sea-Dreams 113 
not one moment c to thunder, . tr . 121 



ceasing. 
C not, mingled, unrepress'd, 
He c, came a message . 

Cecily. 
Wound with white roses, slept St C ; 

cedar. 
The stately c, tamarisks, 
c spread his dark-green layers 
thro' the thicken'd c in the dusk . 
in halls Of Lebanonian c: 
A voice by the c tree, . 
dance By his red c tree, 
Sighing for Lebanon, Dark c, 
bloom profuse and c arches . 

cedar-wood. 
A mile beneath the c-w, 

cede. 
if Ida yet would c our claim, 



A rabian TV's. 74 
Princess, iii. 152 

Pal. of Art 99 

Arabian N's. 105 

Gardener sD. 115 

ir . 162 

Princess, ii. 331 

Maud, I. v. 1 

it xvii. 18 

tt xviii. xS 

Milton . 11 

Elcanore . 8 

Princess, v. 3 2 3 



TE.Y.VYS01VS WORKS. 



59 



celebrate. poem. line. 

To c the golden prime . . . Arabian N's. 131 

celebrated. 
thine the deeds to be c, . . Boddicea . 41 

Celidon. 
gloomy skirts Of C the forest ; . Elaine . 292 

cell. 
winds bound within their c. . . Mariana . 54 
the bee would range her c's, . . Tiuo Voices 70 
From c's of madness unconfined, . 11 . 371 

weave their petty c's and die . InMem.xYix. 12 
track Suggestion to her inmost c. 11 xciv. 32 

The tiny £ is forlorn, . . . Maud, II. ii. 13 
Thro' c's of madness, haunts of horror 11 III. i. 2 
c's and chambers : all were fair . Elaine . 406 

gain'd the c in which he slept, . 11 . 807 

huvuck among those tender c's, . Lucretius . 22 

cellar. 
in the c's merry bloated things 



Guinevere . 265 

In Mem. cviii. 16 
IV. toAlexan. 32 

. Princess, Pro. 17 

. Eleanore, . 59 
. Sir Galahad 35 



Celt. 
The blind hysterics of the C ; 
Teuton or C, or whatever we be, 

celt. 

c's and calumets, Claymore and 

censer. 
incense free From one c 
bell rings, the c swings, 

cent. 
mellow metres more than c for c ; The Brook . 5 

centre. 

toward the c set the starry tides, Princess, ii. 102 
its that wait On you, their c; 11 iv. 424 

in the 1 common men . 11 vi. 339 

faith has c everywhere, . In Mem. xxxiii, 3 

if a world's desire; . . » Ixiii. 16 

In the c stood A statue veil'd, . 11 cii. II 

centre-lit. 

c4?i Grind on the wakeful ear . Maud, 1. i. 41 

centred. 

. Lotos-E's. . 162 

c in the i lysses . 39 

c in the sun Of silver rays, . . Elaine . 295 

century. 
When the centuries behind me . Locksley H. 13 

It-ad; . Maud, I.xxii. 72 

1 most meek ; The Brook . 68 

thro' lhe<v////fr/,-.vleta people's voice Odeon Will, i.y 

years will roll into the centuries . Guinevere . 619 

ceremony. 
Long summers back, a kind off— Princess, i. 123 
Once lit f^r fea tsofi . . Enid . . 297 

there be wedded with all c . 11 608, 839 

in the darkness, at the mystical c Boddicea . 36 

certain. 
A prophet c of my prophecy, 
if they be alive . 

Chili e. 
•. ithin the c. 
ik the e ; . 

■ r, . 
1 he common into Darnlcy c 

chafe. 
c's me that I could not bend 
1 'I wrong. . 

chafed. 
hi, hand , And call'd him . 

chaff. 
draff, much better burnt.' 

•very gust of chance, 
1 well in- mi foi grain, 
fcropc And gather dust and c, 



. Enid . . 814 
. Grandmother 84 

. Tailing O. 4 

.1 . 94 

11 . 246 

The Brook . 132 

P. ofF. Worn. 137 

. En. Arden . 471 

. M. d'A rl/iur 209 

The E/>ic . 40 

. iv. 336 

In Mem. vi. 4 

11 liv. 18 



chafing. POEM, LINE. 

c me on fire to find my bride) . Princess, i. 164 
and the squire C his shoulder : . Enid . . 876 
C bis pale hands, and calling (rep.) 11 . 1430 

c at his own great self defied, . Aylmer's F. 537 

chain (s.) 
loosed the c, and down she lay ; L. of.Shalott,\v. 16 
by gold c's about the feet of God. M . d'A rthur 255 
such a c Of knitted purport, . Two Voices 167 

dallied with his golden c, . . Day-Dm. . 163 
To break my c, to shake my mane : Princess, ii. 402 
Twofooted at the limit of his c, . Aylmer's E\ 127 

chain (verb.) 
c's regret to his decease, . . In Mem. xxix. 3 

chained. 
My right leg c into the crag, 
brought her c, a slave, . 

chair. 
In yonder c I see him sit, 
the long shadow of the c 
Two years his c is seen Empty 
vext packs up his beds and c's 
Sweat on his blazon'd c's 
in his c himself uprear'd, 
spirits sink To see the vacant c 
c s and thrones of civil power? 
plays with threads, he beats the c 
sits he here in his father's c ? 
pushing could move The c of Idris. Enid 
in their c's set up a stronger race . 



StS.Slylites 72 
Princess, v. 133 

Miller's D. 9 
" . 126 

To J. S. . 22 
fVali.totneM.31 
. 68 
Day-Din. . 150 
In Mem. xx. 19 
11 xxi. 16 
it lxv. 13 
Maud, I.xiii. 23 
• 543 
17S8 
to make Arms for his c . . . Elaine . 437 

But kept the house, his c . . En. Arden . 827 
With nearing rand lowcr'd accent) Aylmer's F. 267 
cry to vacant c's and widow'd walls, 11 . 720 

They come and sit by my c, . Grandmother 83 

chairman. 
A quarter-sessions c, abler none ; 



Princess, Con. 90 



. Talking O. no 



. In Mem. x. 

. AudleyCt. . 

. Maud, I. i. 
ToF. D. Maurice 



chaise. 
Within the low-wheel'd c, 

chalice. 
The c of the grapes of God ; 

chalk. 
all his joints Are full of c? . 
e and alum and plaster arc sold 
Tumblesa breaker on rand sand 

chalk" d. 

c her face, and wing'd Her transit Princess, iv. 358 

chalk-hill. 
On the c-k the bearded grass Is dry Miller's D. 245 

chalk-auarry. 
white c-q from the hill Gleam'd . 

chamber. 
thick as dust In vacant c's, . 
sunbeam lay Athwart the c's, 
secret bridal c's of the heart, 
[n palace ds far apart, . 
The quiet c far apart 

In musty bins and c's, . 
one dee]) 1 shut from sound . 

all The . '.v emptied of delight : 
I hi field, the c and the street, 
Moved in the c's of the blood ; 
About its echoing ds wide, . 
In the c or the street, . 
bin ". some fair c for the night, 
retura'd And told them of at", 
Apart by all the c's width, . 
nigh in her e up a tower 
cells and c's: all were fair 
the comrade of his c's woke, 

chamber-door, 

lightly as a sick man's c-d, . 

champaign, 

rivcr-sundcr'd c cloth'd with corn (Enont 



Miller's I). 115 

To the Queen 19 

Maria/la . 79 
Gardener sD. 244 
Day-Dm. . 94 

Will Water. 102 

, vi. 353 
In Mem. viii. 8 



11 



1 1 



it win. 20 

Maud, I. vi. 74 

" II. iv. 83 

Enid . 1087 

11 . 11 10 

11 . 1 1 1 4 

Elaine . 3 

tt . 406 

Aylmer's F. 583 

En. Arden . 777 



6o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

high Above the empurpled c, . Princess, iii. 104 
shadowing down the c till it strikes 11 v. 515 

champing. 

c golden grain, the horses stood . Spec, of Iliad 21 

championed. 
C our cause and won it 



Princess, vi. 46 



Miller's D. 206 
ToJ. S. . 47 
M.d* Arthur v$> 
11 _ . 231 
Two Voices 52 
Vision of Sin 164 
191 

i59 
127 
225 

337 
136 
450 



In Mem. lxiii. 

11 xci. 

ft xciv. 

it cxiii. 
Maud. I. i. 



chance. 
Many a c the years beget, 
that is not a common c . 
every morning brought a noble c : 
every c brought out a noble knight 
* The years with c advance : 
April hopes, the fools of c 
Drink to Fortune, drink to C, . 11 

your c Almost at naked nothing.' . Princess, i. 
open eyes, and we must take the c. ti iii. 

wildness, and the c's of the dark.' 11 iv. 

chaff For every gust of c, . . 11 

c Were caught within the record . if v. 

she's comely : there's the fairer c: ir 

was it c, She past my way. . 
grasps the skirts of happy c> 
c's where our lots were cast . 
steps of Time — the shocks of C— 
leaps into the future c> . 
sweeter c ever come to me here ? 
had not been For a <: of travel . 11 ii. 8 

He gave them line : and how by c The Brook .^ 150 
Dispute the claims, arrange the c's; ToF.D. Maurice^ 1 
good c that we shall hear the hounds: Enid . 182 
What c is this? how is it I see . 11 . 1158 

common c — right well I know it — 11 . 1180 

or guiltless, to stave off a c . tr 1202 

c of booty from the morning's raid ; 11 . 1413 

endured Strange ds here alone ; . tr 1658 

Ready to spring, waiting a c: . Guinevere . 13 
c Will make the smouldering scandal 11 . 90 

beyond all hope, against all c, . En. Arden . 400 

chance-comer. 
You set before c-c's . . . Will Water. 6 

chanced. 

mind all full of what had c, . . Enid . 1626 

King's own ear Speak what has c ; ir . 1657 

jewels, whereupon I c Divinely . Elaine . 59 

chance-gift. 
eating not Except the spare c-g 

chancel. 
A broken c with a broken cross, 
peer'd athwart the c pane. 

chancel-casemen t. 
Upon the c-c, and upon that grave May Queen,i\. 21 

chancellor. 

The c, sedate and vain, . . Day-Dm. . 161 

C, or what is greatest would he be — Ay liner's E. 397 

chance-met. 
cross-lightnings of four c-m eyes 

change -(s.) 
without hope of c, 
airy forms of flitting c. 



St.S.Stylites 77 



M.d'Artlrur 
The Letters 



Aylmer's E. 129 



Mariana 
Madeline 



upon the board, And bred this c ; CEnone 



Pal. of Art 



29 

7 

223 

60 

166 

Lotos- E's. . 116 

D.ofF. Worn. 130 

11 - 167 

ToJ. S. . 7 6 



mood And c of my still soul. 
Full-welling fountain-heads of c, 
but all hath suffer'd c ; . 
' 1 govern'd men by c, . 
thro' all c Of liveliest utterance 
Lie still, dry dust, secure oic. 

c's should control Our being, 

let the c which comes be free 

Of many c's, aptly join' d, 

sick of home went overseas for c 

fear of c at home, that drove 

all the varied c's of the dark, 

shrivelling thro' me, anda cloudlike c, StS.Stylitesig6 

down the ringing grooves of c. . Locksley H. 182 



f ' Love thou thy 

' \ land,' etc. 41 

11 . 45 

tr . 65 

Walk, to the M. 18 
t. . 60 

. Ed. Morris 36 



' The years with c advance : . 
Then comes the check, the c, 
rapt thro* many a rosy c, 
The flower and quintessence of c 
there came a further c : 
dismal lyrics, prophesying c 
not as we, But suffers c of frame, 
came a c : for sometimes I would 
notice of a c in the dark world 
the c, This truthful c in thee 
I perceived no touch of c, 
touch of c in calm or storm ; 
Each voice four c's on the wind 
links that bound Thy c's 
No more partaker of thy c. . 
men and minds, the dust of c, 
cannot come a mellower c, . 
c's wrought on form or face ; 
Recalls, in c of light or gloom, 
touch'd the c's of the state . 
summer's hourly-mellowing c 
abyss Of tenfold-complicated c 
c of place, like growth of time, 
O earth, what c's hast thou seen 
face with c of heart is changed, 
in c of glare and gloom . 
a c, as all things human change 
So much to look to — such a c — 
the c and not the c, 
Changed with thy mystic c, 
thro' every c of sharp and flat ; 



FOEM. LINE. 

. Two Voices 52 


tr , 

. Day-Dm. . 


163 

187 
236 
207 
141 


. Vision of Sin 
. Princess, i. 


If v. 
catch tf vii. 


453 
77 


it . 


2 34 


. InMem.xiv. 


3 2 9 
17 


ti xvi. 


6 


tt xxviii. 
it xl. 
ir . 
tr lxx. 
it Ixxx. 


9 
7 
3 
10 
3 


if Ixxxi. 
11 lxxxiv. 


2 

74 


itlxxxviii. 


35 


If xc. 


9 


it xcii. 


12 


it civ. 


11 


! 11 cxxii. 

. Enid . 
. Vivien 
. En. Arden . 


2 

1747 
808 
101 
458 
831 
55 
4 


.tt . 
. Aylmer's F. 
. Titlwnus 
. Coquette, i. 



Not swift nor slow to c, 



. Ed. Morris. 35 
. Locksley H. 19 
. Will Water. 107 
. Vision of Sin 159 
Princess, Pro. 140 



cha?ige (verb.) 

f ' Love tJwu thy 
\ land,' etc. 31 
c a word with her he calls his wife, Dora . . 42 
my uncle's mind will cl ' . ir , 45 

full music seem'd to move and c 
iris c's on the burnish'd dove ; 
She c's with that mood or this, 
C, reverting to the years, 
our old halls could c their sex, 
you began to c — I saw it 
at a dance to c The music — 
When your skies c again : 
Some patient force to c them 
Nor c to us, although they c; 
c my sweetness more and more, 
every winter c to spring, 
ransom'd reason c replies 
happy birds, that c their sky 
To c the bearing of a word, 
the wine wille your will.' 
Must our true man c like a leaf 
together well might c the world, 
a change, as all things human c, . En, Arden . 101 
This cannot c, nor yet can I.* . Tlie Ringlet 12 
If this can c, why so can I.' . . 11 24, 42 

cJianged. 
all the crimson c, and past . Mariana in tlie S. 25 
cruel heart,' she c her tone, 
c a wholesome heart to gall, 
ere my flower to fruit C, 
flute-notes are c to coarse, 



It IV. 


279 


»i 


566 


II VI. 


261 


tr Con. 


■;6 


In Mem. xxx. 


24 


II XXXV. 


IS 


11 liii. 


16 


11 lx. 


2 


ir cxiv. 


35 


II cxxvu. 


16 


Enid . 


IS" 


Elaine 


683 


Guinevere . 


299 



69 

L.C. V. de Vere 44 
D. ofF. Worn. 208 
. Tlie Blackbird 18 



We are all chy still degrees, 'Love thou thy land, 'etc. 43 



flower of knowledge c to fruit 

And her spirit c within. ' . 

Moved with violence, c in hue, 

thoughts that c from hue to hue 

Our mind is c .* we take it 

her hue c, and she said : 

at their will, and everything wasc, 

one is sad ; her note is c, 

' how c from where it ran 

then c to something else 

can grief be c to less? . 

place is c ; thou art the same. 

Remade the blood and c the franr 

gentle will has c my fate, 

mood is c y for it fell at a time 



LoveandDuty 24 
L. of Burleigh 64 
Vision of Sin 34 
Princess, iv. 192 

» • 343 

ir vi. 91 

363 
27 

9 



In Mem. xxi. 
ti xxiii. 
it Ixxvi. 
if lxxvii, 
ii cxx. 20 
ti Con. 11 

Maud, I. xviii. 23 
1. Ill.vi. 4 



16 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



61 



being young, he c himself, . 

fear no longer, I am c. . 

kept myself aloof till I was c ; 

fear not, cousin ; I am c indeed.' 

have you seen how nobly c ? 

(ace with change of heart is c 

c itself and echoed in her heart, 

I doubt not that however c, . 

Denouncing judgment, but tho' c Guinevere . 418 

that name has twice been c — . En. A rden . 860 

mind is c, for I shall see him, . 11 . 898 

C with thy mystic change, . . Tithonus . 55 

C every moment as we flew . . The Voyage 28 



POEM. 


LINE. 


Enid . 


• S93 


it 


1673 


11 


1720 


11 


1721 


11 


1745 


11 


1747 


Elaine 


• 778 


11 


1212 



sorrow such af be? 



changeling. 



. In Mem. xvi. 4 



changest. 
Who c not in any gale, . . . InMem.'u. . jo 

changeth. 
old order c, yielding place to new, M. a" Arthur 11,0 

channel. 
Thro' every c of the State ' Youaskme why, etc.22 
hoary C Tumbles a breaker . ToF. D. Maurice 23 

chant. 

of the garden the merry bird c's, . Poet's Mind 22 

C me now some wicked stave, . Visiono/Sin 151 

c the history Of that great race . In Mem. cii. 34 

chanted. 
C loudly, c lowly. L. o/Shalott, iv. 29 

c from an ill-used race of men . Lotos-Es. . 165 
c a melody loud and sweet, . . Poet's Song . 6 
c on the blanching bones of men V Princess, 11. 182 
whose hymns Are c in the minster, Vivien . 616 
c snatches of mysterious song . Elaine 1397 

c on the smoky mountain-tops, . Guinevere . 280 
So they c: how shall Britain light Boadicea . 45 
So they c in the darkness, . 11 . 46 

cltanting. 
mine own phantom c hymns? . In Mem. c\ii. 10 

chapel. 

bore him to a c nigh the field, . M. d Arthur 8 

the c bells Call'd us : . . Princess, ii. 446 

In the white rock a c and a hall . Elaine . 404 

To c : where a heated pulpiteer, . Sea Dreams 20 

clutpel-yard. 
in the precincts of the c-y, . . Vivien . 601 
paced for coolness in the c-y; .11 . . 607 

chap-fall'n. 
The c ^circle spreads : . . . Visiono/Sin 172 

char. 
Nor ever lightning c thy grain, . Talking 0. . 277 

charactered. 
f marriage c in gold . . Isabel . . 16 
How dimly 1 and slight, . . In Mem. Ix. 6 

charade. 
Cs and riddles as at Christmas . Princcss,Pro.i8j 

charge (imputation, etc.) 
Redeem'd it from the c of nothing- 

M.d'Arthur,Ep. 7 
left him gold. And in my c, . . Enid . . 452 
in <: of whom ? a (,'irl : • . . 11 . . 974 
whom his father Other left in c . 11 . 1781 

Set up the c you know, . . Vivien . 553 

Merlin answer* d careless of her c 604 

1 whom he left in c of all . Cuinevere . 193 
gave them c about the Queen, . n . 585 

charge (assault, etc.) 
Sunring«'jfoain'dthemseIvesaway Ode on Well. 126 

the wild c they made ! . . Lt. Brigade 51 
Honour the c they made I 11 .53 

charge (to enjoin, etc.) 
Come forth I r thee, arise, . .Ode to Mem. 46 

1 c thee, quickly go again . . M.d' Arthur 79 



' I c you, ask not but obey.' . 
c the gardeners now To pick 
I c you ride before, 
I c you, on your duty as a wife 
I c you, Enid, more especially, 
count it of small use To c you) 
I c you, follow me not.* 



POEM. LINE. 

Enid . . 133 

11 . 670 

11 . . S63 

11 . . 865 

11 . 1263 

11 , 1266 

. Elaine . 506 



c you that you get at once to horse. 11 . . 538 
that, I c thee, my last hope. . Guinevere . 564 

c you now, When you shall see her, En. Arden . 878 

charge (to impute. ) 
did that wrong you c him with, . Sea Dreams 268 

charge (to rush, etc.) 
'C for the guns !' he said: . . Lt. Brigade 6 
beheld the King C at the head . Elaine . 304 

charged (commissioned,) 
c by Valence to bring home the child. Vivien . 568 

charged (rush'd, etc. ) 
c Before the eyes of ladies . . M. d Arthur 224 
down we swept and c and overthrew Ode on I Veil. 1 30 

charged (filled.) 
C both mine eyes with tears. . D.o/F. Worn. 13 

c/targer. 
on my goodly c borne . . . Sir Galahad 49 

cried, ' My c and her palfrey,' . Enid . . 126 

c trampling many a prickly star 11 . 313 

Enid took his c to the stall ; 11 382 

bid him bring C and palfrey.' . 11 . 1250 

saw the c's of the two that fell . 11 . 1330 

great c stood, griev'd like a man. . 11 . 1384 

Sec ye take the c too, . . 11 1404 

gentle c following him unled) . 11 . 1419 

fly, your c is without, . . 11 *597 

Edyrn rcin'd his c at her side, . 11 . 1668 

overbore Sir Lancelot and his c, . Elaine . 486 

a spear Down-glancing lamed thee, 11 . . 487 

from his c down he slid, . . 11 . . 509 

on my c's, trample them under us.' Boadicea . 69 

charging. 
C an army, while All the world . Lt. Brigade 30 

at the midmost c, Prince Geraint. Enid . . 934 

c/uxrier. 
C of sleep, and wine, and exercise, Ay liner's F. 448 

chariot. 
a sound arose of hoof And c, . Princess, vi. 359 
The double tides of c's flow . . In Mem. xcvii. 23 
two brethren from the c took . Elaine 1 140 

to the lychgate, where his c stood, Aylmer's F. 824 
Up my Britons, on my c, . . Boadicea . 69 
all around the royal c agitated, . 11 -73 

each beside his c bound his own ; Spec. 0/ Iliad 3 
horses stood Hard by their c's, . 11 .22 

chariot-bier. 
let there be prepared a. c-b . . Elaine 



1115 
"33 



sad c-b Past like a shadow 

cluiriotcd. 
Boadicea, standing loftily c, . Boadicea 3, 70 

Charioteer. 
the C And starry Gemini hang . Maud, III. vi. 6 

charitable. 
To save the offence of c, . . En. Arden . 339 

charity. 
summer calm 1 of golden c, . .Isabel. . 8 
thou of God in thy great c) , ■ tr . -40 
gentle satire, kin to c , . . . Princess, ii. 445 
those fair charities Joined at her side. 11 vii. 50 
A patron of some thirty c/iarities, u Con. 88 

In reverence and in c. . . . In Mcm.cxm. 28 
Valour and c more and more. ToF. I). Maurice 40 

charlatan. 
Defamed by every c, . . . In Mem. ex. 23 



Charles, 
Wherein the younger C abode 



Talking 0. 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Charles's Wain. poem. line. 
Till C Wcame out above the . MayQzieen, ii. 22 

Charley, Charlie. 
little King C snarling, . 
and C ploughing the hill. 
Harry and C I hear them too — 

charm (s.) 
the c of married brows.' 
heart that doats on truer c's. 
all his life the c did talk 
a kiss ! the c was snapt. 



Maud, I, xii. 30 

Grandmother 80 

ir . 81 



. CEnone . 74 

L. C. V. de Vere 14 
. Day-Dm. . 121 

" • J 33 
c have power to make Newlifeblood Will Water. 21 
loose A flying c of blushes . . Princess, ii. 408 

nameless c That none has else . it v. 67 

Merlin once had told her of a c, . Vivien . 54 

see but him who wrought the c . 11 . .61 

Vivien ever sought to work the c . n . .64 

wish still more to learn this c it 178 

c so taught will charm us both if 181 

when I told you first of such a c . . 11 . . 209 

as tho' you knew this cursed c, . if . . 285 

vast c concluded in that star ir 362 

power upon me thro' this c . it . . 364 

this c on whom you say you love.' it . . 375 

fair c invented by yourself? ir . 390 

needed then no c to keep them 11 397 

might teach the King Some c, . ir . . 434 

c Of nature in her overbore it 445 

they found — his foragers for c's — it . . 469 

save the King, who wrought the c 9 11 . . 493 

the book : the c is written in it : . it . . 502 

open, find and read the c: . it . 510 

every square of text an awful c, . it . . 523 

in the comment did I find the c. . it . . 533 

mutter'd in himself, ' tell her the c I it . . 658 

told her all the c, and slept. . n . 815 

in one moment, she put forth the c tp . 816 
Wrought as a c upon them . . Guinevere . 143 
Each, its own c; and Edith's . Ay biter's F. 165 

charm (verb.) 
c Pallas and Juno sitting by : . A Character 14 
to c from thence The wrath . . Princess, v. . 426 
c's Her secret from the latest moon?' In Mem. xxi. 19 
Perchance, to c a vacant brain, . The Daisy . 106 
so taught will c us both to rest. . Vivein . 181 

taught the King to c the Queen it 491 

bloom profuse and cedar arches C, Milton . 12 

charmed. 
c and tied To where he stands, — . D. ofF. Worn. jg$ 
her father c Her wounded soul . Princess, vi. 325 
So much the gathering darkness c: n Con. 107 

C him through every labyrinth . Ayhner's F. 479 

charnel 
Ev'n in c's of the dead . 

charnel-cave. 
When Lazarus left his c-c, 

chart (verb.) 
c's us all in its coarse blacks . 

Chartist. 
his bailiff brought A C pike. 

chase (s.) 

And in the c grew wild, 

sleek and shining creatures of the c, Princess, 

being ever foremost in the c, 

Follow, follow the c ! . 



. Two Voices . 215 

. In Mem. xxxi. 1 

Walk, to the M. 97 

Walk, to the M. 63 

Talking O. . 126 
148 

. Enid . 1807 

The Window 11 



chase (verb.] 
rose To c the deer at five ; 
do I c The substance, or the 
c a creature that was current 



Talking O. . 52 
Princess, ii.- 386 
Vivien . 258 



' C,' he said : the ship flew forward The Captain 33 

chased (engraved.) 
hilt, How curiously and strangely c M. aT Arthur 86 
meadow gemlike c In the brown wild Enid . 1047 

chased (pursued.) 
shape c shape as swift . . . D. of F. Worn. 37 



POEM. 


LINE. 


. Talking 0. 


• 125 


. Princess, i\ 


■ ^8 


. Vivien 


• 2 77 


. Coquette, i. 


7 



. Dyi?ig Swan 17 
. The Merman 20 



M.d' Arthur 1S7 

Two Voices 304 

Princess, Pro. 93 

11 iv. 5 

Gimievere . 246 

En. Arde?i . 1 

ti .2 

n . 671 

Sea Dreams 218 



Princess, vii. 278 
Vivien . 666 



Enid . 1637 

Ayhner's F. 784 



Isabel . 
Godiva 


2 

S3 


11 


6S 


Vivien 


S4S 


Guinevere 


470 



light wind c her on the wing, 
c The wisp that flickers 
c the flashes of his golden horns 
c away the still-recurring gnat 

chasing. 
C itself at its own wild will, . 
C each other merrily 

chasm. 

in the icy caves And barren cs, . 
Heaven opens inward, c's yawn, . 
one wide c of time and frost . 
every coppice-feather d c and cleft, 
the little elves of c and cleft . 
lines of cliff breaking have left a c; 
in the c are foam and yellow sands 
drawn thro' either c, 
from the gaps and c's of ruin left . 

chaste. 
world's great bridals, c and calm ; 
many generous, and some c. 

chasten. 
love the Heaven that cs us. 

chastisement. 
May not that earthly c suffice ? 

chastity. 
clear-pointed flame of c, 
rode forth, clothed on with c : 
rode back, clothed on with c : 
They bound to holy vows of c I 
To lead sweet lives in purest c, 

C ha tele t. 
The last wild thought of C, . . Margaret 

chattel. 
Live c's, mincers of each other's fame, Princess, iv. 494 

chatter. 
Would c with the cold . . . StS.Stylites 30 
crane,' I said, 'mayc of the crane, Princess, iii. 88 
then to hear a dead man c . . Maud, II. v. 19 
I c over stony ways, . . . The Brook . 39 
I c, c, as I flow .... it .47 

chatter'd. 
They c trifles at the door : . .In Mem. lxviii. 4 
Philip c more than brook . . The Brook . 51 

chatteri?ig. 
c stony names Of shale and . 

Chaucer. 
Dan C, the first warbler, 

chaunt. 
I would mock thy c anew ; . 
solemn c's resound between. . 

chaunteth. 
C not the brooding bee 

cheat (s.) 
Yet, if she were not a c, . Maud, I. vi. 35, 91 

Scarcely, now, would I call him a c • » xiii. 29 

cheat (verb.-? 
love to c yourself with words : 
C and be cheated, and die : . 

cheated. 

Cheat and be c, and die ; 

cheating, 
c the sick of a few last gasps 

check (s.) 
Then comes the c, the change, 
motions, c's, and counterchecks. . 

check (verb.) 
nuns would c her gadding tongue 
c me too : Nor let me shame 
pray you c me if I ask amiss— 



37 



. Princess, iii. 343 

. D. o/F. Worn. 5 

. The Owl, ii. 8 
. Sir Galahad 36 



A Dirge 



16 



Princess, vii. 314 
Maud, Li. 32 

Maud, I. i. 32 

Maud, I. i. 43 



Two Voices 



163 
300 



Guinevere . 311 
" • 315 

11 . 322 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



63 



check'd. POEM. LINE. 

c His power to shape : . . . Lucretius . 22 

cheek. 
The baby-roses in her c's; . . Lilian . 17 

then the- tears run down my c, . Oriatui . 69 
Leaning his c upon his hand, . Elcanore . 118 
c Flushd like the coming of the day ; Miller's D. 131 
J I er c had tost the rose, . . GLttone . 17 

fbrighten'd as the foam-bow brightens 11 . 60 

her snow-cold breast and angry c . n . 140 

His ruddy c upon my breast. . The Sisters 20 

with puff Ac the belted hunter . Pal. of Art 63 
From c and throat and chin. . 11 . 140 

along the brain, And flushesall thee. E. of F. Worn. 44 
swarthy c's and bold black eyes, . n . 127 

dimples your transparent r, . . Margaret . 15 
Tie up the ringlets on your c : . 11 • 57 

could bring the colour to my c ; Gardener's D. 192 
clapt him on the hands and on the c's, Dora . 130 

laughterdimpled in his swarthy c; . Ed. M orris . 61 



. Godiva 

. Tiuo Voices 

. Vay-Dm. 



pat The girls upon the c, . . TalkingO . . 
nush'd her<r with rosy light, . n 

Then her c was pale and thinner . Lockslcy II. 
On her pallid c and forehead 
barking cur Made her c flame 
should smite him on the c 
dreaming on your damask c, 
blush is tix'd upon her c. 
1 <ur llies into his c's; 

C by jowl, and knee by knee 

tsy watcrdrovc hisrin lines ; Princess, 
when the king ECiss'd her pale c, 
blew the swoH'n c of a trumpeter, 
larm of blushes o'er this c 
<an to burn and burn, 
over brow And c and bosom brake 

wet with tears, 
so belabour* d him on rib and c 
wan was her c With hollow watch, 
love not hollow c or faded eye : 

on the wasted c 
c's drop in : the body bows ; 
home upon her c: 

. are pale ; 
, to call them mine, 
blow The fever from my c, . 



25 
57 

-■;■ 
3 

52 
119 

Vision o/Sin 84 
i. 115 
11. 245 

• 343 
. 408 

iii. 29 
iv. 364 
v. 22 

• 33 1 
vi. 128 

..- 37° 

m. 97 

In Mem. xxxv. 3 

'» xxxvii. 10 

Ivi. 5 

'• Ixxxiii. 18 

Ixxxv. 9 

3 
-'7 
'9 

• 65 
. 207 

• S'7 
775. "83 

1469 
1478 
1566 

• 697 
258 

66 
289 
5°5 
37 
45 



xvii. 7, 
.xix. 



li dead on the c, Maud, I. 

■ are her c's .... 11 

Of my mother's faded c . . 11 

was what bad redden'd here . 11 

with his whip, and cut his c. . Enid 

first she kiss d on either c 

c burn and cither eyelid fall, . 11 

lived some colour in your c . . 11 
spearman let his e Bulge 11 

ter lightly, smote her on the c. « 
White was her c ; sharp breaths of / 'Men 
1 ancient swordcut on the c Elaine 

in his 1 ; and eager eyes, . Aylmer's F. 
■i her false cwith a fcathcrfan, 11 
her c Kept colour : wondrous 1 . n 

s to redden thro' the gloom, Tithontis 
thy tears are on my c. . 11 

chee/>. 
c and twitter twenty million loves Princess, iv. 83 

cheer (s.) 

faint at your cruel c . . Poet's Mind 15 

mnd of royal c; . L.gfShalett.iv. 48 

and void off: . . T-uo Voices 239 

A murmur, ' lie of better c' 11 .429 

th books and music, . In Mem. en. 21 

I make myself such evil c, . . Maud, I. xv. 2 

sweet cakes to make them c, . Enid . . 388 

cried Geraint for wineand goodly r, " . 1132 

riven to make him c, . Elaine . 326 

Welcome her, thundering c of the W.toAlcxan. 7 

verb. ) 
enmc, c up before I go.' . . En. Arden . 200 

my girl, c up, be comforted . . 11 . 218 



.:. LINE. 

L. of Burleigh 68 

Jn Mem. xxii. 5 

11 xxxix. 23 

Grandmotlier 69 



Enid . 
Elaine 



1292 
1125 



En. Arden . 828 



cheer'd. 
he c her soul with love. 
we with singing c the way, . 
1-ie c with tidings of the bride 
But he c me, my good man, . 

cheerful. 

It wcllnigh made her c ; 
grew so c that they deem'd . 

cheerfully. 
Enoch bore his weakness c. . 

chee rfu l-m i tided. 
Be c-m, talk and treat Of all things In Mem. cvi. 19 

cheering. 
phosphorescence c even My lady ; Aylmer's F. 116 

chequer-work. 
A c-w of beam and shade . . In Mem. l.xxi. 15 

cherish, 
c that which bears but bitter fruit? Lockslcy II. 65 
love of all Thy daughters c Thee, Idylls, Ded. 51 

cherry. 
catch a dragon in a c net, . Princess, v. 162 

cliesnut (tree.) 
those three c's near, that hung . Miller's D. 53 
came and sat Below the c's . . 11 .60 

those full c's whisper by. . . 11 . 168 

in the c shade I found ..." . 201 

Parks with oak and c shady, . L. of Burleigh 29 

chesnut (fruit.) 
The c pattering to the ground : . In Mem. xi. 4 
c, when the shell Divides threefold The Brook 72,207 

cliesnut-bloom. 
that islet in the c-b . . Aylmer's F. 65 

chesuut-bud. 
drooping c-b's began To spread SirL. andQ. G.16 

chess. 
our wine and c beneath the planes, Princess, vi. 2:9 

chest (part of body.) 
like monstrousapes they crush'd my c: StS.Styliles 171 
Live long, nor feel in head or c . Will Water. 237 

chest (box.) 
She took the little ivory c, . . The Letters 17 
keep it like a puzzle c in c, . . Vivien . 504 

chew'd. 
c The thrice-turned cud of wrath, Princess, i. . 64 

chid. 
be friends, like children beins c ! 
C her, and forbid her to speak 

chidden, 
c by the dainty hand, . 

chief {adj.) 
Lancelot, the c of knights. . . Elaine 



Princess, vi. 271 
Maud, 1. xix. 63 



Coquette, : 



guess thee c of those, After the king, 



141, 187 
• 183 



chief(s.) 
heads of c's and princes fell so fast, Aylmer's F. 763 

child (sec children. \ 

Fed thee, a c, lying alone, . . Eleauore . 25 

A glorious e, dreaming alone, .11 .27 

fcaturcsofherc Krcitisborn: here/ U'.nonc . 248 

never c be born of me, Unblest, . 11 . .250 
you have another e, . . . May Queen, ii. 36 

She'll be a better c to you . ■ » -44 
dream of Father-land Of c, . . Lotos-Es. . 40 

Dora took the c, and went her way, Dora . • 69 

tell him Dora waited with the c, » -74 

rose and took The c once more, » -79 

Whosef is that? What are you doing •» . .86 

answer'd softly, 'This U William'si .'' " .88 

take the e And bless him . . " . • 9 1 

work for William's c, until he grows 11 • • ■ t 

for myself, Or William, orthiic; " . .11 

hours he sobb'd o'er William's c, . 11 . 113 



6 4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Two Voices 
Will Water. 
Lady Clare 



9i 

*74 
412 

3 1 

24 

11 . 27 

» 33> 4 1 

tf . 5° 

Vision of Sin 5 

' Come not, when,' etc. 7 

Princess, Pro. 4 

If . 101 

n i. 136 

tt . 140 

» * 255 

» 11. 44 

11 • 93 

ft . 267 

if . 341 

344 

2l3 



POEM. LINE. 

Talking O. . 128 
Locksley H. 



cling About the darling c: . 
O, the c too clothes the father 
barbarian lower than the Christian 
walk'd between his wife and c, 
that c's heart within the mans 
I speak the truth : you are my c, 
buried her like my own sweet c, 

* Nay now, my c,' said Alice. 
Alas, my c, I sinn'd for thee.' 
from the palace came a c of sin, 
C, if it were thine error 
His tenants, wife and c 
Half c half woman as she was, 
lose the c, assume The woman : 
odes About this losing of thee; 
the c We lost in other years, 
language proves you still the c. 
a c, In shining draperies, 
slay this c, if good need were 
turn'd to go, but Cyril took the c, 
c Push'd her flat hand against 
call'd For Psyche's c to oast it 
lay The lily-shining c; . 
lost Iamb (she pointed to the c) 
a hope The c of regal compact, 
live, dear lady, for your cl . 
my babe, my blossom, ah my c, 
when they say The c is hers (rep, 
my sweet Aglaia, my one c: 
Who gave me back my c ? * . 
You have spoilt this c ; . 
chiefest comfort is the little c 
c shall grow To prize the authenti 
training of a c Is woman's wisdom 
Set his c upon her knee — 
' Sweet my c, I live for thee/ 
Knelt on one knee, — the c on one 
she set the c on the earth ; . 
not yours, but mine : give me the 
The mother, me, the cl 
give her the c ! 

mellowing, dwelt Full on the c ; 
Ida spoke not, rapt upon the c. 
Blanche had gone, but left Here 
is but a c Yet in the go-cart. 
Poor c, that waitest for thy love ! 
call'd me fool, they call me c ; 
find in c and wife An iron welcome 
Familiar to the stranger's c; 
c would twine A trustful hand, 
Half-grown as yet, a c, and vain- 
With wisdom, like the younger c 
like a c in doubt and fear : . 
Then was I as a c that cries, 
I play'd with the girl when a c ; 
O c, you wrong your beauty, 
have play'd with her when a c; 
then, perhaps, as a c of deceit, 
Made her only the c of her mother, tf 
awoke in the heart of the c, . 
darling Katie Willows, his one c 
married Enid, Yniol's only c, 
dear c hath often heard me praise 
O noble host For this dear c, . if 

* See here, my c, how fresh the colours it 
Look on it, c, and tell me if you if 
worn My faded suit, as you, my c if 
dear c is set forth at her best, . if 
fair c shall wear your costly gift . ?t 
wail you for him thus ? you seem a c. if 
neither eyes nor tongue — O stupid cl Vivien 
In you, that are no c, . . . u 

a mere c Might use it . . . n 

One c they had ; it lived with her : ir 
by Valence to bring home the c. . if 

is it clamour'd by the c, if 

bitter weeping like a beaten c . if 

moral c without the craft to rule, . 
true, my c. Well I will wear it : . 
' Do me this grace, my c, 
the diamond : wit you well, my c, 



IV, 



IF vu. 

if Con, 
In Mem. vi. 
if lxviii. 
if lxxxix. 
If c. 

if cviii. 
if cxiii. 



Maud, I. i. 



If xix. 

The Brook 
Enid 



342 

401 

77 

79 



102 
112 
420 
422 
455 
545 
547 
75 
104 
125 
!37 
63-7 
J 75 
203 
4 2 
77 
28 
13 
7 
20 
18 

9 
20 

J 7 
*9 

68 

*7 

87 

30 

40 

48 

. 67 

- 4 

• 434 

■ 497 



Elaine 



. 706 
. 728 
. 819 
1396 
. 100 
. 216 
. 534 
. 566 



704 
146 

369 
381 
767 



POEM. 

kiss the c That does the taskassign'd Elaine 

Meeker than any c to a rough nurse, if 

Milder than any mother to a sick c if 

O my c } you seem Light-headed, ,, 

seeing you desire your c to live, . „ 

saying thou art fair, my c, . tf 

c kill me with her innocent talk?' Gtiitievere . 

c kill me with her foolish prate?' u 

found a naked c upon the sands . n 

the simple, fearful c Meant nothing, 11 

too-fearful guilt Simpler than any c, it 

so low, the c of one I honour'd . it 

Well is it that no c is born of thee. 11 

give his c a better bringing-up . En. Arden . 

how should the c Remember this?' 11 

the third c was sickly-born it 

common to her state Being with c : 11 

when her c was born Then her new c it 

marriage, and the birth Of Philip's*: it 

only c, his Edith, whom he loved Aylmer*s F. 

Nursing a c, and turning to the warmth 

— who could trust a c ? . 

Their c* ' Our cl* * Our heiress ■!* 

because I love their c They hate me : 

read Writhing a letter from his c, . 

such a love as like a chidden c, 

seldom crost his c without a sneer . 

speak before the people of her c y 

The poor c of shame, The common care 

gentle attributes Of his lost c, . ti 

our own c on the narrow way, . tt 

childless mother went to seek her c ; if 

in the narrow gloom By wife and c ; if 

an unknown artist's orphan c — . Sea Dreams 

Virgin Mother standing with her c it 

the c Clung to the mother, . 

mine but from the crying of a c* 

' C ? No ! ' said he, ' but this tide 

flap, Good man, to please the c. 

so loud) has roused the c again. 

But I wept like a c that day, 

like a c for the c that was dead 

that fair c betwixt them born. 

King is happy In c and wife ; 

cast her arms about the c 

c was only eight summers old, 

taken the c To spill his blood 

childhood. 
Ere c's flaxen ringlet turn'd . 
up from c shape His action . 
the dawn of rosy c past, 

childlike. 
lose the c in the larger mind ; . Princess, vu. 268 

children. 

May c of our c say, . . .To tlie Queen 23 

Two c in two neighbour villages . Circumstance 1 

Two c in one hamlet born . . 11 

been to blame. Kiss me, my c* . Dora . . 159 

our time, nor in our c's time, . Golden Year 55 
mothers brought Their c, clamouring, Godiva . 15 

Three fair c first she bore him, . L. of Burleigh 87 

That love to keep us c I . Princess, Pro. 133 

had but been, she thought, As c; it i. 136 

baser courses, c of despair/ . . 11 iii. 197 

her due, Love, c, happiness?' . it . 229 

c, would they grew Like field-flowers if . 234 

But c die ; and let me tell you, . if . 236 

C — that men may pluck them . if . 240 

c — there is nothing upon earth . it . 242 

Whose name is yoked with c's, . it v. 408 

be friends, like c being chid ! . if vi. 271 

c call, and I Thy shepherd pipe, . if vii. 202 

by the hearth the c sit . . . In Mem. xx. 13 

takes the c on his knee, . . if lxv. 11 

grins on a pile of c's bones, . . Maud, I. i. 46 

Late the little c clung : . . Ode o?i Well. 237 

c of the king in cloth of gold . Enid . . 664 

all the c in their cloth of gold if 668 

cry of c, Enids and Geraints . it . 1813 



LINE. 
. 824 

• 853 

• 854 
1056 
I089 

1399 
. 212 
. 223 
. 29I 

• 3^7 

• 309 

. 4*9 

421 

87 

232 
260 

518 

519 

710 

23 

. 183 

. 264 

• 297 

• 4 2 3 

• 517 
■ 54i 
. 5 6z 
. 608 
. 687 

• 73i 

• 743 



" • 2 34 

ti . 236 

ir . 241 

if . 242 

ti . 258 

ii . 270 

Grandmother 64 

11 . 68 

On a Mourner 25 

The Victim 28 

» • 33 

■• • 34 

» • 45 



In Mem. lxxviii. 
11 cxix. 
. E11. Arden . 



T£X.VySO.VS WORKS. 



. Two Voices . 258 
. J u Mem. IxxL 17 
Guinevere 166-172 
. En. Arden . 440 
ti . 671 



LINE. 

In c a great curiousness be well, . Vivien . 214 

Where e cast their pins and nails, 11 . . 280 

To one at least, who hath not c, . " . 356 

Lives for his c, ever at its best . Elaine . 335 

c born of thee are sword and fire, . Guinevere . 422 

ler for his own or c's sake. . " , 509 

Three c of three houses, . . En. Arden . 11 

c play'd at keeping house. . n .24 

With it; first a daughter. . . 11 .84 

see his c leading evermore 11 . 115 

Whenhewasgone — thee — what to do? n . 132 

I For her or his dear c, . . " . 164 

her c, let her plead in vain ; . . " . 167 

;, ju bear Him and his c . 11 . 307 

:nt Gifts by the c » . 325 

Philip was her c's all-in-all 11 . 345 

A father to your c : . . n . 408 

c.imj the c la ten with their spoil ; 11 . 442 

his own c tall and beautiful, . 11 . 763 

his rights and of his c's love, — 11 . 765 

My c too I must I not speak . u . 789 

if my c care to see me dead, . n . 889 

lly way with c . . . Aylmer's F. 181 

talk'd. Poor c, for their comfort : . 11 . 427 

Bodies, but souls — thy ds — . u . 672 

c*j laughter in their hall . . n . 787 

all my c have 5 me before me . Grandmother 18 

c, Annie, they're all about me . 11 76 

Phantom wail of women and c, . Boiidicea . 26 

chill. 
he is c to praise or blame. 
As wan, as c, as wild as now ; 
dark the night and c ! . 

>r Annie 
that afternoon Sunny b:it c ; 

chill' d. 
cthe popular praises of the King . Guinevere . 14 
heavens Stilled and c at once : . Ay Inter's F. 613 

chilling, 
c his caresses By the coldness . Maud, I. xx. 12 

chime (s.) 
for noise Of clocks and c's, . . Princess, i. 213 

chime 'verb.) 

. Pal. of Art 158 
sail will no less to c with his, . En. Arden . 247 

chimera. 
Cs, crotchets, Christmas s. ilecisms, Princess,Pro. 799 

chimney. 

half the c's tumbled . . . The Goose . 48 

it muffled in the leafy vine . . Audley Ct. 18 

now her father's c glows . . In Mem. vi. 29 

chimney-top. 
above the tall white c-t's . . May Queen, ii. 12 

chin. 

•mooth'd his c and sleek'd his hair A Character 11 

ible c, his portly size . . Miller's P. 2 

heck and throat and c . Pal. oj Art . 140 

tie up his c: D.o/theO. Year 48 

sweet face from brow to <r : . . L.o/Burl 

1 the furrows of his c, Princess, w. 211 
many-winter'd fleece of throat and C. Vivien . 690 

China. 
.lique And little-footed C, . Princess, ii. n3 

Chitta-l'ouud. 
ting of his vessel C-b, . . En. Arden . 122 

chink (sound.) 
Evenindreamstotherofhispence, Maud, I. x. 43 

chink (crevice.) 
Were full of c's and holes; . Codiva 



( 1 



I hear a c of 






. In Mem. cxviii. 5 
chirfi (verb. ) 
The cricket c's: the light burns low: D.o/thcO. 1 'earifi 



durpmg. poem. line. 

caught His weary daylong c, . Tite Brook . 53 

chirred. 
not a cricket c : . . . In Mem. xci v. 6 

chirrup. 
The sparrow's c on the roof, . Mariana . 73 

win her With his c at her ear. . Maud, I. xx. 30 

chirrupt. 
beside me c the nightingale . . Grandmother 40 

chivalry. 
came to c: When some respect . Princess, ii. 119 

choice. 

And told him of my c, . . . Talking P. iS 
wherefore rather I made c . . Two Voices 460 
have made the wiser c, ' You might havewou,'etc. 5 
weep the comrade of my c . .In Mem. xiii. 9 
sweetness hardly leaves me a c . Maud, I. v. 24 
glorious in his beauty and thy c . Tithouus . 12 
Teach that sick heart the stronger c, On a Mourner 18 

choke. 
almost c with golden sand ' You ask me why,' etc. 24 
' A quinsy c thy cursed note ! ' . The Geese . 29 
yellow vapours c The great city . Maud, 11. iv. 63 

choked. 
I c. Again they shriek'd . . Ed. Morris 123 
Earth, and Time are c . . . St S. Sty Hies 102 
Her voice C, and her forehead sank Princess, vii. 231 
are mine,' and saying that she c, . Elaine . 604 

His mercy c me Guinevere . tog 

choler. 
old, but full Of force and c, . . Golden Year 61 

choorch. 
voiitcd wi' Squoire an' c an' staiite, N. Farmer 15 
An' I alius corned to 's c . . 11 -17 

choose. 
To c your own you did not care ; . Day-Dm. . 242 
hardly worth my while to c . . InMem.xxxiv.io 
arms for guerdon ; c the best.' . Enid . 1067 

chop (s.) 
His proper c to each. . . Will Water. 116 

Among the c's and steaks I . 11 . 148 

clwp (verb.) 
C the breasts from off the mother, Boiidicea . 68 

chop-house. 
Head-waiter of the c-h here, . Will Water. 209 

chord. 

clear twang of the golden c's . Sea Fairies 38 

smote on all the c's with might. . Locksley II. 33 

Consonant c's that shiver to one . Princess, iii. 74 

deepest measure from the c's: . InMem. \lvii. i_* 

flash along the c's and go. . . 11 Ixxxvii. 12 

' Screw not the c too sharply . Aylmer's / . 41 j 

chorus. 
Go' (shrill'd the cottonspinning c] I'll. Morris 122 
O you c of indolent reviewers, Hendecasyllabics i,za 

chose. 

smooth as burnish'd brass 1 c. . Pal. of Art . 6 
sober-suited Freedom c, ' You ask me ~^!:y,' etc. 6 

your sake, the woman that he c, . Dora . 1 1 

ere the people c him for their king, Elaine . 35 
C the green path that show'd . 11 

You c the best among us — . . En. A rden . 292 

chosen, 
c to wed I had been wedded earlier, Elaine . 930 

Was ( Abbess, there, an Abbess, Guit 
Who madest him tin- e, . . Tithonus . 13 

Gods,' he said, 'would have <r well; Ike Victim 62 

Christ. 
C. the Virgin Mother, and the Saints; StS.Stylitesi 10 
So 1 clutch it. C .' Tis gone ; . 11 204 

time draws near the birth of C : In Mem. xxviii. 1 

Behold a man raised up by C 1 11 xxxi 13 

E 



66 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

IiiMem. ciii. i 



. Maud, II. iv. 13 

11 v. 29 

Ode on Well. 281 

• 599 

• 305 
. 428 

467 
558 
573 
793 



Maud, II. i. 
. The Epic 



26 



time draws near the birth of C : 
Ring in the C that is to be. 
Ah C, that it were possible . 
churches have kill'd their C. 
God accept him, C receive him 
saintly youth, the spotless lamb of C, Vivien 
all his legions crying C and him, Elaine 
everywhere about this land of C . Guinevere 
break the heathen and uphold the C, n 
lean on our fair father C, . . 11 

Save C as we believe him — . . Ayhners F. 
as cried C ere His agony . . it 

preaching simple C to simple men, Sea Dreams 
C the bait to trap his dupe 11 

Christian. 
barbarian lower than the C child. Locksley H. 
The graceful tact, the C art ; . hi Mem. cix. 
kept a tender C hope . . . Sea Dreams 

Chrisiless. 
C code, That must have life 

Christmas. 
old honour had from C gone, 

church-bells ring in the C morn. M. d* Arthur, Ep. 31 
cock crows ere the C morn, . . Sir Galahad 51 
seven stay'd at C up to read ; . Princess y Pro. 176 
Charades and riddles as at C here, n . 187 

from mouth to mouth As here at C* tr . 190 

Chimeras, crotchets, C solecisms, . ti . 199 

C bells from hill to hill . . . luMem.xxvm. 3 
holly round the C hearth ; 11 xxx. 2 

Again at C did we weave 
holly round the C hearth ; 
lastly there At C; 
when the second C came, escaped 
green C crams with weary bones. 
Christmas-eve. 
At Francis Allen's on the C-e— 
How dare we keep our C-e ; 
sadly fell our C-e. 
calmly fell our C-e: 
strangely falls our C-e 

chronicle. 
keep a c With all about him' — 
So sang the gallant glorious c ; 
The total c's of man 
ran thro' all the coltish c 
dash'd Into the cofa deedful day, Aylmer's F. 

chrysalis. 
dull c Cracks into shining wings . StS. Stylites 153 



11 Ixxvii. 2 
Aylmer's F. 114 

..." 8 38 
Coqtiette, iii. 14 



The Epic 
fuMem.xxix. 

II xxx. 

ti Ixxvii. 

ir civ. 

Princess, Pro. 



. The Brook 



InMc7n. lxxxi. 



Maud, I. iv. 29 
The Goose . 25 



. hi Mem. lxvi. 

11 ciii. 

. Maud, I. viii. 

xix. 

II. v. 

TJie Letters 



ruin'd c of one 

chuckle. 
c, and grin at a brother's shame 

chuckled. 
It clutter'd here, it c there, . 

church. 
in the dark c like a ghost 
A single c below the hill 
She came to the village c, 
fragrant gloom Of foreign e'es — , 
kill their c, As the ces have kill'd 
homeward by the c I drew. . 
moulder'dc; andhigherAIongstreet En. Ardc7i 
c, — one night, except For greenish Ayhner's F. 
pious variers from the c, . . Sea Drea77is 

chu rch-com 7iiissio7ier. 
Now harping on the c-c's, . . The Epic 

church-bell. 
Toll ye the c-b sad and slow, D.oftheO. Year 2 

c-b's ring in the Christmas morn. M '.d Arthur, Ep. 31 
sweet c-b's began to peal. . . Two Voices . 408 

c h urch-harpy. 
church-harpies from the master's feast To J. M. K. 3 

churchmen. 

c fain would kill their church, . Maud, II. v. 28 
Should all our c foam in spite ToF. D.Maurice 9 



4 

621 



15 



ch u re h- tower. 
grass-green beside a gray c-l, 

churchwarden. 
Until the grave c doff'd, 



POEM. LINE. 

Circumstance 6 



. The Goose 



^9 



66 



261 
200 



churl. 
low c, compact of thankless earth . Godiva 
The c in spirit, up and down . I?i Mem. ex, 

The c in spirit, howe'er he veil . ir 

riding close behind an ancient c, . Enid . 
laugh' d the father saying. 'Fie, SirC, Elai7ie 

cicala. 
At eve a dry c sung, . . Mariana 171 theS. 85 
the £ sleeps CEnone . 27 

cider. 
flask of c from his father's vats, . Atidley Ct. . 26 

cinder. 

make My scheming brain a c, . Vivie7i . 782 

circle (s.) 
round about the c's of the globes 
I watch' d the little c's die ; . 
The greensward into greener cs 
in the c of his arms Enwound us 
his orbit, and the Moon Her c. 
all the c of the golden year?' 
In the same c we revolve. 



. The Poet . 43 
. Miller's D. . 74 
. Garde7iersD.i33 
u . 211 

. Love and Duty 2.-$ 
. Golde7i Year 51 
. Two Voices 314 
musicwindingtrembled, Wov'nincV. VisioiiqfSin 18 



Caught the sparkles, and in c's, 

The chap-fallen c spreads : . 

group of girls In c waited, 

c rounded under female hands 

Thro' c's of the bounding sky, 

in a c hand-in-hand 

Against the c of the breast, . 

With all the c of the wise, 

In c round the blessed gate . 

all in c drawn About him, 

From all the c of the hills. 

round me drove In narrowing ds . 



11 . 30 

11 . 172 

. Princess, Pro. 69 
it ii. 350 

. InMem. xvii. 6 

II XXX. II 

II xliv. r> 

. „ b, I 

hIxxxiv. 23 
it lxxxviii. 21 

IF C. 24 

Lucretius . 57 

circle (verb.) 
knowledges with thewinds; 'Love thou thy land ',' etc. 17 

tho' I c in the grain, . . . Talking O. . 83 

We c with the seasons. . . . Will Water. 64 

full voice which c's round the grave, Princess, ii. 31 

c moaning in the air : . . I71 Mem. xii. 15 

It c's round, and fancy plays, . 11 C071. 81 

circled. 

C thro' all experiences, pure law, . CE7i07ie . 163 

I prosper, c with thy voice ; . . h1Me7u.cxxlx.15 

settling c all the lists. . . . E7iid . . 547 

circuit. 
The c's of thine orbit round . . hi Mei7i. Ixii. 11 

circu77ista7ice. 
hollow orb of moving C 
breast the blows of c, 



citadel. 
Troas and Uion's column'd c, 
beneath her shadowing c. 
A moulder'd c on the coast, . 
Fell the colony, city, and c, . 

citadel-crow7i d. 
Tempest-buffeted, c-c . 



Pal. of Art 255 
l7iMe7?z. lxiii. 7 

CEnone . 13 

ti . . 116 

The Daisy . 28 

Boddicea . 86 



citizen. 
gravest c seems to lose his head, 
heart of the c hissing in war . 

citron -shadow. 
clove The c-s's in tl_e blue : . 

city. 
Full of the c's stilly sound, . 
a ^glorious — A great and distant c- 
the open gates of the c afar, 
Below the c's eastern towers : 
in a clear-wall'd c on the sea, 
I and Eustace from the c went 
fable of the c where we dwelt. 



. Will . . 9 

. Princess, Co?i. 59 
. Maud, I. i. 24 

A rabia7i N*s. 15 

Arabia7iN i s. 103 
- Deserted H. 19 
Dying Swan 34 
Fati)7ta . 9 
Pal. of Art 97 
Cardc7ier'sD. 2 



TEXXYSON'S WORK'S. 



67 



POEM. LINE. 

i'r om the humming c comes Gardener's D. 35 
O'er the mute c stole ..." . 182 

the dust and drouth Of c life . Ed. Morris 4 

Beyond the lodge the c lies, . Talking O. . 5 

cities of men And manners, climates, Ulysses . 13 
shaped Tlie c's ancient legend . Godiva . 4 
rose a shriek as of a c sack'd ; . Prin'cess, iv. 147 
dash'd Your cities into shards . 11 v. 132 

breathed his latest breathThatC. In Mem. xcvii. 6 
I come once more : thee sleeps; . n cxviii. 3 

bubbles o'er like a c, with gossip, . Maud, I. iv. 8 
For a tumult shakes the c, . . " II. iv. 50 

choke The great c sounding wide ; " .64 

shines over city and river, . . Ode on Well. 50 
the long-illumined cities flame . " . 228 

cOf little Monaco, basking, glow'd. The Daisy . 8 
c glitter'd Thro' cypress avenues, 11 , 47 

here to-night in this dark c, . . 11 -95 

c sparkles like a grain of salt. . Will . 20 

saw two cities in a thousand boats Vivien . 411 

heads should moulder on the c gates, tr . 444 

■risen since With cities on their flanks. " . 526 

up the still rich c to his kin, . . Elaine 798, 841 
thro' the din rich c to the fields, . » . 843 

across the fields Far into the rich c, 11 . 887 

in it Far cities burnt, . . Guinevere . 83 

Kin; Kide toward her from the c, « . 401 

made The harlot of the cities : . Aylmer's F. 375 
A c clerk, but gently born, . . Sea Dreams 1 
Flash, ye cities, in rivers of fire ! . W. to Ale.xan. ig 
rioted in the c of Cunobeline . Boiidicca . 60 

Fell the colony, c, and citadel, . ir .86 

oxen from the c, and goodly sheep Spec, of Iliad 4 

city-gate. 
before the c-g's Came on her brother Elaine . 786 

city-gloom. 
Droopt in the giant-factoricd c-g, . Sea Dreams 5 

city-roar. 
c-r that hails Premier or king ! Princess, Con. 101 

city-room. 
moss or musk, To grace my c-r"s ; Gardener's D. 190 

civility. 
keep a touch of sweet c . . Enid . 1161 

civilisation. 

infant c be ruled with rod . Maud, I. iv. 47 

clack'd. 
It c and cackled louder. . The Goose . 24 

palace bang'd, and buzz'd and c, . Day-Din. . 14O 

clad. 

p i£e in crimson c, L.qfShalott, ii. 22 

un, . Lady Clare 57 

.ke an April daffodilly . Princess, ii. 303 

Six hundred maidens <r in purest white, n . 448 

ran bunt the ranks of war, . " iv. 483 

ily human, str.i Arden 639 

ith myrtle and c with vine, The hid . 19 

clai: 

■ml c's to reverence closed . TothcQuecn 27 

. /.. ('. V.deVere ■-,.■ 

I m.t : waive yourr: . . Princess, v. 286 

our c, . 11 . 323 

it for my < till death. " . 350 

m righl t" right, . « . 407 

my c, . 11 vii. 72 

, 'rale 1 , . . In Mem. ci. 18 

1 in the clash of jarring c's, Maud, III. vi. 44 

■I sound . Ode on Well. 70 

"inlander's c . •• 

I'o F.D Mat 
Lays f to for the lady at his side, Enid . 

claim 
■ '.anlranr; ' You might havewon'etc, 4 

. . Pn 
his (hie! . . itx. 1 1 

i'ruc, . . . Elaine . 543 



POEM. LINE. 

spring to me, and c me thine, . Guinevere . 561 

with Edith, c A distant kinship . Aylmer's E. 62 

claiming, 

c each This meed of fairest. . . CEnone . 85 

before her face, C her promise. . En. A rden . 435 

clajul/er'd. 

c half way up The counter side; . Golden Year 6 

c o'er at top with pain, . . . Princess, iv. 190 

street that c toward the mill. . En. Arden . 60 

clambering, 

c on a mast In harbour, . . En. Arden . 105 

clamour (s.) 

fill'd the house with c. . . . The Goose . 36 

With peals of genial c sent . . Will Water. 187 

herd of boys with c bowl'd . . Princess, Pro. 81 

hear my father's c at our backs . 11 i. 104 

c thicken'd, mixt with inmost terms 11 ii. 423 

c grew As of a new-world Babel, . 11 iv. 465 

trampling the flowers With c : . u v. 238 

that blind c made me wise ; . InMem.aoaii.i8 

the c of liars belied . . . Maud, I. iv. 51 

C and rumble, and ringing . . 11 II. V. 13 

blare of bugle, c of men,, . . Ode on Well. 115 

c of the rooks At distance . . Enid . . 249 

all the windy c of the daws 11 1104 

fill'd the shores With c. . . En. A rden . 637 

clamour (verb. ) 

to c, mourn, and sob, . . . St S. Stylilcs 6 

cease I not to c and to cry, - ■ 11 • 4 1 

clamour'd. 

Lilia, then, for heroine,' c he, . Princess, Pro. 217 

Melissa c Flee the death ;' . . 11 iv. 148 

he c frum a casement, ' run ' . . The Brook . 85 

is it c by the child, . . . Vivien . 621 

' Dead ' c the good woman . . En. Arden . 841 

clamouring. 

c, ' I f we pay, we starve I ' . . Godiva . 1 5 

c etiquette to death, . . . Princess, v. 16 

rout 'Mine — mine — not yours, . 11 vi. 124 

eon, till Ida heard, ... 11 . 134 

at the c of her enemy fainted . Boiidicca . 82 

clang (s.) 

overhead Begins the clash and c . In Mem. Con. 61 

clang (verb.) 

among the stars Would c it, . 
the wood which grides and c's 



Princess, iv. 415 

. In Mem. cvi. 11 

clanged. 

bare black cliff c round him, . M. d 'Arthur 188 

knell to my desires Con the bridge; Princess, iv. 157 



clanging. 
windy c of the minster clock ; 



Gardener's D. 3S 



clai 

stammering cracks and c's That fullow'd Vivien . 791 

Dead c 's of thunder from within . Sea Dreams 55 

clap verb.) 

C's her tiny hands above me, . Lilian . 4 
bird That i 'i his wings at dawn. . />. ,-/!■'. Worn. 1S0 
c their cheeks, to call them mine. In Mem. lxxxiii.iS 

clapper. 

in a c clapping in a garth, . . Princess, ii. 209 

clapping. 

Laughing and r their hands, . The Merman 99 

in a garth, . . Princess, ii. 209 

' II -"ii^--, and ,- hands. In M. i::.\\ . 

came a c as of phantom hands. . Enid . . 566 

clapt. 

'ids ami cried, 'I marvel . Pal. of Art. 1S9 

<■ his hand On Everard's shoulder, 

c him on the hands, and on the checks Prta . 130 

ml in mine, and sang— . Audley Ct. . 38 

1 ran, and doors I . I'aylhi:. . 135 

c her hands and cried for war . Princess, iv. 567 

mused a little, and then char hands Vivien . 715 



/ 



68 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Clara. 
Lady C Vere de Vere (rep.) . 

Clare. 
To give his cousin, Lady C. 
you are not the Lady C 
was no longer Lady C, 
Lady C, you shame your worth ! 
you shall still be Lady C 

Claribel. 
Where C low-lleth (rep.) 

clash (s. ) 
overhead Begins the c and clang 
in the c of jarring claims 
Roll of cannon and c of arms, 
I heard the c so clearly. 



POEM. LINE. 

L.C.V.deVere i 



Lady Clare 



Claribel . 1 

In Mem. Con. 61 
Maud, Hl.vi. 44 
Ode 071 Well, 116 
Sea Dreams 132 



clash (verb.) 
O hard, when love and duty c ! . Princess, ii. 273 
you c them all in one, . . . 11 v. 172 

C, ye bells, in the merry March air ! W.toAlexan. 18 
C the darts and on the buckler . Boadicea . 79 
Fly on to c together again, . . Lucretius . 41 

clash'd. 
c his harness in the icy caves . M. d' Arthur 186 
from them c The bells ; . . Gardener sD. 215 

' shameless noon Was c and hammer'd Godiva 



one, that c in arms, 
horses yell'd : they c their arms 
c His iron palms together 
save When armour c or jingled, 
As the music c in the hall ; . 
C with his fiery few and won ; 
thrice They c together . 



Princess, v. 



75 
5 

n . 240 

» • 343 

" vi- 343 

. Maud, I.xxii. 34 

. Ode on Well. 100 

Enid . . 562 



Touch'd, clink'd, and*:, and vanish'd Sea Dreams 131 



clashing. 
Enid heard the c of his fall . 



. Enid 



clasp (embrace.) 
glance and smile, and c and kiss, In Mem. lxxxiii. 7 

clasp (fastening.) 
Buckled with golden cs before, SirL. andQ. G. 25 

clasp (verb.) 
I 'd c it round so close and tight, 
cs the crag with hooked hands ; 
c it once again, And call her Ida, 
Let Love c Grief . 
Some landing-place, to c and say 
Thy passion cs a secret joy : 
C thy little babes ' Lady, let 

c These idols to herself? 
C her window, trail and twine, 
Trail and twine, and c and kiss, 

clasped. 
Die, dying c in his embrace, 
her, who c in her last trance 
Are c the moral of thy life, . 
But he c her like a lover, 
c the feet of a Mnemosyne, . 
hands so lately c with yours 
A hand that can be c no more — 
hands so often c in mine, 
comfort c in truth reveal'd ; . 
first he walk'd when c in clay ? 
He is c by a passion-flower. . 
ivy-stems C the gray walls, . 
c and kiss'd her, and they rode 
turn'd and c me in his arms, 
fell on him, C, kissed him, . 
C on her seal, my sweet ! 

clasping. 
round me, c each in each, 
I, c brother-hands, aver 

clatter. 
With cackle and with c. 
rumble, and ringing, and c, . 



. Miller sD. 180 

The Eagle . 1 

Princess, vii. 80 

. In Mem. i. 9 

it xlvi. 15 

it lxxxvii. 8 

the rolling? etc. 6 

Lucretius . 164 

The Window 22 

n . 24 



Fatima . 42 
D.o/F.Wo7fz.266 
Day-Dm. . 267 
L. of Burleigh 67 
Princess, iv. 250 



- . In Mem. vii. 


1 


II X. 

11 xxxvii. 


x 9 
22 


II xcu. 
. Maud, I. xiv. 
. E)iid . 


4 

8 

323 


away 11 . 825 
. Grandmother 55 
. Lucretius . 276 
. The Window 135 


. Talking O. 
In Alem.lxxxiv 


*43 
102 



The Goose 
Maud, II. v. 



POEM. LINE. 

. Princess, v. 459 
. Lucretius . 120 



clause, 
the little c ' take not his life : ' 
in a train Of flowery c's 

clave. 

loved one only and who c to her' — Idylls, Ded. 10 

c Like its own mists . . . Elaine . 38 

his kith and kin C to him, . . Guinevere . 437 

c To Modred, and a remnant stays 11 . 439 

claw. 
red in tooth and c With ravine . In Mem. Iv. 15 
miss' d, and brought Her own c back, Vivien . 350 

clay. 
should have trod me into c, . 

cta'enfromthecommon To , 

coarse to sympathize with c . 
Doing dishonour to my c' 
shall not blind his soul with c' 
Half-conscious of their dying c, 
first he walk'd when claspt in c ? . ir 

Not only cunning casts in c : . ir 

judge all nature from her feet of c, Vivien 
seems to make us loveless c, . Elaine 



. Oriana . 62 
(With Pal. oj 'Art) 17 

. Locksley H. 46 

. Two Voices 

. Princess, vii. 

. InMem. lvii. 
? . it xcii. 

CX1X. 



102 

312 

7 
4 
5 
684 
1008 



Ay Inzer's F. 170 



Princess. Pro. 18 



Rose from the c it work'd in 

clayinore. 
C and snowshoe, toys in lava, 

clean. 
As c and white as privet . Walk, to the M. 48 
whole, and c, and meet for Heaven. St S. Stylites 210 
make all c, and plant himself afresh, Enid 1753 

keep him bright and c as heretofore,^ 11 . 1785 



will never make oneself c. 

cleanse, 
c this common sewer of all his 

cleansed. 
bandit holds and c the land. . 



' (adj/ 



Gra?idmother 36 



Enid 



Enid 



1792 



. Isabel . 

. Poet's Mind 5 

. Miller's D. 15 

. Princess, iii. 354 

. Maud, I. xix. 



TI I 
253 



clea 
C, without heat, undying 
C and bright it should be ever, 
healthy, sound, andc and whole, 

hark, O hear ! how thin and c, 

1 feel so free and so c . 

clear (verb.) 
Better to c prime forests, 
c away the parasitic forms . 

clear-cut. 
But a cold and c-c face, 
Cold and c-c face, why come you 

clear* d. 
a whirlwind c the larder, 
everywhere C the dark places 
flash of semi-jealousy c it 

clearer. 
The fires are all the c, . 

clearest, 
c of ambitious crime, 

clear-faced. 
Until they found the cf King, . Elaine . 431 

clear-featured. 
that r^face Was lovely, . . Elaine 1153 

clear-headed. 
C-h friend, whose joyful ' Clea?'-headedfriend,'etc. 1 

clearness. 
like the rest, No certain c, . . Two Voices. 335 
The starry c of the free ? . In Mem. Ixxxiv. 86 
The critic c of an eye, ... it cviii. 3 

clear-pointed. 
the c-p flame of chastity . . Isabel . . 2 

clear-steimri 'd. 
c-s platans guard The outlet, . Arabian N's. 23 

clear-voiced. 
The c-v mavis dwelleth, . . Claribel . 16 



Princess, iii. 



Maud, I. 



The Goose . 
Enid . 1791 

Aybner's F. 189 

The Window 58 

Ode on Well. 28 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



6; 



clear-wall'd. POEM. LINE. 
i.i a c-w city on the sea, . . Pal. of Art 97 

cleave (to adhere.) 

love thee well and c to thee . . (Euone . 157 

man will c unto his right.' . . Lady Clare 46 

C to your contract : . . . Princess, iv. 390 

if I fall, c to the better man.' . Enid . 1001 

love one maiden only, c to her, . Guinevere . t,-ji 

shadow of another c's to me, . " .611 

cleave (to divide. ) 

race of men that c the soil, . , Lotos-E's. . 165 

c the rift of difference deeper, . Princess, v. 291 

Love would c in twain . hi Mem. xxv. 10 

he. Would c the mark. . . , " lxxxyi. 30 

c a creed in sects and cries, . 11 cxxvii. 15 

hard earth c to the Nadir hell . Vivien . 199 

cleaved. 
c to a cause that I felt . . Maud, III. vi. 31 

cleaving. 
The fruitful wit C, took root, . The Poet . 21 

cleft (s.) 

torrent call'd me from the c : . CEnone . 53 

thro' mountain cs the dale was seen Lotos-E's. . 20 

coppicc-fealhcr'd chasm and c, . Princess, iv. 5 

trickling dropwise from the c, . Vivien . 123 

little elves of chasm and c . . Guinevere . 246 

cleft verb.) 

He c me thro' the stomacher ; . Princess, ii. 3S5 

apart C from the main, . " iv. 263 

Has risen and c the soil . 11 vi. ij 

Cilia. 

C, Cornelia, with the Palmyrcnc Princess, ii. 69 

clematis. 
O'erflouri h'd with the hoary a . Golden }'er.r 03 

rose, and c . . . The Window 23, 30 

clench. 
who c their nerves to rush . Love and Duty 75 

clcnctid. 

. Princess, \ 

1 her linger.! till they bit . . Elaine . US6 

of old To entangle me . Maud, I. vi. 27 

clergyman. 
od man, the c, . . . May Queen ^m. 13 

clerk. 

wom-ont c Brow-beats his de.sk . To J. M. A". 11 

.-•hind us . Ed Morris . 97 

a lawyer's c, <> . 102 

A city c, but gently born . . Sea Dreams 1 

cleverness. 
not for all Aspasia's c, . . . Princess, ii. 323 

click. 

merry milkmaids c the latch, . The Owl, i. 8 

cliff. 
upon the wall Of purple c's, . . Ode to Mem. 54 
to her ■.■■at from the upper c. . CEnone . 21 

',.: c to fall ... 9 

him . M .d' Arthur 188 

1 live land . Audley Ct. . 48 

on of Sin 47 

1 ■ ipses, . Princess, ii 

car . » . 356 

n the c, . 11 iv. 503 

iy .In Mem. xii. 8 

nc . ». Iv. 2 

111 thee, Enid . . 318 

■ vc : . Guinevere . 278 

a c . 11 . 602 

eft . . En. Arden . 1 

the c: . . " .23 

■'. . . .S'iV! Dreams 17 

ind now on c, 11 

thunder from within the 1 's . " • 55 



caves that run beneath the c's. 
on those c's Broke, mixt with 
lines of c's were c's no more, 



POEM. LINE. 

. Sea Dreams £8 
11 . 207 

11 . 210 

cliff-side. 
broken rocks On some c-s, . . Elaine 1246 

climate. 
manners, c's, councils, governments Ulysses . 14 

climax. 
' The c of his age ! . . . Princess, ii. 36 

climb. 
seem'd to hear them c and fall . Pal. of Art 70 
'will you c the top of Art. . . Gardener sD. 105 
day wanes : the slow moon c's : . Ulysses . 55 
Cry, faint not, c: . . . Two Voices 184 

C Beyond her own material prime? n . 377 

I c the height ; . . . . Sir Galahad 57 
but we Set forth to c : . . . Princess, iii. 336 
as one that c's a peak to gaze . n vii. 20 

near us when we c or fall : . .In Mem. I. 13 
C thy thick noon, disastrous day ; 11 lxxi. 26 

I c the hill : from end to end . 11 xcix. 1 

felt the knot C in her throat, . Elaine . 737 

would not or I could not c — . Guinevere . 637 

street c's to one tall-towcr'd mill ; En. A rden . 5 
c into the windy halls . . . Lucretius . 136 

climbed. 

he had c across the spikes, . Princess, Pro. n 1 

we c The slope to Vivian-place, . 11 Con. 39 

thither I c at dawn . . . Maud, 1. jriv. 5 

/ have c nearer out of lonely Hell. " xviii. Eo 

.1 fair and even ridge, . Enid . . 239 

re had (- Tin r, " . . 826 

he set her own and 1 ; 11 . 1608 

c That eastern tower, . . . Elaine . 14 

Then to her tower she c, . . 11 

■ pof the garden-wall Guinevere . 26 
c the hill, Just where the prone edge En. Arden . C6 
I c to the top of the garth, . . Grandmother 38 
c as quickly, for the rim . . The Voyage 27 

climbing part.) 

ever c up the c wave! . . . Lotos-Ex. . 95 

r ( higher; . . . D.ofF.Wom. 32 

c up into my airy home, . . SIS. Stytitesan 

Came little . . Amphion . yi 

c Cyril kept With Psyche, . . Princess, iii. 336 

tum'd his face here, . Enid . 1609 

A lily-avenue c to the doors ; . Aylmer's I 
c up the valley ; at whom In n . 228 

climbing [s.) 

Maud with her venturous cs . Maud, I. i. Cg 

clime. 

poet in a golden c was born, . The Poet . 1 
in that unblissni] c, DrfF. li'em. £2 

me were sun orr? . . Lockslry II. 177 

In divers seasons, divers c's, . Day-Dm. . 230 

on the tables every e and age . Princess, Pro. 16 

led him I blissful c's, In Mem. lxx.viv. 25 

throve and branch'd from c to c >< cxvii. 13 

the breeze of a softer?, . . Maud, I. iv. 4 

For many a time in many a c . Ode on Well. 64 

hundred shi 1 c's, . The Voyage 49 

. came . . 11 .89 

Put forth and feel a gladder c' . On a Mourner 15 

cling. 

close as might be would he c . Tailing O. 1:7 

c's To the turrets and the walls ; . Maud, 1 1, iv. 33 

a cloud c's to the hill, . . Enid 

each blade of grass, . Elaine . 108 

ther in the ghastly sack — . Aylmer's E. 764 

' My mother c's about my neck, . Sailor Boy . 17 

din, 

aw- ; • Love thou thy land,' etc. 29 
a, 1 to her purpose, . Princess, v. 334 

clink (s.) 
l1 c of compliment. . . Princess, ii. 41 



7 o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



clink (verb.) poem. line. 
hears't the village hammer c, . In Mem. cxx. 15 

clink'd. 
Touched, c, andclash'dand vanish' d, Sea Dreams 131 

clinking. 
Cj chattering stony names . . Pri?icess, iii. 343 

clip. 
Tho* fortune c my wings, . . Will Water. 50 

clip. 
read in arbours c and cut, . . Amphion . 85 
wing'd affections c with crime : . Princess, vii. 297 
c A tiny curl, and gave it . . En. Arden . 234 
thousand days Were c by horror . Ayhncrs F. 603 
She c you from her head . . The Ringlet 38 

cloak (s.) 
the red cs of market girls . L. ofShalott, ii. 17 
Pitiful sight, wrapt in a soldier's c Princess, v. 53 
raised the c from brows as pale . 11 -7° 

Wrapt in a c, as I saw him, . . Maud, I. i. 59 

cloak (verb.) 
c's the wounds of loss with lies ; . Vivien . 667 

cloaked. 
The Shadow c from head to foot, . In Mem. xxiii. 4 

clock. 
The slow c ticking, . . . Mariana . 74 
windy clanging of the minster c; Gardener's D. 38 
heavy c's knolling the drowsy hours. ir . 180 

rose a noise of striking c's . . Day-Din. . 134 
speak for noise Of c's and chimes, Princess, i. 213 
the dark, when c's Throbb'd thunder n vii. 88 
c Beats out the little lives of men. In Mem. ii. 7 
And hark the c within, . . Maud,\. xviii. 64 

clock-work. 
little c-w steamer paddling plied . Princess, Pro. 71 

clog {s. ) 
To lighten this great c of thanks, Princess, vi. no 
A c of lead was round my feet, . The Letters 5 

clog (verb.) 
fulsome Pleasure c him, and drown Maicd, I. xvi. 4 

cloister, 
c s, branch'd like mighty woods, . Pal. of Art 26 
while our cs ccho'd frosty feet, . Princess, Pro. 181 
Walk your dim <:, and distribute dole Guinevere . 675 

clomb. 

Imprisoning sweets, which, as they c Arabian TV's. 40 
C to the roofs, and gazed alone . Princess, vii. 17 

close (an enclosure.) 
I broke a c with force and arms, . Ed. Morris 131 
in a roofless c of ragged stones ; . StS.Stylites 73 

Are wither'd in the thorny c, . Day-Dm. . in 

close (an end. ) 
sweet c of his delicious toils — . Pal. of Art 185 
The c ' Your Letty, only yours ;' . Ed. Morris 106 
never found his earthly c, . . Loveaud Duty 1 
and the bitter c of all, . . . Princess, vi. 101 
drove us, last, to quite a solemn c — \\ Con. 17 
they said, as earnest as the c? . tr .21 

Such a war had such ac. . . Ode on Well. 118 
such a stern and iron-clashing c, . Vivie?i . 26g 

Death dawning on him, andthec of 3.W En. Arden . 833 
At c of day ; slept, woke, . . Sea Dreams 18 
Then comes the c. f n 29 

it is here — the c of the year, . . Spiteful Let. 1 
Here is the golden c of love, . The Window 180 

close (verb.) 

forgets to c His curtains, . . Adeline . 42 

C the door, the shutters c, . . Deserted H. 9 

C up his eyes : tie up his chin : D.oftheO. Year 48 
To c the interests of all. ' Loveihozi thy land,' etc. 36 

this be true, till Time shall c . tr • 79 

Death c's all : . . . . Ulysses . 51 

c with Cyril's random wish : . . Princess, iii. 85 

so employ' d, should c in love, . if vii. 52 



and the daisy c Her crimson fringes 
Until we c with all we lov'd, 
before his journey cs, He shall find 
To c with her lord's pleasure ; 
c again, and nip me flat, 
c the hand Upon it ; 
heard the ponderous door C, 
breathe it into earth and c it up . 
one wide will that cs thine. . 



POEM. LINE. 

In Man. Ixxi. 11 
ir cxxx. 11 

Ode on Well. 205 
Enid . 1063 

Vivien . 200 

Elaine 1108 

Aylmer's F. 338 
Coquette, iii. 12 
On a Mourner 20 



close-buttoned. 
turn'd once more, c-b to the storm; Ed. Morris 136 

closed. 
thousand claims to reverence c . To the Queen 27 
c mine eyelids, lest the gems . M. d Arthur 152 

Summ'd up and c in little ; . . Gardener's D. 13 
She turn'd, we c, we kiss'd, . . Ed. Morris 114 
hoped that ere this period c . . StS.Stylites 17 
for the promise that it c : . . Locksley II. 14 
C in a golden ring. . . SirL. andQ. G. 27 

And thus our conference c. . . Princess, ii. 346 
until they c In conflict ... 11 v. 479 

darkness c me ; and I fell. tr . 531 

spirit c with Ida's at the lips ; . ii vii. 143 

So c our tale, of which I give . if Con. 1 

the gates were c At sunset, . it . 36 

such as a c Welcome, farewell, . it -94 

warm hands have prest and c, . In Mem. xiii. 7 
such as c Grave doubts ... 11 xlvii. 2 

dying eyes Were c with wail, . it lxxxix. 6 

pulses c their gates with a shock . Maud, I. i. 15 
The gates of Heaven are c, . . n xviii. 12 
by this my love has c her sight 
they c a bargain, hand in hand. . The Brook 



Dash'd on Geraint, who c with him Enid 



Vivien 58, 393 
1. . 822 

Elaine 11 29 

34o 
495 
713 
776 
503 



seem'd to lie C in the four walls 

and the thicket c Behind her, 

And c the hand upon it, 

c about by narrowing nunnery-walls, Guinevere 

she c the Book and slept : . . En. Arden 

when she c ' Enoch, poor man, 

open'd it, and c, As lightly . 

c her access to the wealthier farms, Aylmer's F. 

fain had she c them now 

c by those who mourn a friend . Lucretius . 142 

close-latticed. 
C-l to the brooding heat, . Mariana in tlie S. 3 

closelier. 
once mine, now thine, is c mine, . Vivien f 296 

close-matted. 

1, Day-Dm. . 66 



67 

156 

1311 



a wall of green C- 

close-set. 
wore A c-s robe of jasmine . 

closet. 
not to myself in the c alone, . 

closeted. 
with that woman c for hours ! ' 

closing (part. ) 
c like an individual life — . . Love and Duty 77 
c eaves of wearied eyes . . In Mem. Ixvi. 11 

closing (s.) 



Aylmer's F. 158 
Maud, II. v. 49 
Princess, iii. 40 



at the c of the day 



clot. 



Is a c of warmer dust, 

cloth of gold. 
With inwrought flowers, a. c o g 
children of the king in c o g . 
all the coverlid was cog 



■L.ofShalott,W. 15 

. Vision of Sin 113 

. ArabianN's. 149 
. Enid . 664-8 
. Elaine 1151 



clothe. 

c the wold and meet the sky ; . L. ofShaloit, i. 3 

the child too cs the father . . Locksley H. 91 
Cs and reclothes the happy plains ; Day-Dm. . 22 

to c her heart with love, . . Princess, iv. 87 

tender ash delays To c herself, . 11 .89 

Will c her for her bridals . . Enid . . 231 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



71 



POEM. LINE. 

cyourself in this, that better fits . Enid . . 717 

C her like the sun in Heaven. 11 784 

poor gown he bad me c myself, . 11 . 1550 

lo, I c myself with wisdom,' . . Vivien . 104 

often toil'd to c your little ones ; . Aylmer's F. 699 

clothed. 
river-sunder' d champaign c with . CEnone . 112 
C in white samite, mystic, M. d' Arthur 31,144,159 
from ridge to ridge, C with his breath, 11 . 182 

rode forth, c on with chastity : . Godiva 53, 65 
spaces c in living beams, . . Sir Galahad 66 

If in act Princess, i. . 192 

have c their branchy bowers . InMem.htxv. 13 

see her now, C with my gift . Enid . . 753 

c her for her bridals like the sun ; 11 836 

c her in apparel like the day. . 11 . 1796 

-in the river, c in black. . Elaine 1117 

1 pure a loveliness ? . 11 1 375 

worst self hast thou c thy God. . Aylmer's F. 646 

clothes. 

wholesome food, And wear warm c, St S. Stylites 107 

Like coarsest c against the cold : . In Mem. v. 10 

fairer in new c than old. . . Enid . . 722 

C they gave him and free passage En. Arden . 651 

clothing. 
upbearing parasite, C the stem, . Isabel . . 35 

clotted. 

c into points and hanging loose 



. Eleduore 


71 


. CEnone 


41 


11 


90 


M 


103 


II 


.87 


II 


214 


II 


214 


. Pal. of Art 


39 
83 

IS7 


. Lotos-Es. . 


. D.o/F.Wtm. u 


11 


221 



M.d' Arthur 219 

cloud. 
Like little c's sun-fringed, . . Madeline . 17 

. Ode tu Mem. 22 

1 low-hung c 11 . 71 

nit Mariana in theS. 38 

Slowly, as fr im a c of gold, . 

. 
I lad lost his way 

ithdrew into the golden c 

dear... I iling e, . 

. 
All liarrM with long whiter .. 
. curl'd 

uing, 
on over lis. 
kirts of a long c, M.d' Arthur 54 
iwnward: . Gardener s 1). 77 

an the summer crag. . Ed, Morris r 4 7 

. St S. Sty/ites 1 4 

1 If-dipt in c : , Godiva . 46 

. Two Voices 186 

I like ; . . 11 . 195 

every c, 11 . 446 

n in the sky, . . Sir Galahad 73 

c's are highest up in air, . . Lady Clare 

1 her c, Pocfi 

molten 1 Princess, iv. 
1 i stormy c, 

lillar of electric c, 
thro' the t that dimm'd her broke 

■ 1 aven 

a great black C I >ra^ i 
I 
uidcr c . 
nil, 
ii 
. 
in the darkness and the r, 

: . . ■ lit : 
' themselves 

minge 

ilies. 

fold upon fold of hueli \e, . 

Inar, 
lictwixt the 1 and the moor, 



Poet s Song 


■7 


Princess, iv. 


SS 


n 


365 


11 


S47 


11 v. 


51 1 


II VI. 


264 


'I 


365 


II VII. 


21 


In Mem. iv. 


n 


II XV. 


16 


II XXX. 


3 


11 lxxi. 


22 


11 Ixxxiv. 


8s 


11 xcv, 


21 


11 en. 


55 


II cv. 


2 


II cxxti. 


8 


11 


107 


Maud, 1. iv. 


54 


11 VI. 


3 



(OEM. LINE. 

thro' sunshine, storm, and c ; . Enid . . 348 

wheel and thou are shadows in the c; 11 . . 357 

by and by Slips into golden c, . n . 736 

seeing c upon the mother's brow, . 11 . . 777 

your Knid burst Sunlike from c — 11 . . 789 

all night long a c clings n *539 

like a c above the gateway towers.' Vivien . 449 

the vast eyelid of an inky c, . 11 . . 484 

across him came a c Of melancholy Elaine . 323 

Dispersed his resolution like a c '11 . 880 

they cannot weep behind a c : . Guinevere . 205 

c Cuts off the fiery highway . . En. Arden . 129 
Sailing along before a gloomy c . Sea Dreams 120 

soft air fans the c apart ; . . Tithonus . 32 

creeps a c, or moves a wind . . Lucretius . 106 
C's that are racing above, . . The Window 6 

Gone, and a c in my heart, . . o . 40 

No is trouble and <rand storm . 11 . 113 

clouded. 
spake he, c with his own conceit, 
all my mind is c with a doubt) 

cloudlet. 
From little cs on the grass, . 

cloud-tower. 

C-t'sby ghostly masons wrought 

cloudy. 

look so c and so cold ; . 



M.d' Arthur tio 

. 2 S 8 

In Mem. Con. 94 

In Mem. lxix. 5 

Enid . . 897 

The Voyage 40 

Arabian N's. 14 
Princess, iv. 264 



Ode to Mem. 
In Mem. liii. 

A Dirge 



clove (s.) 
nutmeg rocks and isles of c. . 

clove (verb.) 
e The citron-shadows in the blue : 
c An advent to the throne ; . 

cloven. 

Was c with the million stars 
not a worm is c in vain ; 

clover. 
broidry of the purple c. 

r-hill. 

with white bells the c-h swells 

clown. 

thou art mated with Mr, 

>■< Shall hold their "i'ou might have won, 'etc. 1 1 
Shakespeare's curse on c and knave 11 . 27 

Princess, iv. 227 
11 . 228 

11 . 495 

11 v. 179 

In Mem. ex. 4 
Enid . 1275 



Sea Fairies. 14 
. Locksley If. 47 



to the c, 
furr'd and purpled, still the c, 
turnspits for the c, 
Glorifying C and satyr ; 

d a king, at heart a c 
nusmated with a yawning c, . 

club. 
talk'd At wine, in c's, of art, 

clung. 
should have c to Fulvia's waist 

1 lie II man's neck, 
mist of morn C to the lake. . 
When I c to all the present . 
1 ' "I after, c About him, 
C The shadow of his sister 
I. ate the little children c: 
lets the day Strike where it c : 
c to him, Kixt in her will, 
lb hi her lissome limbs 
about his neck, C" like a snake ; 

I i > crate and basket, . 

c to him '1 him cl 

to hi 1 rown the golden dragon c 

C to the dead earth 

for crest the golden dragon c 

evil fancies c lake sei pent 1 

from the beetling crag to which he 

siill C to their fanci 

and the child C to the mother 

cluster (s.) 
Below the starry c's bright, . 



Princess, Pro. 160 



D.o/F. Worn. 259 



. Dora 
. Ed. Morris 
isley II. 

. Princes:: 11 



159 
108 



»4 
291 

11 v. 247 
. Ode on Well 237 



Enid 

'■ 



. Elaine 
. Guinevere 
11 

, Eft. Arden . 
c Aylmer's P. 

. Se.r Preams 



'541 
43 
73 
9' 
475 
794 
433 
8 
588 
476 

36 
*37 



L.o/Shalott,m. 25 



72 



CONCORDANCE TO 



tropic shade and palms in c, 
about a narrow wharf In c ; . 
tear away Their tawny ds, . 
men and women in dark c's . 

cluster (verb. 
The foxglove c dappled bells.' 

clustered. 
sunny hair C about his temples 

clutch. 
So I c it Christ ! 'Tis gone : 
lives to c the golden keys, 

clutch' d. 
c the sword, And strongly wheel 
stoop'd and c him, fair and good, 
my mother c The truth at once, 
He, standing still, was c ; 

cluttered. 
It c here, it chuckled there . 

coal. 
On the c's I lay, A vessel 
left his c all turn'd into gold 

coal-black. 
flow'd His c-b curls as on he rode, 



POEM. LINE. 

. Docks ley H. 160 

. En. A rden . 4 

" • 379 

. Sea Drea7ns 219 

) 

. Two Voices 72 

. (E?w?ie . 59 

. St S. Stylitcs 204 
. In Mem. lxiii, 10 

d M.d' Arthur 135 

. Will Water. 133 

. Princess ; iii. 44 

ir iv. 241 

. The Goose . 25 

. St S. Stylites 166 
. Maud, I. x. 11 

D, ofSJialott, iii. 31 

coarse. 
sense of touch is something c . Talking O. . 163 
growing c to sympathise with clay. Locksley H. 46 
daughter of our meadows, yet not c ; The Brook 69 
eat also, tho' the fare is c, . . Enid . 1057 

coarseness. 
According to the c of their kind, . 

coast. 
an iron c and angry waves. . 
All round the c the languid air 
A lucid veil from c to c, 
rolling brine That breaks the c. . 
a c Of ancient fable and fear — 
Back from the Breton c 
bad you guard the sacred c's. 
A moulder'd citadel on the c, 
province with a hundred miles of c . 
about a stone On the bare c. 
After the sunset, down the c, 
down the lonely c of Lyonnesse, . 
leagues along that breaker-beaten c 
moving up the c they landed him, 
bound for health they gained a c . 
having dream'd Of that same c. . 
all in shade, Gloom'd the low c 

coat. 
castles patch my tatter' d c ? . 

coat-of-arms. 
worth a hundred c's-o-a . L. C. V. de Vere 16 

cobweb. 

The petty c-s we have spun : . In Mem. cxxiii. 8 

c woven across the cannon's throat Maud, III. vi. 27 
could wish a c for the gnat, . . Vivien . 220 

cock, 
c sung out an hour ere light : . Mariana . 27 

c hath sung beneath the thatch . The Owl, i. 10 
At midnight the c was crowing, . Oriana . 12 
Before the red c crows . . . May Queen, ii. 23 
heard just now the crowing c. D. of the O. Year 3% 
sitting, as I said, Thee crew loud -/J/, d'Arthur,Ep. 10 
barking dogs, and crowing c's ; . Day-Dm. . 136 
c crows ere the Christmas morn, . Sir Galahad 51 
plump head-waiter at The C, . Will Water. 1 

The C was of a larger egg it . 121 

the red c shouting to the light, . Enid . * 2 33 

Maud, I. x. 22 

En. Ardeii . 575 



Princess, iv. 


327 


Pal. of Art . 


69 


Lotos-Es. . 


5 


In Mem. Ixv: 


• 14 


ir cvi 


15 


Maud, II. ii. 


3 1 


Ode on Well 


43 
172 


The Daisy . 


2S 


Vivien 43 


3-97 


Guinevere . 


53 


11 


236 


if 


238 


En. Arden . 


51 


11 


666 


Sea Dreams 


16 


11 


201 


The Voyage 


42 


Princess, ii. 


394 



cockney. 
(Look at it) pricking a c ear. 

coco. 
The slender c's drooping crown 



COCOOn. POEM. LINE. 

Spins, toiling out his own c. . Two Voices 180 

rich as moths from dusk c's . . Princess, ii. 5 

code. 
Christless c, That must have life, Maud, II. i. 26 

Cogoletto. 
stayed the wheels at C, . . . The Daisy 23 

coil. 
Hard ds of cordage . . . En. Arden . 17 

coiled, 
c around the stately stems . . En. Arden . 57S 

coin. 

Light c, the tinsel clink . . Princess, ii. 41 

Him that made them current c ; . In Mem. xxxvi. 4 



coinage. 
strown With gold and scatter'd c, . 
like proven golden c true 

cold. 

dew is c upon the ground, 
Ere the placid lips be c ? 
Quiet, dispassionate, and r, . 
not more c to you than I 
our household hearths are c : 
Night is starry and c my friend 
fear My wound hath taken c 
in thirsts, fevers and c, . 
Would chatter with the c, 
Because my memory is so c, 
Shy she was, and I thought her 
ere he scarce be c, ' Youmz* 

loyal warmth of Florian is not c, 
motionlessly pale, C ev'n to her, 
And call her hard and c 
In height and c, the splendour 
coarsest clothes against the c ; 
C in that atmosphere of Death 
spectral doubt which makes me c 
How dwarf 'd a growth of c . 
dearest, now thy brows are c 
c to all that might have been, 
looks so c : she thinks him kind. 
And smile as sunny as c, 
kind Only because she was c. 
Full c my greeting was and dry ; 
loved that hall, tho' white and c, 
ill and weary, alone and c, . 
glanced at him, thought him c, 
you think I am hard and c ; . 
c Are all thy lights, and c my 
all the comets in heaven are c, 
found Her master c ; 

cold-blooded. 
That dull c-b Cassar. 

coldness* 
The faithless c of the times ; 
By the c of her manners, 

cold-white. 
white against the c-w sky 

colewort. 
from the c a green caterpillar 

collar. 
iron c grinds my neck ; 

Collatine. 
made her blood in sight of C 

college. 
knew your gift that way At c 
remember'd Everard's c fame 
at school — a c in the South : . 
dragg'd her to the c tower 
My c friendships glimmer. 
I was there From c, 
we, unworthier, told Ot c: . 
Far off from men a c 
swore he long'd at c, only long'd 



Enid . . 875 
Aylmer 1 s F. 182 

. The Owl, i. 2 

. Adeline . 20 

. A Character 28 

L.C. V.deVere^ 

. Loios-E's. . 117 

D.oftheO. Year 34 

. M.d* Arthur 166 

. St S. Stylites 12 

11 . 30 

. Two Voices . 341 

c ; Ed. Gray . 1 3 

'Jit have won* etc. 15 

. Pp'ipicess, ii. 226 



11 vi. 


86 


11 vii. 


83 


. In Mem. v. 


!/9 

10 


II XX. 


14 


11 xl. 

M IX. 


19 

7 


11 lxxiii. 


S 


11 lxxiv. 


16 


11 xcvi. 
. Maud, I. vi. 


24 
2 4 


11 xiv. 


2 7 


. The Letters 


13 


. The Daisy . 


37 
96 

402 


. Guinevere . 


. Gi'andmother 17 


. Titlionus 


66 


. The Ringlet 


9 


. Lucretius . 


2 



. D. oj 'F. Worn. 139 

. In Mem. cv. 18 
. Maud, I. xx. 13 

. Dying Swan 12 

. Guinevere . 33 

. St S. Stylites 115 

. Eucretius . 235 

The Epic . 25 
11 .46 

Walk, to the M. 7 5 
.1 . 8i 

Will Water. 40 

Princess, Pro. 7 
n . in 

" - i35 

" • ^57 



TEWYSOX'S WORKS. 



11 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, Pro. 226 
11 i. 204 

11 ii. 1 
11 . 302 

11 iii. 171 
11 v. 467 
11 vii. 2 
11 Con. 49 

In Mem. lxxxvi.5 



'. c and of ladies' rights, 
c lights Began to glitter 
At break of day the C Portress, 
rosy blonde, and in a c gown, 
c and her maidens, empty masks, 
camp and c turn'd to hollow shows, 
their fair c turn'd to hospital ; 
a garden ! ' said my c friend, 
heard once more in c fanes . 

college-council. 

Should eighty-thousand c-c's Top. D. Maurice 7 

college-time. 
save for t '-/'.s Or Temple-eaten terms Ayhner's P. 104 

colony. 
near the c Camolodunc, . Boddicea . 5 

their c half-defended ! lo their c 
Then a phantom c smoulder'd 

: c, there they rioted . 

e silent c hearing . 
Fell the c, city, and citadel . 

colossal. 
Let his gTeat example stand C . Ode on Well. 221 

colour. 
sweet is the c of cove and cave, 

b with c's gay. . 
I I :ny c, I lose my breath, 
could bring the c to my cheek ; 
came a c and a light, 
c flie- ek 

t face 
had touch'd her fa 

iv Her moth 
in the mornin 

vnd danced the 
'ir c's : 
i helmet 

r'd c day by day 
r c bum-. ; 
M Aver : 
ent prime? 

ved. 
, happy hamlet, 

.1 the c's look 
. 
made it of two c's ; 

ir check . 
In c Ii) 'lining palm 

■ theirs 

f; ■ an opal warm'd 

; . 
id . 

. 

ind c 

' y rigid c . 
. 
'itcned 

colourless. 

face v. , . 

colt. 

the c, 

- : . 
wild Like .'. a ite. 

colt-like. 
r-/ whinny, and with hoggish whine StS. Stylitesijt 

column. 
•'.ree nn eithei 

the king ; 



. SeaPairies 


30 


. E.o/S/uiloit 


ii. 2 


. Elednore 


«37 


. Gardener*sD 


.192 


. Locks ley H. 


25 


. Day-Dm. . 


no 


. L. 0/ Burleigh 61 


Princess, Pro. 


214 


ii ii. 


304 


" 


•H5 


c, 11 iii. 


276 


ip iv. 


57' 


11 v. 


523 


11 vii. 


103 


. In Mem. vi. 


34 


11 xlii. 


8 


11 cxv. 


4 


c, Maud, 1, xx 


. 12 




16 




=7 


. Enid . 


C80 


n 


681 


• 1 


1141 


• • 


1469 


'.' 


73 




67. 


• 


799 




45 


11 


•35 


. » . 




11 


386 


" 


833 


11 


836 


. Guinevere . 


640 


. Aylmer's P. 


2S1 

506 

29 


. T/ie Captain 



M.d' . trthursij 

Talking O. 121 

■ v- 445 

<ok . 136 

11 . 139 

• 149 
I. it. Arden 304 



The Daisy . 17 

Arabian We. 144 
M. d ' . Xrihur 221 



POEM. LINE, 
people hum About the c's ba ,e, . St S. Stylites 38 

watcher on the c till the end ; . 11 . 160 

in we stream'd Among the c's, . Princess, ii. 412 

left and right, of those tall d s . ■■ vi. 334 

the knotted c of his throat . . Enid . . 7-1 

massive c s, like a shorecliff cave, Plaint . 45 

comb iverb} see comb oj '/earl. 
I would c my hair (rep.) . . The Mermaid 'ii 

combat (s. ; 
when the tide of c stands, . . Sir Galahad 10 
To prick us on to c . . . Princess, v. 294 
Not dare to watch the c, . . Enid . 1003 

In c with the follower of Limours u . 1350 

combat (verb.) 
c for my claim till death . . Princess, v. 350 

combed. 
as I c I would sing and say . . The Mermaid 12 
I curl'd and c his comely head . The Sisters . 31 

combing. 
C her hair Under the sea, . . The Mermaid 4 
c out lur long black hair . . Princess, iv. 257 

combo/ /earl. 
Witharo/ .... The Mermaid 7,11 
Made with her right a co/ . . Vivien . 93 

come (see comeandgo.) 
cats run home and light is c, . The Owl, i. . 1 

(' not as thou earnest of late . Ode lo Mem. 8 

' C forth I charge thee, ... 11 .46 

C from the woods that belt . . .. .55 

Dark-brow'd sophist, c not anear Poet's Mind H 
fr<vcn sneer C not here . . 11 .11 

hithet, c hither, (rep.) . . Sea Pairies 16 

: no more of mirth . . Deserted H. 13 
C away : for Life and Thought . 11 .17 

illld I rise and c away, . Oriana . 57 
dare nut die and c to thee, . . 11 .96 

c riding two and two : . E.o/Shalott.n.zs 

irse is c upon me,' . . u iii. 44 

night c's on that knows not morn, Mariana in the .y.94 
C's out thy deep ambrosial smile . EleSnore . 74 
Herif'ito-day, l'allasand Aphrodite, LEuoue . 83 
Should c most welcome . . 11 . 127 

1 power of herself Would c uncall'd 11 . 145 
c from the inmost hills, . . 11 . 245 
herchild! — a shudder c's Across me: n . 249 
shrill happy laughter ' to me . 11 . 254 
ere the stars c forth Talk . 11 . 258 
I made a feast ; I had him c ; . The Sisters 13 
There c's no murmur of reply . Pal. of Art 2E6 
'ill c from far away, . . . May Queen, \. 27 
till the snowdrops c again : . . n ii. 14 
and the sun c out on high : . . n 15 
the swallow 'ill c hack again . 11 
When the flowi mother, h 
you'll c sometimes and see me 11 -30 
If I can I'll c again, mother, . 11 -37 
Don't lei me . . 11 -43 
violet, that c's beneath the shies . w iii. 5 
if it c's three tin , I thought . 11 .38 
little while till you and Effie c — . 11 .58 
flikegh 1 i able joy . . I.otos-E's. . 119 
' C here. That I may look on thee.' / ' of P. II 'em. 123 

echoes of laborious day C to you, Margaret . 30 
C down, c down, and hear me speak: " . 56 

Cs up to take his own. . D.n/ 'the O. Year 36 

gently c's the world to those . To j. S. . 3 

Nothing c's to thee new . . n -74 

let the change which c's I <•■_ ' Lore thou thy land.'elc. 45 
keep a thing, its use will c. . . The Epic . 42 
Merlin sware that I in M.d' Arthur 23 

land, where no one c's, Or hath c, 11 . 202 

'Arthur is c again : he cannot die.' 11 / 

\sfair; . 11 

V With all g,.,.l things . . ,1 

c's to it In sound of funeral . . Gardener's D. 35 

Norheardusir.norfrom her tendance •• .111 

time Is c to raise the veil . . 11 . , 



«9 



74 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 

Dora . 



for this orphan, I am c to you 

he cried out to c to her : 

now I c For Dora : 

I c to-morrow morn. 

when does this c by ? 

here it cs With five at top : . 

For that the evil ones c here, 

here c those that worship me ? 

not say But that a time may c- 

C, blessed brother, c. . 

down the way you use to c . 

in station, but the end had c. 

c like one that looks content, 

sure cs up the golden year. . 

crimson c's upon the robin's breast Locksley H. 

to such length of years should c 

Slowly cs a hungry people, 

Knowledge*:'.?, but wisdom lingers, (rep.) 

Never cs the trader, never floats 

Cs a vapour from the margin, 

dragon-fly C from the wells . 

Then c's the check, the change 

days that never c again. 

murmurs from the meadows r, 

C, Care and Pleasure, Hope and Pain, n 

c's, scarce knowing what he seeks : n 

Love may c, and love may go, . Ed. Gray . 

Till Ellen Adair c back to me. . u 

c's and dips Her laurel in the wine, Will Water. 

C's out, a perfect round, . tr 

all c's round so just and fair : 

c you drest like a village maid 

When beneath his roof they c. 

Here is custom c your way ; 

Therefore c's it we are wise, 

C not, when I am dead, 

Will never c back to me. 



LINE. 
. 62 

• 135 

• 139 



Audley Ct. 

Walk.totfieM.~s 

it . 102 

StS.Stylites 96 

11 . 123 

. 187 

H . 201 

Talking O. 115 

Love and Duty 74 

11 . 90 

Golden Year 31 

17 

67 

135 

141 

161 

191 

9 

163 

3 2 4 

26 

75 

117 

29 

32 

17 



. Lady Clare 18 

11 _ 67-9 

. L . of Burleigh 40 

. Vision of Sin 64 

it . 100 

Come not when* etc. 1 

Break, break' etc. 16 



Two Voices 



Day -Dm. 



29 
461 
467 
221 
301 
224 



1 C out,' he said, ' To the Abbey : Priucess,Pro. 50 

"we all say whatever c's. . . 11 . '232 

1 what, if these weird seizures c n i. 81 

ye c, The first-fruits of the stranger 

C from the dying moon, and blow 

Father will c to thee soon ; (rep.) . 

ds the feebler heiress of your plan, 

Nor willing men should c among us, 

Would rather we had never c ! 

those to avenge us and they c : 

face across his fancy c's, 

Had c on Psyche weeping : . 

ds With the air of the trumpet 

did but c as goblins in the night, . 

c's a pillar of electric cloud . 

* C hither, O Psyche,' she cried . 

C to the hollow heart they slander 

C down, O maid, from yonder 

c, for Love is of the valley, c 

c thou down And find him ; . 

c; for all the vales Await thee ; . 

When c's another such? 

c's the statelier Eden back to men : 

trust in all things high C's easy . 

new day c's, the light Dearer 

I love thee : c, Yield thyself up : . 

whifF ! there c's a sudden heat, 

yet we trust it c's from thee, 

From out waste places cs a cry, . 

here to-morrow will he c. 

A happy lover who has c 

' C's he thus, my friend ? 

C Time, and teach me, many years 

C stepping lightly down the plank, 

c The man I held as half-divine . 

C quick, thou bringest all I love. . 

C then, pure hands, and bear the head 

c, whatever loves to weep, . 

The praise that ds to constancy . 

hopes and light regrets that c 

The wonders that have c to thee, . 

Peace : c away : we do him wrong 

There ds a glory on the walls : 

likeness^ hardly seen before, Cs out- 



ir 




i.S4 


it 




211 


ir 
ir 


vi. 


513 
266 
270 


11 
ir 
11 
11 

11 


vn. 


177 
183 
184 
200 
229 
277 
3" 
3 2 5 


11 . 342 

u Con. 58 

Mem., Pro. 23 


11 


111. 


7 


11 


VI. 


24 


ti 


V1I1. 


1 


11 


XII. 


13 


ir 


xm. 


13 


11 


XIV. 


7 
9 


11 


XV11. 


8 


11 


XV111. 


9 
11 


11 


XXI. 


12 


ir 


XXXIX. 


7 


11 


xl. 


22 


11 


lvi. 


3 


n 


lxvi. 


4 


11 


lxxiii. 


4 



POEM. LINE. 

InMem.lxxx. 3 

it lxxxix. 21 

11 xcii. 6 

ii civ. 8 

it cxviii. 3 

II CXX. 12 
II CXXX. 

Con. 



xm. 

xviii. 

xix. 



cannot c a mellower change, 

Ah dear, but c thou back to me 

he, the Spirit himself, may c 

The violet ds, but we are gone. . n 

I c once more ; the city sleeps ; . it 

Behind thee c's the greater light : . n 

faith that c's of self-control, . . h 

back we c at fall of dew. . . n 

sweeter chance ever c to me here ? Maud, 

why c you so cruelly meek, . . w 

C sliding out of her sacred glove, 11 

let c what c may .... n 

One is c to woo her. ... n 

old man never ds to his place : . 11 

shook my heart to think she c's . 11 

her brother ds, like a blight . tr 

then, oh then, c out to me . . n 

C out to your own true lover . 11 

C into the garden, Maud, . . ti 

C hither, the dances are done, . 11 

c to her waking, find her asleep . 

Get thee hence, nor c again . 

The day c's, a dull red ball . 

Has c to pass as foretold ; 

ds from another stiller world 

c's to the second corpse in the pit ? 

kind heart will c To bury me 

c to be grateful at last . 

' Whence c you V and the brook . 

c from haunts of coot and hern, . n 

Men may -c and men may go, (rep. ) 11 

loves to talk of, c with me. . . it 

you will be welcome — O, c in ! ' . n 

ds a sound of marriage bells . The Letters 

To thee the greatest soldier ds ; . Ode on Well, 

C, when no graver cares employ, ToF. D, 

God-father, c and see your boy : . 

(Take it and c) to the Isle of Wight ; 

C, Maurice, c : the lawn as yet . 

pay but one, but c for many. 



9 
100 
62 



xi. 5, 12 

xii. 28 

24 



102 
44 
46 

*i 3 
54 
81 
56 
65 
44 
70 
88 

102 

3 

22 

23 
33 
226 
228 



Maurice 1 



II. 



,. Hl.vi. 
The Brook . 



c like you to see the hunt, 

find, at some place I shall c at 

C's flying over many a windy wave 

but a better time has c ; 

meadow, till she saw them c ; 

1 Look, Here c's a laggard . 

' yonder c's a knight.' . 

want me, let him c to me. 

c with no attendance, page or maid 

c with morn, And snatch me 

C slipping o'er their shadows 

And now their hour has ir; . 

I c the mouthpiece of our King . 

then will Arthur c to you 

you would c To these my lists 

c To cleanse this common sewer . 

' C from the storm ' 

my shield In keeping till I c' 

c to all I am And overcome it ; 

who has c Despite the wound 

This will he send or c for ; . 

ghostly man had c and gone, 

c to take the King to fairy land ? . 

Traitor, c out, ye are trapt . 

then she, 'the end is c . 

if there ever c a grief to me . 

knowest thou now from whence I c 

that I c to urge thy crimes, . 

did not c to curse thee, Guinevere, 

hither shall I never c again, . 

from this, whatever ds to me ! 

that all evil would c out of it) 

merry, when I c home again. 

to the babes and till I c again 

if he c again, vext will he be 

if you will, when Enoch c's again 

' Come with us Father Philip' 

If Enoch c's — but Enoch will not c — 

dead man c to life beheld 

let them c, I am their father ; 

but she must not c 



■lid 



Elaine 



. 41 

• 47 
. 179 
. 219 

• 337 
. 716 
. 832 
. 909 

• 975 
1086 
1171 
1205 
1320 
1545 
1644 
1663 
1687 
1742 

• 744 



En. 



- 447 
■ 564 

. 632 
1095 
1250 
■ 105 
. 109 
. 198 

• 430 
. 5=8 

• 529 

, • 573 

Arden . 118 

. 162 

• i99 
. 219 
. 300 
. 308 

• 36S 
. 428 

• 759 
. S90 



TE.V.VYSO.V'S WORKS. 



75 



Cries ' c up hither,' 
Then c's the close, 
they c too late for use 
then c's what c's Hereafter : 



POEM. LINE. 

Aylmer's F. 745 
Sea Dreams 29 

. 67 
173 



Jenny, my cousin, had c to the place, Grandmother 25 
Often they c to the door . . u . 82 

They c and sit by my chair, . 11 . 83 

Parson a' c's and a' goos, . . N. Farmer 25 
summun 'ul c ater meii mayhap . ir .61 

Man c's and tills the field . . Tithonus . 3 
c's A glimpse of that dark world . 11 . 32 

doubt will only c for a kiss, . . The Ringlet 21 
C to us, love us and make us . W. toAlexan. 30 
I i to the test, a tiny poem . I/eudecasyllabics 3 
every height<r\sout, and jutting peak Sj>ec. oflliadi^ 
dreams that c Just ere the waking : Lucretius . 35 
there before you are c and gone, . The Window 14 
Can't we c together? . . . 11 -77 

Take my love, for love will c, . 11 . 125 

I. ove will c but once a life. . . 11 126 

Sun c's, moon c's, .... n . 162 

Flash ! 1 am coming, I c, 11 . 190 

come and go. 
Thought seems to c a g . . Eleanore . 96 
night-winds c a g, mother, . 
The flashes c a g . 
To c ag, and come again, 
The I a g 

With thousand chucks that c a g, 
she c's a g's at her will, 

corned. 

hallus c to 's choorch . . . N. Farmer 17 

1 1 to the, plaice. . . 11 .34 

sin fust I c to the 'All ; 11 .55 

comeliness. 
a broad-blown c, red and white, 



. Eleanore 
. May Queen, i. 33 
. Si Agnes* Eve -6 
. WiU Water. -2---J 
. In Mem. Hx. 13 
11 cxii. 17 
. Grandmother 79 



Maud, I. xiii. 9 



comely. 
' C too by all that's fair' 



Princess, ii. 



there's the fairer chance 
ice the face is c — . . Enid 

contest. 
not with shows . 

1 in.: and the skies, . 
much wept for : 
' Whence c thou, my guest, . 

comet. 
all the c's in heaven arc cold, 

cometh. 
night the moon c, 
be said 
quickly : . . . Fatima 
c, like an honour'd guest, . . Ode on Well. 
there c a victory now. . . . Bo&dicea 

comfort s.) 
The c, I have found in thee : . Miller's D. . 

.•where: .... Pal.qf Art 



99 
450 
1400 



Ode to Mem. 4S 
Oriana . 75 

hi Mem. xvii. 1 
Elaine . 1S1 



. The Ringlet 9 

. Claribel . 13 

Mariana 10 et pass. 

23 

I:, 

4fi 



1 thyself : what c is in me? .'/. d Arthur 243 



EovcaudDufyOj 
Locksley II. 69 
„ . " -75 



Then I unsel, 

in 'iivisiMn of the 

' med of devils ! 

none for me ! ' . 

: live, dear lady, 

is the little c . 

I my dark hour, 

<.ut of word* a c win ; . 

1 in truth revcal'd ; . 
find his ■• in thy face ; . 

itrfromthcirconvcrsc Enid . 1798 

in low tones ' Have c,' .Elaine .989 

little c;' . . . En. Arden . 275 

Why, that would be here;' . . ., .810 

open hand . Aylmer's /■'. 171 

talk' d, Poor children, for their c: . .. . 427 

comfort (verb.) 

you must c her . . . MayQuern.m.^a, 

c's mc in this one thought to dwell D.ofF. Worn. 233 



Princess, v. 


75 


11 


77 


11 


420 


" VI. 


■77 


In Mem. xx. 


10 


II XXXVII. 


22 


II CVlil. 


20 



C thyself: what comfort is in me 
Reach out dead hands to c me 
C her, c her, all things good, 
c her tho' I die. 
love of all Thy people c Thee, 
Because I saw you sad, to c you. 
C your sorrows ; for they do not 
give her this, for it may c har. 
said the kindly wife to c him 



POEM. LINE. 

? M. d' Arthur 243 
. /«.'/.'«/. Ixxix. 16 
. Maud, II. ii. 75 



comfortable. 

comforted. 
look up : be c : 

' Be c ,' Said Cyril, ' you shall have i 
my girl, cheer up, be c, 



Idylls, Ded. 
Vivien 
Guinevere . 
En. Arden . ceo 
Sea Dreams 136 



83 

52 

291 

186 



Will Water. 158 

Princess, v. 63 
t : n . 102 

En. Arden . 218 

In MemAxxxiv. 51 

. Princess, Con. 67 



Xor wholly c, 

: be c 
ne c. Said Cyrn 
my girl, cheer up, 

comforting. 
An image c the mind, . 

comic. 
Too c for the solemn things . 

coming (part' see coming and going. 

C in the scented breeze, . . Eleanore . 24 

to embrace him c ere he came. . (Euone . 62 

C thro' Heaven, like a light 11 . 106 

the New-year's c up, mother, . May Queen, ii. 7 

some one c thro' the lawn, . . D.tfE.Wom. ij& 

Each month, a birth-day c on, . Will Water. 93 

like swallows c out of time . . Princess, ii. 409 

they are c back from abroad ; . Maud, I. i. 65 

I see my Oread c down, . . 11 xvi. 8 

brother is c back to-night . . 11 xix. 1 

She is c. my dove, my dear (rep.) 11 xxii. 61 

If James were c. 'C every day,' The Brook . 106 

But c back he learns it . . . Enid . 1347 

c up close to her said . . . 11 . 1518 

c up quite close, and in his mood . 11 . 1562 

Storm was f, but the winds : . . Vivien . 1 

trumpet-blowings in it, c down . 11 . . ?(. S 

from the outer doors Rang c, . Guinevere . 411 

m the wild hour e on, . 11 . 443 

Philip c somewhat closer spoke. . En. Arden . 395 

I mind him c down the street . 11 . 848 

his lonely life, his c back, . . 11 . 863 

, 1 after he v.. is gone, . . Aylmer's F. 234 

c fitfully Like broken music, . 11 . 476 

crippled lad, and e turn'd to fly, . u . 519 

she to be c and slandering me . Grandmother 27 

Flash ! I am c, I come, . . The Window 190 

coming (s. ) 

Fhish'd like the c of the day ; . Miller's D. . 132 

and their c to the court . . Enid . 144, 846 

lonk'd on ere the c of Ocraint . 11 . . 614 

will abide the c of my lord, . . 11 . . 980 

And she abode his c, . . . n . . 9S8 

Would listen for her c . . . Elaine . 862 

ere the c of the Queen.' . . Guinevere . 221 

Narrow'd her goings out and c's in ; Aylmer's F. 501 

coming and going. 
C a g, and he lay as dead . . Vivien 62, 494 
\\ 'andercrs c a g, . . . 1865-1866 . 7 

command (s.) 

under whose c Is Earth . . InMent.Con.xy> 

He, that ever following her c's, . Ode on Well. 21 1 

gave < that all which once was . Enid . . 696 

one c I laid upon you, . . .11. . 926 

his e of silence given . . 11 1215-39 

the king's c to sally forth . . Elaine . 559 

command 'verb.) 
Will he obey when one c's f . . Tvn I 'rues 244 
Man to c and woman to obey ; . Princess, v. 440 

I cannot all c the strings ; ///.)/<>//. Ix.vwii. 10 

commander. 
Attest their great c's claim . . Ode on Well. 14S 

commeasurc. 
C perfect freedom. . . . CEnone . 164 



7 6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



commenced. 


POEM. LINE. 


co7npa n ionsh ip. 


POEM. LINE. 


However then c the dawn : . 


Princess, ii. 


122 


Who broke our fair c, . 


. hi Mem. xxi 


■ *3 


c A to-and-fro, so pacing 


11 


282 


company. 






comment. 






sat a c with heated eyes, 


. Visio7i of Shi 7 


in rubric thus For wholesale c' . 


Princess, iii. 


35 


yes ! — but a c forges the wine. 


. Maud, L i. 


36 


heard in thought Their lavish c 


Vivien 


8 


lingers late With a roystering c) 


11 xiv. 


15 


crost, and cramm'd With c, . 


1, 


5^8 


twos and threes, or fuller c's, 


. E7iid . 


57 


read the c but myself . 


H 


532 


A glorious c, the flower of men, 


. Guinevere . 


461 


in the c did I find the charm. 


11 


533 


little wife would weep for c, . 


. E71 A rde7i . 


34 


commerce. 






comparison. 






Saw the heavens fill with c . 


Locksley H . 


121 


half asleep she made c . 


. E7iid . 


651 


two crowned twins, C and conquest, Princess, v. 


411 


C077ipass (s.) 






So hold I c with the dead, . 


In Mem. Ixxxiv. 93 


in the c of three little words, 


Garde7ier s D 


227 


No more shall c be all in all, 


I\Iaud,lll. vi. 23 


winds from all the c shift 


. Godiva 


33 


that c with the Queen, 


Vivien 


620 


Might lie within their c, 


. Ayh7iers F. 


485 


the stinted c of those days ; . 


En. A rde7i 


818 


his c is but of a single note, . 


T/te Islet . 


28 


commercing. 






co77ipass (verb.] 






c with himself, He lost the sense 


Walk, to the M. 15 


c our dear sisters' liberties.' . 


Pri7icess, iii. 


271 


commingled. 






c her with sweet observances, 


E7iid - 


838 


C with the gloom of imminent war 


Idylls, Bed. 


12 


compass d. 






commission. 






c by the inviolate sea.' . 


To the Queeii 


■36 


A bought c, a waxen face, 


Maud, I. x. 


30 


With what dull pain C, 


D. ofF. Worn. 


273 






All beauty c in a female form, 


Pri7icess, ii. 


20 


common (adj.) 






Sat c with professors : . 


11 


421 


'Loss is c to the race' — And c 


I 71 Mem. vi. 


2 


c by two armies and the noise, 


II v. 


33S 


That loss is c would not make 


11 


5 


c by the fires of Hell ; . 


l7iMem. cxxvi. 17 


first flash in youth, Most c: . 


Elaine 


946 


c round with turbulent sound, 


. Will . 


7 


fears were c to her state, 


E71. Arden . 


5 T 7 


c her with sweet observances 


. E71 id . 


48 


coimnon (s.) 






c round by the blind wall of night 


En. Arde7i . 


488 


crost the c into 3>arnley chase 


The Brook . 


132 


compel. 






commonplace. 






I c all creatures to my will . 


. Enid 1477, 


1521 


And barren cs break 


Will Water. 


23 


co77ipelVd. 






common is the c And vacant chaff 


I71 Mem. vi. 


3 


such a breeze C thy canvas, 


. I 71 Mem. xvi 


. 2 


common-sense. 






coi7ipe7isa ted. 






Rich in saving c-s, 


Ode on Well. 


3 2 


often fineness c size : 


. Pri7icess, ii. 


133 


Commonwealth 






compensatitig. 






from it sprang the C, which breaks 


L ucretius . 


238 


nor c the want By shrewdness 


. E71, A rde7i . 


249 


commutfe (s.) 






C07npete7ice. 






days of happy c dead ; . 


hi Mem. cxv. 14 


happy years of health and c, 


E71. Arde7i . 


82 


Held c with herself, 


E7iid . 


1217 


C077Iplai7li7lg. 






coi7nnnne (verb.) 




broad stream in his banks c, . 


L. ofShalott, 


V. 3 


To c with that barren voice . 


Two Voices 


461 


C, ' Mother give me grace . Mariana in the S. 29 


communed. 






call'd him by his name, c loud, 


M. d'A rthur 210 


c only with the little maid, . 


Guinevere . 


14S 


complaint. 






comjnunicate. 






Not whisper, any murmur of c 


. StS.Stylites 


22 


We two c no more.' . . In Mem. Ixxxiv. 84 


What end is here to my c ? . 


hi Mem. lxxx. 6 


communing. 

C with herself : ' All these are mine 


Pal. of A rt 


181 


co77ipleter. 
gipsy bonnet Be the neater and c 


Jilaud, I. xx. 


20 


C with his captains of the war. 


Pri7iccss, i. 


66 


co77ipletio7i. 






communion. 






awaits C in a painful . ' Love thou thy la7id,' etc 


■ S8 


An hour's c with the dead. . 


hi Me77i. xciii. 4 


fulfill'd itself Merged inc? , . 


Ga7'de7ier s D 


• 2 34 


Como. 






complexity. 






how we came at last To C ; . 


The Daisy . 


70 


many-corridor'd co77iplexilies 


Vivie7i 


582 


past From C when the light . 


ti 


73 


compliment. 






compact (adj . ) 
churl, c of thankless earth, . 






Light coin, the tinsel clink of c. 


Princess, ii. 


4i 


Godiva 


66 


composed. 






C with lucid marbles, . 


Princess, ii. 


10 


All c in a metre of Catullus, He7idecasy Italics 4 


compact (s.) 






C077lpOU7ld. 






He said there was a c ; . 


Princess, i. 


46 


' No c of this earthly ball 


Two Voioes . 


35 


there did a c pass 


ti 


122 


co77iprest. * 
rais'd her head with lips c, . 






Our formal c, yet, not less . 
hope The child of regal c. 


11 iv. 


163 
401 


The Letters 


19 


' that our c be fulfill' d : 


11 v. 


in 


comrade. 






she would not keep Her cJ . 


ii 


314 


C's, leave me here a little, . 
Hark, my merry c's call me . 


Locksley H. 


1 
145 


companion. 






weep the c of my choice, 


hi Ale 7 71. xiii. 


9 


past From all her old c's, 


Princess, ii. 


244 


c of the lesser faith 


n exxvii. 


3 


Too harsh to your c yestermorn ; . 


11 iii. 


183 


then against his brace Of c's . 


Enid . 


037 


wine and free cs kindled him, 
all the boon c's of the Earl, 


Enid . 
Elai7ie . . 


1142 
1326 
398 


craven pair Of cs, making slowlier ir . 1016 
To laughter and his c's to applause 11 . 1145 


the new c's past away . 


Enoch's c, careless of himself, 


E71. Arden . 


5C9 


compan ion less. 






c's having fought their last below, 


Ayl77iers F. 


227 


I, the last, go forth c, . 


M.d Arthur 236 


the c of his chambers woke . 


11 


5Si 



T£X-VyS0-\S WORKS. 



77 



conceal. 
she knows too, And she c's it.' 
half c the Soul within. . 

conceal'd. 
Better to leave Excalibur c . 

concealment. 
maiden-meek I pray'd C 

conceit. 
clouded with his own c, 

conceived. 
sinful man, c and born in sin : 

concluded. 
At last a solemn grace C, 
some vast charm c in that star 

conclusion. 
To those c's when we saw 



POE.'.I. LINE. 

. Princess, iii. 44 
. In Mem. v. 4 



. M.d' Arthur 62 

. Princess, iii. 119 

. M. eP Arthur no 

. St.S.Stylites 120 

. Princess, ii. 429 
. Vivien . 362 

luMemAxxxvi. 35 

concourse. 
banquet, and c of knights and kings. Elaine . 561 

concubine. 
Sent like the twelve-divided c . Aylmcr's F. 759 

condemned. 
prisoner at the bar, ever c: . . Sea Dreams 172 

condensation. 
cramm'd With comment, densest c, Vivien . 52S 

condition. 
with sound oftrumpet,allThe hard £■; Codha . 37 
yet— Hear my c's: . . Princess, ii. 275 

conditioning. 
ebb and flow c their march, . Golden 1 'ear 30 

conduct (verb. ) 
C by paths of growing powers, In Mem.\xxx'm. 31 

conduit. 
W here the bloody c runs : . . Vision o/Sin 144 

cone. 
masses thick with milky c's. . . Miller's D. 56 

confederacy. 
between her daughters, o'er a wild c. Boddicea 6 

conference. 
And thus our c closed. . . . Princess, ii. 346 

confess. 
I e with right) you think me . Princess, i. 157 

As 1 1 it needs must be ; . .In Mem. Win. 4 

conflict, 
c with the clash of shivering points, Princess, v. 480 

confluence. 
A riotous c of watercourses . 



Lucretius 

Mariana 

Will . 
Enid . 



31 



■ 76 
. 5 
1018 



confound. 
did all c Her sense ; 
all ( .il. unity's hugest waves c 
the victor, to 1 them more, . 

confounded. 
Shame and wrath his heart c, . The Caftain 61 

confuse. 
with shadow'd hint c A life . . InMem. xxxiii. J 

confused. 

Makes thy memory c : . , A Dirge . 45 

nine utterly c with fears, . Pal.ofArt 269 

ig the rest . Princess, iv. 205 

He the unhappy Lark . InMem. xvi. 12 

all that . mwJ c and loud, . . Maud, II. iv. 71 

. Ode on Will. 153 

^.ut all c at first, . /."«/,/ . . 685 

Sweet moons c his fatherhood.' . Virion .562 

C the chemic labour of the blood, Lucretius . 20 

confusion. 

The airy hand c wrought, . . Pal.ofArt 226 

■ c in the little isle? . . Lotos-Es . 124 

There is c worse than death, . " . 128 

Unsubjcct to c Will Water. 86 



woman to obey ; All else c . 
At first with all c : 
C's of a wasted youth ; . 
make C worse than death, . 
for wrong done you by c, 
wrought c in the Table Round 

conjecture (s.) 



,1. LINE. 

Princess, v. 441 
" vii. 3 

In Men:. I V;'. 42 

11 lxxxix. 19 

n . 156 

Guinevere . 218 



make C of the plumage 



. Enid . 



333 



conjecture 'verb.) 
C's of the features of her child . CEnoue . 248 
if I C of a stiller guest . . . In Mem. Con. 86 

conjecturing. 
C when and where : . . . Elaine . 21 



conquer. 
From barren deeps to c all . 
rack'd with pangs that c trust 
your great name, This c's : . 

conquer' d. 

A cry above the c years 
let herself be c by him . 
his great name C : 

conquest. 
two crowned twins, Commerce and c, Princess, v. 411 

const: 
A little grain of c made hit. ion of Sin 218 

My < will not count me Reckless . Princess, ii. 274 
To whom a c never wakes ; . 
Without a c or an aim. . 
The <■ as a sea at rest . 

reverenced his c as his king ; . ldllys, J ted. 7 

Their e, and their c as their King, Guinevere . 465 
wast, as is the c of a saint . . " . 632 



Princess, vii. 149 
InMem.xlix. 6 

Elaine . 151 



. In Mem. exxx. 7 

. / 'mien . 749 

ne . 579 



InMem. xxvii. 8 
11 xxx'iv. 8 
it xciii. 12 

ldllys, 1 <ed. 



all his c and one eye askew 



earns 176-80 



conscious, 
c of ourselves, Perused the malting 
partly c of my own deserts, . 
e of what temper you art? built, 
norr of a liar Between them, 
Slowly and c of the rageful eye . 

consecrate. 
I dedicate, I c with tears 

consent. 

1 c to my desire : 
Her slow c, and marriage, . 

consequence. 
n in the scorn off. 
duty duty, clear of c's. . 

war he a cause or at'?. 

consider. 
C, William : take a month . 
1 C well,' the voice replied, . 

considering, 
c everywhere Her secret 111 

consist en 1. 
liberal minded, great, C ; 

consolable. 
A long, long weeping, not c. 

consolidate. 
became C in mind and frame — . 

consort. 
And a gentle c made he, 

constancy. 
The praise that comes to c' . 

constellation. 
Larger c's burning, 
With e and with continent, . 

constrained. 
cruel need C us 

Consume. 
cruel immortality C's . 



; Princess, ii. 53 

11 iv. 286 

. 3 8« 

Aylmcr's F. 1 34 

11 . 336 

Idylls, Dcd. 4 

Millers D. 138 
En. Aideu . 709 

CF.none . 148 

Princess, iii. 136 
Maud, i. x. 45 

Dora . . 27 
Two Voices 241 

InMem. liv. 9 

In Mem. Con. 39 

• 7°S 

Two Voices 366 

L. of Burleigh 73 

Ii: .'Jem. XXL 12 

I.ecKsley II. 159 
221 



E.rii'. 



Tit/101.. :c 



6,7 



73 



CONCORDANCE TO 



consumed. poem. line. 

utterly c with sharp distress, . Lotos-E's. . 58 

contemplate. 
when I c all alone, . . . l7zMe77z.\xxx\\\. 1 

C all this work of Time, . . tr cxvii. 1 

con tezzzpiatizzg. 
no form, of creed But c all.' . . Pal. of Art 211 
C her own unworthiness ; . . E.?iid . . 533 

con tempi a tio?i . 
And luxury of c : . . . . Eleazzore . 107 

contempt. 

touch' d on Mahomet With much c Princess, u, 119 

contend. 
C for loving masterdom. . . In Mem. ci, S 

content (adj.) 
I had been c to perish, . . . Lockdey H. 103 
well c that all was well . . Enid . 1800 

Nor rested thus c, but day by day Elaine . 13 

Queen, she would not be c . . tr 1304 

c' he answer' d 'to be loved . . En. Arden . 425 

content (s.) 

meditative grunts of much c, . Walk, to t/icJII. 79 

come like one that looks c, . . Love and Duty 90 

The low beginnings of c . In Mem.lxxx'ui. 48 

more c, He told me, lives . . tr xcvii. 25 

sun of sweet c Re-risen . . The Brook . 168 

had power to rob it of c. . . Coquette, ii. 8 

contented. 

into my arms, C there to die! . D. of F. Worn. 152 

continent. 

With constellation and with c, . Princess, i. 221 
The dust of c's to be ; . . . InMem.xxxv. 12 

co7it7'adictio7i. 
to live A c on the tongue, . . In Me77z.cxx.xv. 4 

contract. 
Cleave to your c : . . . . Prizzcess, iv. 390 

cozztractizzg. 
Philip's rosy face c grew . . E71. Arde7i . 483 

cozztrivazzce. 
With great c's of Power. ' Love thouihy lazzd,' etc. 64 

contrived. 

two c their daughter's good, . Aylz7ier's F. 848 

contriving. 

c their dear daughter's good — . Ay Inzer's F. 781 

cozztrol (s.) 
O friendship, equal-poised c, IzzBfezzzXxxx'w. 33 

ours, O God, from brute c . . Odeo7i Well. 159 

control. 
changes should c Our ' Love thozi thy lazid,' etc. 41 

c07ztroll' d. 

they c me when a boy ; . - InMe7n.xxvui.1S 

cozztrolleth. 

C all the soul and sense . . Eledzzore . 115 

convent. 

while I lived In the white c . . StS. Stylites 61 

cozzvezztiozz. 

but c beats them down : . . Prizzcess, Pro. 128 

Dwell with these, and lose C, . 11 ii. 72 

We hold a great c : ... 11 iv. 490 

convent-roof. 

Deep on the c-r the snows . . St Agnes 1 Eve 1 

co7zve7it-toiver. 

The shadows of the c-t's . . St Agzzei Eve 5 

C07zve7'se (s.) 

hold c with all forms . . . Ode to Mem. 115 

open c is there none, . . . InMem.'XX.. 17 

Thy c drew us with delight . . it cix. 1 

suspends his c with a friend, . E7zid . . 340 

told her all their c in the hall if 520 

whom he held In c for a little, . 11 . 1730 

comfort from their c which he took tr ♦ 1798 



coizverse (verb.) poem. line. 
Hears him lovingly c, . . L. oj 'Burleigh 26 

C07ZV0hltl07l. 

saturate, out and out, Thro' every c. Will Walter. 88 

c07zvolvzdzis. 
The lustre of the long c'es . . E71. Arden . 577 

cony. 

Or C07zies from the down, . . E7Z. Ardczi . 337 

cooHd. 
c his spleen, Communing with his Prizzcess, i. 6$ 
Are but dainties c again : . . Tlie Wizzdow 131 

sool (adj . ) 
as we enter'd in the c. . . . Gardezzer'sD.ii^ 
she wept, and I strove to be c, . Maztd, II. i. 15 

cool (verb. ) 
Drink to lofty hopes that c — VisioziofSizz, 147 

and grieved — to slacken and to c; Przzzcess, iv. 2S0 

coold. 
c within the glooming wave ; IzzMe77z. lxxxviii. 45 
upon the sick man's brow C it, . Ay Inzer's F. 701 

cooling. 

Cher false cheek with a featherfan, Ayl77zer , $ F. 289 

coobiess. 

paced for c in the chapel-yard ; . Vivien . 607 

cooper. 
C he was and carpenter, . . Ezz. Arde7i . 815 

codpera7zt. 
Is toil c to an end. . . Lz Me77z. cxxvii. 24 

coot. 
come from haunts of c and hern, . T/ze Brook . 23 

cope. 
c Of the half-attain'd futurity, 
dense cloud from base to c. . 



. Ode to Me77z, 32 
. Two Voices . 186 

Cophetua. 
Before the king C. Beggar Maid 4 

C swore a royal oath : . . . ti .15 

coppice. 
suddenly Breaks from a c . Ezzid . . 339 

scour'd into the c's and was lost, . tr . 1383 

coppicc-fea th erd. 
every c-f chasm ana" cleft, . . Przncess, iv. 5 

copse. 

may-pole and in the hazel c, . MayQzzeezz, ii. 11 
shadowy pine above the woven c. . Lotos-E's. . 38 

did we hear the c's ring. . . Locksley H. 35 

Came little c's climbing. . . Amphion . 32 

move the trees, the c's nod, . . Sir GalaJzad 77 

in c And linden alley : . . . Pritzcess, i. 206 

wound About the cliffs, the c's, . n iii. 342 

In c and fern Twinkled . . T/ze Brook . 133 

coquette. 
the slight c, she cannot love, . Coqztette, ii. 12 

coqztette-like. 
or half c-/ Maiden, . . Hezzdecasyllabics 20 

coqziettzzzg. 
C with young beeches ; . . Aizzphiozt . 28 

cord. 
wounding c's that bind ' C lear-headed friezid' etc. 4 
softly with a threefold c of love D. ofF. W077Z.211 

cordage. 
coils of c, swarthy fishing-nets, . E71 Ardezi . 17 

cordon. 

draw The c close and closer . . Ayl77zer's F. 5C0 

core. 
Else earth is darkness at the c, IzzMc77Z. xxxiv. 3 
make a solid c of heat ; . . tr cvi. 18 

Corizzzzds. 
wrought With fair C's triumph ; . Pri7zcess, iii. 331 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



79 



Coritanian. poem. line. 

hear C, Triaobant I (rep.) . . Bo&dicea . 10 

corkscrew. 
up the c stair With hand and rope Walk, to l/u-M. 82 

corn. 

champaign cloth'd with c, . . CEnone 

when a field of c Bows all its ears . Princess, 

all night long breast-deep in c, . u 

sweating underneath a sack of c, . Enid . 

Take him to stall, and give him c, 11 

flaws in Summer laying lusty c : . " 

land of hops and poppy-mingled c, Aylmcr's F. 



Ruth among the "fields of c, . 11 . 680 

corn-bin. 

horse That hears the c-b open, . The Epic . 45 

Cornelia. 

Clelia, C, with the Palmyrene . Princess, ii. 69 

corner. 

some odd c of the brain. . . Miller's D. . 68 

in dark c's of her palace stood . Pal. of Art 237 

Sometimes a little c shines, . . Two Voices 187 

tread The c's of thine eyes : . . Will Water. 236 

Ralph Who shines so in the c ; Princess. Pro. 145 

my own sad name in c's cried, . Maud, 1. vi. 72 

Found Enid with the c of his eye . Enid . 1130 

1 drooping in a c of it. . 11 

I in the c ? . . . Vivien 

Full lowly by the c's of his bed, . Elaine 

shelf and c for the goods . . En. Arden 

From distant c's of the street . n 



»459 
. 622 



'7' 
34* 



cornice. 
watching high on mountain c, . The Daisy . 19 

Cornish. 
dark Dundagil by the C sea ; . Guinevere . 292 

corn-laws. 
struck upon the c-l A udley Ct. 34 

coronach. 
ling in weakness, the c stole Dying Swan 26 

coronet. 
Kind hearts arc more than c's L. C. V. de Vere 55 

corpse. 

On c's thrcc-months-old . . Pal. of Art 243 

hold: . . D. of F. Wont. 25 

■ 'in the r, and lei him in D.oftkeO. 1 'ear 4 j 

I c in the pit 't . . Maud, II 

f>ond. 
-ce years to c with home ; . Princess, ii. 56 

corridor. 
lull of long-sounding c's . .Pal. of Art 53 

corrupt. 
Plenty c's the melody . . . T/ie Blackbird '15 
I c the world. . M.d' 'Arthur 242 
C*J the strength of heaven-descended /J 7// . 1 1 

corselet. 

thro* the bulky bandit's c home, . Enid . 1008 

Cossack. 

C and Russian Recl'd . . . Lt. Brigade 34 

cost 
care not for thee ; the c is mine. . Enid . 1137 

f«/ (verb.) 
c me many a tear. 
c me a world of woe, 



Grandmot/ier 22 
" . 23 



eost (cast.) 
But a c oop, thot a did, 

costliest. 
velvet of the c— . 

costly. 
;>pcar'd so c, 
' Let her tomb lie C, 



A". Farmer . 1 4 
Aylmcr's F. 804 



Enid . 
Elaine 



ooslly-broid.r'd. 
Laid from her limbs the c-b gift, . Enid 



■ 638 
1330 

• 769 



costly-maole. 
half-cut-down, a pasty c-m, . 

costrel. 
youth, that following with a c 

col. 
and kiss'd him in his c . 

coterie. 
Came yews, a dismal c ; 

cottage. 
even a lowly c whence we see 
' Make me a c in the vale,' . 
Love will make our c pleasant, 
gaze On that c growing nearer, 
Fair is her c in its place, 

cottager. 
She was the daughter of a c, 

cottage-walls. 
robed your c-w with flowers . 

cotton. 
ear is cramm'd with his c 

cottonspinning. 
Go ' (shrill'd the c chorus) 

couch. 
Kings have no such c as thine, 
She lying on her c alone, 



TOEM. LINE. 

. A udiey Ct. 22 

. Enid . . 3S6 

. En. Arden . 233 

. Amphion . 42 

. Ode to Mem. 300 
. Pal. of Art 291 
. L. of Burleigh 15 

" • 35 

. Requuscat . 1 

Walk, to the M. 51 

. Aylmcr's F. 698 

. Maud, I. x. 42 

Ed. Morris 122 



A Dirge 
Day-Dm. 



40 
78 



light of healing, glanced about the c Princess, vii. 44 

Enid woke and sat beside the c, . Enid . . 79 

which she laid Flat on the c, « 679 

left her maiden c, and robed herself, " . . 737 

wearied out made for the c , . . I 'ivien . 586 

Down on the great King's c . Elaine . 607 
Low on the border of here they sat Guinevere . 100 



r down upon a c of fire, 
Rolling on their purple e'es . 

couchant. 
c with his eyes upon the throne, 

couch'd. 
leopards c beside her throne, 
c behind a Judith, 
sk King c i 



Aylmcr's F. 574 



Boiidicea 



Guinevere 



. Princess, ii. 
" iv. 
InMem.\xxxvm. 



62 



wine-flask lying c ld 

c at ease. The white kine . . n xciv. 14,50 
c their spears and prick'd their steeds Elaine . 478 
passing by Spied where he c, . Guinevere . 32 

cough, 
c's, aches, stitches, ulcerous throes StS.Slylitcs 13 

council. 
statesmen at her c met . 
manners, climates, c's, governments, 
In iron gauntlets : break the c up.' 
when the c broke, I rose 
call'd mine host To c, . 
' everywhere Two heads in c, 
Orcat in c and great in war, . 
c's thinn'd And armies wan'd 

council-hall. 
voice is silent in your c-h 
The basest, far into that c-h . 

counsel advice.) 
silver flow Of subtle-paced c 
Then followM c, comfort, 
prized my c, liv'd upon my lips : . 
ill c had misled the girl 
take my c : let me know it . 
turn'd Her c up and down . 
Her art, her hand, her c 
dealing good c from a height 

counsel (counsellor. 
Like sleepy c pleading : 
man is likewise c for himself 



To the Queen 29 

Ulysses . 14 

Princess, i. . £3 

. 89 

" _ . 172 

" ii. 156 

Ode 011 Well. 30 

Vivien . 422 

Ode on Well. 174 
Lucretius . 171 

Isabel . .21 
J.ovcaiidDutyb-j 
Princess, iv. :-^ 

11 vii 

Vivien . 503 

Elaine . 368 

Aylmcr's F. 151 

. 172 

.) 

Amphion . 74 

Sea Dreams 170 



counsellor. 
He play'd at c's and kings, . 

count 'title.) 
c's and kings Who laid about them 
C, baron — whom he smote, he 



. Jn Mem. Ixiii. 23 

Princess,!' 10. 30 
Elaine . 464 



3o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



count (reckoning.) poem. line. 
'Heaven heads the c of crimes . D.ofF.Wom. 201 

count (verb.) 
can but c thee perfect gain, . . Pal. of Art 198 
neither c on praise : . ' Love thou thy laud,' etc. 26 
but c not me the herd ! , . . Golden Year 13 
c the gray barbarian lower . . Locksley H. 174 
conscience will not c me fleckless . Princess, ii. 274 
what every woman c's her due, . m iii. 228 

what may c itself as blest, . . In Mem. xxvii. 9 
c new things as dear as old : . . tr xxxix. 28 

c it crime To mourn for any . . 11 Ixxxiv. 61 

c their memories half divine ; . 11 lxxxix. 12 

Thy likeness, I might c it vain . 11 xci. 2 

To-day they c as kindred souls ; . 11 xcviii. 19 

Nor c me all to blame if I . it Con. 85 

c it of small use To charge you) . Enid . 1265 

be he dead, I c you for a fool ; . 1? 1397 

c it of no more avail, Dame, . w . 1563 

C the more base idolater . . Ayhner's F. 670 
O Ringlet, I c you much to blame, The Ringlet 46 
Deep as Hell I c his error. . . The Captain 3 

C'^nothing that she meets with base, OnaMoumer 4 

counted. 
died Earl Doorm by him he c dead. Enid . 1578 

only Queens are to be cso, . . Elaine . 238 

countenance. 

With a glassy c L.qfShalott,iv. 13 

If I make dark my c, . . . Two Voices 53 

her c all over Pale again . . L. of Burleigh 65 

She sets her forward c . . . In ISIcin. cxiii. 6 

o'er his c No shadow past, . . En. Arden . 710 

Else I withdraw favour and c . Aylmer's F. 307 

counter. 
rogue would leap from his c . . Maud, I. i. . 51 

coun ter change 
Witch-elms that c the floor . InMem.lxxxviii. 1 

co un ter-c hanged. 
c The level lake .... Arabian N's. 84 
half-disfame, And c with darkness? Vivien . 316 

counierchann. 
c of space and hollow sky, . . Maud, I. xviii. 43 

cotmiercheck. 
With motions, checks, and c's. . Two Voices 300 

counter-gale. 
to and thro' the c-g ? . . . The Voyage 88 

coun termarch 
would fight and march and c, . Audley Ct. . 39 

cou7iter-scoff. 
hery-short was Cyril's c-s, . . Princess, v. tzgy 

coun test. 
See thou, that c reason ripe . . InMem.xxx'ui.13 

counting. 
C the dewy pebbles, . . . M.oT Arthur 84 

country. 
His c's war-song thrill his ears : . Two Voices 153 
O Prince, I have no c ; . . Princess, ii. 200 

If love of c move thee there . . Ode on J Veil. 140 
neither court nor c, tho' they sought Enid . . 729 

country dance. 
men and maids Arrang'd a c d, . Princess, Pro. 84 

countryman. 
behold the Prince Your c, . . Princess, ii. 197 

countryside. 
tree by tree, The c-s descended ; . Amphion . 52 

" countrywoman, 

countrywomen I she did not envy Princess, iii. 25 
the manneis of your countrywomen ? tr iv. 133 
A foreigner, and I your c, tr . 298 

county. 
Not a lord In all the c . . . L. of Burleigh 59 
None of these Came from his c, . En. Arden . 654 
that almighty man, The c God — . Aylmer's F. 14 



County Member. poem. line. 
not the C M's with the vane : . Walk, to the M.Z 

county town. 
Last week came one to the c t . Maud, I. x. 37 

cojiple. 
a c, fair As ever painter painted, . Aylmer's F. 105 

courage, 
A c to endure and to obey ; . . Isabel . . 25 
' CI ' he said, and pointed toward the Lotos E's. 1 
C, St Simeon ! This dull chrysalis StS. Stylites 153 
Till thy drooping c rise, . . Vision of Sin 152 

C, poor heart of stone . . . Maud, II. iii. i, 5 

courier. 
Which every hour his c's bring. 
By cs gone before 



cottrse. 
held your c without remorse, 
Their c, till thou wert also man : 
baser ds, children of despair.' 
outran The hearer in its fiery c ; 
roll it in another c, 
all the c's of the suns 
move his c, and show That life 
sees the c of human things 
all the genial c's of his blood 
c of life that seem'd so flowery 
baffling, a long c of them ; 
Like the Good Fortune, from her 

coursed, 
c about The subject most at heart, Gardener's D. 217 
C one another more on open ground. Enid . 522 

court. 
Her ^was pure ; . 
Four c's I made, East. West 
round the cool green c s there ran . 
seek my father's tr with me, 
old-world trains, upheld at c 
Till in a c he saw 



. InMem.o.xxv, 4 
. Guinevere . 393 

L.C. V. deferens 

. Two Voices 327 

. Princess, .iii. 107 

. In Mem. cviii. 8 

if cxii. 16 

11 cxvi. 12 

11 cxvii: 19 

ti cxxvii. 4 

. Enid . 1775 

. Vivien . 729 

. En. Arden 542 

destin'dc, if . 630 



To the Queen 25 
Pal. of Art 21 

H . 25 

Day-Din. . 191 

Will Water. 130 
Thro' the c's, the camps, the schools, Vision of Sin 104 
have a sister at the foreign c, . Princess, i, 
I stole from c With Cyril . . tr 

masque or pageant at my father's c. 
3 c Compact with lucid marbles, . 
'We of the c' said Cyril. ' From the c 
crost the c To Lady Psyche's : 
thro' the c A long melodious thunder 
c's that lay three parts In shadow, 
So saying from the c we paced, . 
there rose A hubbub in the c 
down the steps, and thro' the c, . 
Deepening the c's of twilight 
pleased him, fresh frombrawYmgc'sInMem.l: 



74 

. 101 

„■ T 95 

11. 10 

■ 34 

. 8S 

..." 45* 

iii. 4 

. 101 

iv- 455 

• 533 

Con. 113 

xxxviii.n 



keep Within his c on earth 
after her own self, in all the c. 
and their coining to the c. 
Held c at old Caerleon 
with the morning all the c were gone, 
rode Geraint into the castle c 
good knight's horse stands in t»he c ; 
ride with him this morning to the c, 
bright and dreadful thing, a c 
her own faded self, And the gay c, 
lords and ladies of the high c went 
like a madman brought her to the c, 
neither^ nor country, tho' they sought 
I can scarcely ride with you to c . 
a sense might make her long for c 
poor gown I rode with him to c . 
but to rest awhile within her c ; . 
thing was blazed about the c, . V 
the c, the king, dark in your light, 
his c Hard on the river . . E 

to meet him in the castle c ; 
great knight, the darling of the c, 
heard Sir Lancelot cry in the c, . 
graces of the c, and songs, . 
we two May meet at c hereafter : 
Thence to the c he past ; 



Enid 



156 



II . 


• 37° 
. 606 


H 


. 616 


n 


• 653 

. 662 


11 


■ 725 


11 


• 7=9 


II 
ti 

M 


• 749 
. 803 
1548 


II 


1703 


7 vvien 


• 593 


11 


• 7 2 4 


laine 


• 75 


ir 


• 175 
. 261 


11 


• 343 

• 645 

• 695 


» 


. 702 



TEiViVVSOJVS WORKS. 



Sr 



1054 
1118 



• 29 
11 . 135 

. Sea Dreams 170 

11 . 179 

. Ttthanus . 75 

Gardener'sD. 108 



POEM. 

all the gentle c will welcome me, Elaine 
go in state to c, to meet the Queen, 11 
Queen Guinevere had fled the c, . Guinevere 
one morn when all the c, Green-suited, 11 
lissome Vivien, of her c The wiliest ir 
the crimes and frailties of the c, 
silent c of justice in his breast, 
often, in that silent c of yours — 
in earth forget these empty c's 

courted. 
a well-worn pathway c as 

courteous. 

Sir, I was r, "every phrase well-oil'd, Princess, in. 117 

1, surnamed The C, . . Elaine . 554 

Too c truly ! you shall go no more " . 712 

mighty c in the main— . . Aylmer's F. 121 

courtesy. 
To greet the sheriff, needless c ! . Ed. Morris 133 
. irrulouseasc and oily courtesies Princess, i. 162 
amends For a c not rctum'd. 
it, from utter c forbore, 
nd Earl, I pray your c ; 
of your c, He being as he is, 
1 see you scorn my courtesies 
such a grace Of tenderest c, 
wonted c, C with a touch of traitor 

the courtesies of the court 
Deeming our c is the truest law, 
Obedience is the c due to kings.' 
Shun to break those bounds of c 

thy courtesies and thee 
trustful courtesies of household life, Guinevere 
of the two first-famed for c — 

t that grace of c in him 
Then broke all bonds of c . . Aylmer's F. 323 

court-favour. 
willing she should keep C-f: . Princess, vii. 

court-Galen. 
c-G poised his gilt-head cane, . Princess, i. 



Maud, I. v 

Enid . 


• 14 
. 381 


11 


• 4°3 
1489 


ip 


1519 


Elaine 


1709 
• 635 
. 696 
. 708 


I' 


• 7'4 


11 


1214 


Guint-ere 


1354 
. 86 


<• 


• 3=' 


" 


• 433 



4 3 



court-lady. 
should some great c-l say 



Enid 



courtliness. 

.: up with pliant c . Enid , 

it, and amiable words, Andr, Guinevere 

courtly. 

her, who is neither c nor kind, . Maud, I. v. 

it her, Full c, yet not falsely, Elaine 



''> 



1127 
478 



COltrtxy. 
made me a mocking c and went 

courtship. 
Discussing how their c grew, 

cousin. 
a silent c stole Upon us 

!1 the current 

t thou love me, cV . 

low-hearted ! 

. 
I ady Clare, . 
■ 1 he plain, 
" 'ill 'I, . 
i'ii him who gave you life.' 
. you that had most 
with your meek blue cyc^, 
II tlf-sickenin 

ne to the place, 



Crandmother 46 
In Mem. Con. 97 



Lady Clare 



Ed. Morris 115 

Loeksley H. 24 

11 . 30 

39 

4 

• ' 5 
Princess, vi. 299 

The lirook . 75 

Enid . 1631 

11 . 1672 

" 1689 

Ay Inter's F. 460 

Gratuimotlier 25 



cove. 
dimple in the dark of rushy c's, 
nd cave 
unny shore, 

1 in creek and 
from a purple c. 



60 



. Ode to Mem. 

Fairies 30 

non . 18 

. 108 

/w.lAvw.Ixxviii. 10 

" c. 10 

Tlie Paisy 



coz'enant. 
Breathed, like the c of a God, 

Coventry. 
I waited/or tlie train at C ; 
grim Earl, who ruled In C : 

cover (s.) 
I slide by hazel c's ; 

cover (verb.) 
mercy, mercy , c all my sin. 

coverlet. 
Across the purpled c, . 
moving, cast the c aside, 

coverlid. 
The silk star-broidered c 
all the c was cloth of gold 

covert. 
Rode thro' the c's of the deer, 
often they break c at our feet.' 

coverture. 
In closest c upsprung . 

cow. 
his ploughs, his c's, his hogs, 
theer warn't not fead for a c: 
Wi 'auf the c's to cauve 

coward. 
The fear of men, a c still. 
Where idle boys are c's 
doubts that drive the c back . 
were he not crown'd king, c, and fool. 

cowardice. 
full of c and guilty shame, . 
thro' his c allow'd Her station 



POEM. LINE. 

. Gardener '$.£>. 204 

. Godiva . 1 
11 . 13 

. Tlie Brook . 171 

. StS.Stylites 83 

. Day-Dm. . 79 
. Enid . . 73 

. Day-Dtn. . 83 
. Elaine 1151 



cowcr'd. 



SirL . andQ. G.21 
Enid . . 183 

Arabian Ifs. 68 

Tlie Brook . 125 

X. Farmer 37 

" . 52 

Two Voices 108 
Princess, v. 299 
In Mem. xciv. 30 

Vivien . 638 

Princess, iv. 329 
Guinevere . 512 

A dwarf-like Cato c. . . . Princess, vii. 1 1 1 

cowl. 
And turn'd the c's adrift . . Talking O. . 48 

eowFd. 

Some c, and some bare-headed, . Princess, vi. 61 

cowslip. 

Letters c's on the hill? . . . Adeline . 62 

c and the crowfoot are over all . jl/ay Queen, i. 38 

As e unto ozlip is Talking' O. . 107 

little dells of e, bay palms, . . Aylmers F. 91 

crab. 

like a butt, and harsh as c's . Walk, to the M. 41 

era, 
deafen'd with the stammering c's . 

crack (verb.) 
chrysalis Cs into shining wings, . 
splinter'd spear-shafts c and fly . 
hearts that c within the fire . 
breaks, and c's, and splits, 



/ 'ivien 



791 



StS. Stylitcs 153 

Sir Galahad 7 

Princess, v. 369 

. 5 '6 

whelp toe; C them now for yourself Maud, II. v. =5 



*|'iii|»ie(, 1 tie 1 misy , 20 

bat by the river 111 a c, and watch'd Elaine 1380 



in one day C's all to pieces 

cracked. 
mirror c from side to side ; 
The forest e, the waters curl'd, 
And c the helmet thro', 
all her bonds C ; . 

crackle. 
tempest c's on the leads, 

crackling. 
hair as it were c into flames, 

cradle. 
To deck thy c, F.leiinore 
on my c shone the Northern star, 
rock the snowy c till I died. . 
Then lightly rocking baby's c 
sway'd The c, while 

cradled. 
Their Margaret c near them, 



Lucretius 



L.o/Shalott.'m. 43 
. In Mem. XV. 5 
. Enid . . 573 
. Lucretius . 30 



Sir Galahad 



5; 



. Aylmers F. 585 

. F.leanore . ;i 

Princess, i. . 4 

•1 iv. 86 

. En. Ardtt 1 i 

. Sea Dreams 1- 

E 



£2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



cradle-Jiead. poem. line. 
half embraced the basket c-h . Sea Dreams 277 

craft (art, etc.) 
before we came, This c of healing. Princess, iii. 303 
less from Indian c Than beelike . 11 iv. 180 

with such c as women use, , . Enid . 1201 

untold the c herself had used ; . 11 1242 

moral child without the c to rule, . Elaine . 146 

c of kindred and the Godless hosts Guinevere . 424 

craft (vessel.) 
boated over, ran My c aground, . Ed. Morris 109 
pushing his black c among them . Vivien . 413 

Become the master of a larger c, En. A rden . 144 
At times a carven c would shoot . The Voyage 53 

crag. 
the c that fronts the Even, . - Eleanore , 40 
long white cloud the scornful c f s, . Pal. of Art 83 
splinter'd c's that wall the dell . D.ofF. Wom.iSj 
water lapping on the c' . M.d' Arthiir 71, 116 

His feet on juts of slippery c . 11 . 189 

when the bracken rusted on their c's, Ed. Morris 100 
cloud smoulders on the summer c. tr . 147 

right leg chain'd into the c, . . StS. Stylites 72 
still hearth, among these barren c's, Ulysses . 2 
swings the trailer from the c ; . Locksley H. 162 
gleaming c with belts of pines, t Two Voices 189 
clasps the c with hooked hands ; , The Eagle , 1 
At the foot of thy ds, O Sea ! ' Break, break,' etc. 14 
flowery levels underneath the c f t Princess, iii. 318 
like a jewel set In the dark c : " . 341 

They tremble, the* sustaining c's ; In Mem. cxxvi. 11 
the toppling c's of Duty scaled Ode on Well. 215 

like a c that tumbles from the cliff, Enid „ . 318 
like a <r was gay with wilding flowers: ir = . 319 
lichen'd into colour with the c's: . Elaine . 45 

beetling c to which he clung t Aylmer's F. 229 

crag-ftla tfonn. 
huge c-Jf, smooth as burnish'd brass Pal. of Art 5 

crake. 
flood the haunts of hern and c ; 



crash'd. 
c the glass and beat the floor ; 



hi Mem. c. 14 



* Give, C us with all,' . . . Golden Year 13 
c him with the fragments oT the grave Princess, iii. 294 
should c our ears with wool . . u iv. 47 

green Christmas^ with weary bones. Coquette, iii. 14 

cram?n d„ 
The Bull, the Fleece are c, . . Andley Ct. . 1 
And c a plumper crop : . . Will Water. 124 

your Princess, c with erring pride Princess, iii. 86 
Titanic shapes, they c The forum it vii. 109 

c with theories out of books, . u Con. 35 

Whose ear is c with his cotton, . Maua\ I. x. 42 
crost, and c With comment . . Vivien . 528 



cravumng. 
C all the blast before it. 

crajnft (s.) 
stitches, ulcerous throes, and c's, 

cramp (verb.) 
r its use, if I Should hook it 
I will not c my heart, . 
To c the student at his desk, 

cramp'd. 
women, up to this C 

crane t 
c* I said, 'may chatter of the c 

cranny. 

In an ancient mansion's cra7inies 

crash (s.) 
with the c of shivering points, 
thro' the c of the near cataract 
c of ruin, and the loss of all . 
at his right and with a sudden c, 

crash (verb.) 
The fortress c'es from on high, 



, Locksley H. 192 

. StS. Stylites 13 

. Day-Dm. . 211 
. Will Water. 51 
In Mem. cxxvii. 18 

. Princess, iii. 261 

. Princess, iii. 88 

. Maud, II. v. 61 

. Princess, v. 480 

. Enid . 1021 

. Eft. Arden . 550 

. The Islet . 8 

In Mem. cxxvi. 14 



POEM. LINE. 

IiiMem. lxxxvi. 20 



c with long echoes thro' the land, Aylmer's F. 338 
C went the boom, .... T/ie Captain 44 

crate. 
Clung but to c and basket, . . Vivien, . 475 



crave. 
moaning, household shelter c 
I c your pardon, O my friend ; 
C pardon for that insult 

craved, 
c a fair permission to depart, 



. Two Voices 260 
In Mem. Ixxxiv. 100 
. Enid . . 583 



Enid 



. 40 
1156 



at the palace c Audience of Guinevere Elaine 

craven. 
'Ac: how he hangs his head.' . Enid . . 976 

crawL 
inch by inch to darkness c ? . . Two Voices 200 
wrinkled sea beneath him ds ; . The Eagle . 4 
into some low cave to c r . Vivien. . 733 

creaked. 
doors upon their hinges c; . . Mariana . 62 

cream. 
fruits and c Served in the weeping Gardener sD. 190 
robb'd the farmer of his bowl of c . Princess, v. 214 

cream-w/iite. 
Her c-w mule his pastern set : SirL. andQ. G. 31 

crease (weapon.) 
cursed Malayan c, and battle-clubs Princess, Pro. 21 

create. 
Life eminent c's the shade of death ; Love and Death 13 

creation. 
could not all c pierce . . . A Character 5 
all c is one act at once, . . . Princess, iii. 308 
serene C minted in the golden moods ir v. 186 

love C's final law — . . . In Mem. Iv. 14 
To which the whole c moves. . u Con. 144 



TalkingO. . 
P*rincess, ii. 



VI. 



167 

253 

281 



148 
73 



creature. 
Did never c pass So slightly 
not a c was in sight 
c laid his muzzle on your lap, 
Like some wild c newly-caged, 
that same fair c at the door . 
sleek and shining i^s of the chase, 
lovely, lordly c floated on 
c's native unto gracious act, . 
Thy c, whom I found so fair, 
play As with the c of my love ; 
O beautiful c, what am I 
A c wholly given to brawls . 
pick the faded c from the pool, . n 
themselves, like c's gently born . u 
c's voiceless thro' the fault of birth it 
Icompelall^'-ytomywill.'frep.l. 1521) it 
chase a c that was current then . Vivien 
sat the lifelong c of the house, . Elaine 
His c's to the basement of the tower Guinevere 
his c's took and bare him off . n 

but loved thy highest c here ? 
God grants To any of his c's. 
hunters round a hunted c draw 
the gentle c shut from all 

credible. 
almost think That idiot legend c. 

credit (s.) 
Hadst thou such c with the soul ? In Mem. lxx. 5 
His c thus shall set me free ; . if lxxix. 13 

credit (verb.) 
world which ds what is done In Mein. lxxiv. 15 

creditor. 
They set an ancient c to work : . Ed. Morris 130 

credulous, 
c Of what they long for, . . Enid . 1723 



II vii. 12 

In Mem. Pro. 38 

tr lviii. 12 

Maud, I. xvi. 10 

Enid . . 441 

n . . 671 

1040 

1115 

1477 

. 25S 

"37 

. 103 

. 108 

ti . 649 

En. Arden . 414 

Aylmer's F. 499 

" • 565 

Princess, v. 146 



TEXNYSOiV'S WORKS. 



83 



credulousuess. 
darken, as he cursed his c . 
creed. 
knots that tangle human c's, 

other than his form of c, 

as God holding no form of c . 

A dust of systems and of c's. 

Who keeps the keys of all the c's, 

wrought With human hands thee of c's 

shrick'd against his c — 

Believe me, than in half the c's. . 

cleave a c in sects and cries, 



POEM. LINE. 

Sea Dreams 13 

{ ' Clear-headed 

\ friettdj etc. 3 

. A Character 29 

Pal. of Art 211 

Two Voices 207 

ht. Mem. xxiii. 5 

xxxvi. 10 

lv. 16 

XCV. 12 

exxvii. 15 



Against the scarlet womanandhcre .' Sea Dreams 23 



lisp in love's delicious c's; 

creek. 
desolate c's and pools among, 
Lotos blows by every winding c : . 
sailing moon in c and cove ; . 



Coquette, 1. 11 

Dying Swan 41 
146 
16 



Lotos-E's 

In Mem. 



creep. 
These in every shower c .A Dirge . 33 

languid fire c's Thro' my veins . Eleanore . 130 
c's from pine to pine, And loiters . CEnone . 4 
thro' the moss the ivies c, . . Lotos-E's . 54 
lost their edges, and did c . D. o/F. Wont. 50 

C's to the garden water-pipes . 11 . 206 

c's on Barge-laden, to three arches Gardener's D. 43 
like a guilty thing \c . . . In Mem. vii. 7 
the blood c's, and the nerves prick tr xlix. 2 

Must / tooc to the hollow . . Maud, I. i. 54 
Felt a horror over me c, ti xiv. 35 

Always I long toe . . . it II. iv. 95 
Some ship of battle slowly c. To F. D. Maurice it 
slow tear c from her closed eyelid Vivien . 755 

new disease, unknown to men, C's Guinevere . 515 
slow-worm c's, and the thin weasel Aylmer's F. 852 
£* a cloud, or moves a wind, . Lucretius . 106 
dead flesh e, or bits of roasting ox " . 131 

creeper. 
A c when the prop is broken, 

creeping. 
point : 
.Still c with the c hours . 

crept. 
The cluster'd marish-mosses c. 
blooms unmown, which c Adown . 

tept, and up 1 c : 
down my surface c. 
With li I r into the hall, 

a gentler feeling c Upon us : 
till he c from a gutted mine . 
c so Ion n wing . 

As on I he Lariano c 
from the carven-work behind himr 
C to her father, while he mused . 
in the pans,; she c an inch Nearer 

into the hollows of the wood 
1 1 trade . 

•o the shadow . 
C to the gate, and open'd it . 

crescent fadj.) 
. youth Now c, who will come 

crescent \.) 
Hundred! of c't on the roof . 
. glimmer'd cold, 
iiic- . 
When down the stormy c goes, 

if eclipse, . 
To which thy c would have grown; 
. 
t sea, 
ird c of her minion mouth . 

crescent-bark. 
range Of vapour Imoy'd the c-b . 

crescent-curve. 
Set in a gleaming river's c-c, . Princess, i. 



. Aylmer's F. 810 

. Locksley If. 134 
. St Agnes' Eve 7 

. Mariana . 40 
Arabian. Vs. 29 
Ed. Morris 1 1 1 
Talking O. 162 
Princess, iv. 206 
hi Mem. xxx. 17 
Maud, I. x. 9 

.. III. vi. 1 
The Daisy . 78 
Elaine . 435 
714 
523 
76 
no 
384 
776 



Guinevere 
En, - / rden 



Elain 



447 



Arabian .Vs. 129 
Millers h. . 107 
Andley CI. . 80 
Sir Galahad 25 
Vision of Sin 10 

/«.I/(V//.lxX.\iii. 4 

" cvi. 10 
Maud, I. iv. 5 
Aylmer's F. 533 

Day-Din. . 186 



109 



crescent-lit. poem. line. 

while the balmy glooming, c-l, . Gardener sD . 258 

crescent-wise. 

thro' stately theatres Bench'd c-w. Princess, 11. 348 



To purl o'er matted c . 
I loiter round my e'es ; . 

crest. 
watch'd my c among them all, 
lapwing gets himself another c ; 
Vi-Ait as the c Of a peacock . 
giant tower, from whose high c, 
CS that smoke against the skies, 
for c the golden dragon clung 

Crete, 
Had rest by stony hills of C. 

crevice. 
from the c peer'd about, 
fretful as the wind Pent in a c: 



Ode to Menu 59 
, The Brook . 181 

Oriana . 30 
Locksley II. 18 
Maud, I. xvi. x6 
Enid . . 827 

Elaine . 483 

, Guinevere . 588 

OnaMourner 35 

Mariana . 65 
Princess, iii. 65 



crew. 

sent a c that landing burst . . En. A rden . C35 

ever as he mingled with the c, ti . 644 

half the c are sick or dead. . . The Voyage 92 

a c that is neither rude nor rash, . The Islet . 10 

the seamen Made a gallant c, . The Captain 6 

beneath the water C and Captain lie; 11 . 68 

crew (pret. of crow. ^ 
sitting, as I said, The cock c M.d' A rthnr,Ep. 10 

Crichlon. 
I call'd him C, for he seem'd . Ed. Morris 21 

cricket, 

c chirps : the light burns low : D.oft/ieO. I 'ear so 

not a c chirr* d : . . . .hi Mem. xciv. 6 

of the myriad c of the mead, . Elaine . 107 

cricketed. 
They boated and they c; . . Princess, Pro. 159 

cried. 
took the boy, that c aloud 
boy beheld His mother he c out 
clapt her hands and c for war, 
thncc they c, I likewise. 
my own sad name in corners e. 
had you c, or knelt, or pray'd 
I c because you would not pass 
Lcolin c out the more upon them- 
I c myself well-nigh blind, . 



Dora . . 99 

11 . . 135 

Princess, iv. 567 

11 Con. 104 

Maud, I. vi. 72 

Enid . 1692 

Elaine 1036 

■ Aylmer's F. 367 

Grandmother 37 



crime. 
intellect to part Error from c; . Isabel . . 15 
And all alone in c: . . . Pal. of Art 272 
' Heaven heads the count of c's . D.ofF. Worn. 201 
When single-thought iscivili', 'Vouask me why,' 'etc. 19 
c Of sense aveng'd by sense . . Vision of Sin 213 
c of sense became The c of malice 11 . 215 

if it were thine error or thy c 'Comenoiwhen,' etc. 7 
wing'd affections dipt with c: 
Unfcttcr'd by the sense of c, 
mark'd as with some hideous c 
count it c To mourn for any 
from madness, perhaps from c, 
clearest of ambitious c, 
ever weaker grows thro' acted c, 
main Cause of all their c; 
most impute a c Are proncst 
frailties of the court, 
that I come to urge thy c's, . 
crimson 
all the c changed, and past . 
In the Spring a fuller c 
add A c to the quaint Macaw 
molten into flakes Of C . 
In c's and in purples and in gems Enid 

crimson (verb.) 
Cs over an inland mere, . . Eleanore . 42 

crimson-circled. 
Before the c-c star . . In Mem. Ixxxviii. 47 



. Princess, vii. 


■-■7 


. In Mem. xxxi 


■ 7 


11 lxxi 


18 


11 lxxxiv 


61 


, Aland, I. xvi. 


22 


. Ode on Well. 


28 


. Will . 


12 


. / 'ivien 


' 7 


ii 


'"I 


. Guinevere . 


' ; 


11 


5*8 


fariana in tlreS 


• »■; 


. Locksley II. 


■ 7 


. Dav-Dm. . 


,.» 


. hi Mem. xevi 


. 3a 



CONCORDANCE TO 



crimson' d. poem. line. 

slowly c all Thy presence . . Tit/urnus . 56 

crimson-h iced, 
c-h the stately palmwoods . . Milton . 15 

crimson-rolling. 
when the c-r eye Glares ruin, . Princess, iv. 473 

crimson-tk readed. 
When from c-t lips . . . Lilian . 23 

cripple. 
Came from a grizzled c, . . Aylmer's F. 8 

crispeth. 
The babbling runnel c . . . Claribel . 19 

critic. 
No c I — would call them . . Pri?icess, i. 144 
Musician, painter, sculptor, c, . 11 ii. 161 

critic-pen. 
Unboding c-p, .... Will Water. 42 

CTOak. 

c thee sister, or the meadow-crake Princess, iv. 106 
a raven ever c's, at my side . . Aland, vi. . 57 

croak'd. 
the Raven, flying high, C . . Guinevere . 133 

crocodile. 
C's wept tears for thee : . . A Dirge . 22 



. CEnone . 94 

. Pal. of Art 119 

7^ .F. D. Maurice 44 



crocus, 

the c brake like fire, 

From one hand droop'd ac: 

C, anemone, violet, 

crofts. 
ThroVs and pastures wet with dew Two Voices 14 

crop (of a bird.) 
And cramm'd a plumper c; . . Will Water. 124 

crop (verb.) 
overquick To c his own sweet rose Vivien . 575 

cross (s.) 

A broken chancel, with a broken c, M. d' Arthur 9 

I lift the c, And strive . . . SIS. Stylites 116 



Princess, ii. 57 

Maud, II. iv. 70 

Enid 815, 1097 

1- . 1147 



I smote them with the c 
happy with the mission of the C ; Golden Year 43 
mark'd it with the red c to the fall Princess, vi. 25 
Under the c of gold . . . Ode on Well. 49 
Thro' the dome of the golden c; . ir .61 

his catspaw and the C his tool, . Sea Dreams 186 

cross (verb. ) 
any cloud would c the vault Mariana in t fie S. 38 
■wrong to c his father thus . . Dora . . 145 

Should my Shadow c thy thoughts Love and Duty '85 
Should it c thy dreams, . 11 . 8q 

for three years to c the liberties 
It des here, it des there 
shadow of mistrust can c 
leave, my lord, to c the room, 
He shall not c us more ; 
forbear you thus : c me no more . u . 1526 

c our mighty Lancelot in his loves ! Elaine . 685 

And the lonely seabird des . . T/ie Captain 71 

cross-bones. 
carved c-b, the types of Death, . Will Water. 245 

crossed — crost. 
they c themselves for fear, . L. ofShalott y W. 49 
your shadow c the blind . . Miller s D. 124 
c the garden to the gardener's . A. 7ulley Ct. 
then we c Between the lakes, 
then we c To a livelier land ; 
back again we c the court 
We c the street and gain'd . 
shade by which my life was c, 
c By that old bridge which, . 
where the waters marry — c, 
c the common into Darnley chase 
when we c the Lombard plain 
little thumb That c the trencher . 
C and came near, lifted adoring . 11 . 1153 



16 



Goldc?i Year 


S 


Princess, i. 


108 


11 11. 


85 


II IV. 


MS 


In Mom. lxv. 


s 


The Brook . 


78 


11 


81 


11 . 


132 


Tlie Daisy . 


40 


Enid . 


396 



POEM. 

Vivien 
En. Arden 



LINE. 



527 
334 

" . 470 

Aylmer's F. 562 



Maud, I. xiii. 
11 xxi. 

T/ie Daisy . 



CEnone . 197 
St S. Stylites 87 

Audley Ct. . 44 
Locksley H. 6S 
Will Water. 235 
Vivien . 448 

Mariana . 26 
May Queen, ii. 23 



c, and cramm'd With comment, . 
And seldom c her threshold, 
Abhorrent of a calculation c 
seldom c his child without a sneer 

crossing (part. ) 
past him, I was c his lands ; 
Rivulet c my ground, . 
c, oft we saw the glisten 

crossing {s.) 
Who sweep the ds t wet or dry, . Will Water. 47 

cross-lig/itn ings. 
c-l of four chance-met eyes . . Aylmer's F. 129 

cross-pipes. 
carved c-p, and, underneath . Will Water. 247 

crotchet. 

Chimeras, ds, Christmas solecisms, Princess, Pro. 199 

crouched. 
C fawning in the weed. 
c on one that rose Twenty . 

crow (s.) 
like a c upon a three-legg'd stool 
many-winter'd c that leads . 
ere the hateful c shall tread . 
carrion ds Hung like a cloud 

crow (verb.) 
she heard the night-fowl c 
Before the red cock ds . 
cock ds ere the Christmas morn, . Sir Gala/iad 51 

crowd, 
ds in column'd sanctuaries ; . . D. ofF. Worn. 22 
The d s, the temples, waver'd, . " .114 

methought, who waited with a c, M. d'A rthur, Ep. 20 
c of hopes That sought to sow . Gardener sD. 63 
his heart before the c .' ' You might have won,' etc. 36 
The park, the c, the house ; . . Princess, Pro. 94 
An universal culture for the c, . 11 . 109 

as we came, the c dividing clove . 11 iv. 264 

know Your faces there in the e . 11 . 489 

thereat the c Muttering, dissolved : n . 501 

the c were swarming now, . . it Con. 37 

Civic manhood firm against the c 11 -57 

the genial day, the happy c, . " . 75 

ds that stream from yawning doors In Mem. Ixix. 9 
He told me, lives in any c, . . n xcvii. 26 

To fool the c with glorious lies, . n cxxvii. 14 

Thro' all that c confused and loud, Maud, II. iv. 71 
held their heads above the c, . TJie Brook . 10 
the sorrowing c about it grow, . Odeon Well. 16 
Till ds at length be sane . . 11 .169 

The dark c moves, ..." . 268 

thy wheel above the staring c ; . Enid . . 356 
blows, that all the c Wonder'd, " 564 

in this Are harlots like the c, . Vivien . 680 

c Will murmur, lo the shameless . Elaine . 100 

of the c you took no more account n . . 106 
the honest shoulders of the c . Sea Dreams 162 

while none mark'd it, on the<r . 11 . 227 

ds that in an hour Of civic tumult Lucretius . 168 

crow'd. 
C lustier late and early, . . Will Water. 126 

maid, That ever c for kisses. . Priueess, ii. 261 

crow-foot, 
c are over over all the hill, . . May Queen, i. 38 



croztnng. 
At midnight the cock was c, 
Came c over Thames. . 

cro7un (diadem, etc 
Revered Isabel, the c and head, . 
better than to own Ac,a sceptre, 
With a c of gold, On a throne ? 
under my starry sea-bud c . 
column'd citadel, The c of Troas . 
from all neighbour ds Alliance 
heads and ds of kings ; 



Oriana . 12 
Will Water. 140 

.) 

Isabel . . 10 
Ode to Mem. 121 
The J\fer?na?i 6 
The Mermaid 16 
CEnone , 14 

ll . . 2?2 

Pal. of Art 153 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



S5 



POEM. LINE. 

Last May we made a c of flowers : May Queen, ii. 9 
the roof and c of things 1 . . Lotos-Es. . 69 
my c about my brows, . . D. o/F. Worn. 162 
King-like, wears the c : ' Of old sat Freedom,' etc. 16 
Three (Queens with c's of gold — . M.d'ArthurigS 
moments when we met The c of all, Ed. Morris 70 
angel there That holds a<r? . . StS. Stylites 201 
again; thee.' thee/ . 11 . 205 

That a sorrow's c of sorrow . . Locksley II. 76 
from his cold c And crystal silence Two Voices 85 
mountain stirr'd its bushy c, . Amphion . 25 

' You might liave 
•wort,' etc. 



those that wear the Poet's c : 



{'■ 



. Princess, iii. 


95 


II IV. 


S22 


. In Mem. Ixviii. 8 


11 • 


12 


•• 


16 


II CXXV1. 


9 


. Ode on Well. 


122 


11 


269 


11 


2 7 6 


Idylls, Ded. 


48 


. Elaine 


46 


11 


S> 


it 


•m 


. En. A rden . 


575 



■ and c the King stept down Beggar Maid 5 
her error like a c 
were pack'd to make your c, 
wore them like a civic c : 

lat wears a c of thorns : 
look'd upon my c and smiled : 
ill for him that wears a c, 
it but Duty's iron c 
' s be just. . 
wears a truer c Than any wreath 
a lonely splendour. 
. 
from the skull the c Roll'd . 

olden dragon clung, 

of plumes, 

It wore a c of light, . . . The Flower 10 

ly wren with a c of gold, . The Window 80 

king of the wrens with a c of fire. 11 . 159 

crown ffivc shillin 
and he gave the ringers a c. . . Grandmother 58 

crown (verb.) 
high dial which my sorrow c's — . St S. Stylites 94 
that <• a happy day . . Maud, I. xviii. 30 
C thyself, worm, and worship . Ay liner's F. 650 

crowned. 
with stars . 

oid c, 

■^lint. 

:lC, 

ivct 

ith good . 
■voc 
1 fair death, . 

i!i stars 
she c the sea 
WO . 

crows/oot. 
crafty c round his eye ; . 

crucified, 

cither they were stoned or c, 

cruci/ix. 
the maid-mother by a r, 

cruel. 

. 
hard, too c .* . 
1. d the Captain's mood. 

cruel-hearted. 
call me ch, but I care not 

crueller. 
I in tale, . 
sing thro' 

cruet. 
gentlemen, That trifle with the c. 

crumbled. 
public wrong be c into dust, . 

crumpled, 

c than a poppy from the sheath 



Pal. of Art 184 
D.qfF. II i>iii. 16 i 
StS. Stylites 151 

■ 77 

Tii'ii I 'oices 277 

luMciit.xxn. 6 

11 xwi. 11 

11 xxxix. 5 

11 lxxxiii. 5 

11 cxvii. iS 

F.nid . 1815 

Guinevere . 396 

Sea Dreams 233 

The Voy 

Lucretius . 226 



Sea Dreams 183 

SIS. Stylites 50 

Pal of Art. 93 

Walh.tothcM.n-, 
Ed Cray . 17 
Princess, v. 505 
Tlte Captain 1 3 

May Queen, i. 1 <; 

Vivien . 707 
Ay liner's F. 671 

Will Water. 232 

Ode on Well. 167 

Princess, v. 28 



crupper. 
and arm beyond The c , 

crush s.) 
great the c was, and each base, 

crush (verb.) 
Like a rose-leaf T will c thee, 
c her pretty maiden fancies dead . 
c her, like a vice of blood, 

crush'd. 
c them on my breast, my mouth : 
c My spirit llat before thee. . 
monstrous apes they c my chest : . 
Lady Psyche will be c ; 
she c The scrolls together, 
record of her wrongs And c to death 
bruised the herb and c the grape, 
Mangled, and llatten'd, and c 
c with a tap Of my finger-nail 
c in the clash of jarring claims, 
found, tho' c to hard and dry, 
feet unseen C the wild passion 



POEM. 

Enid . 



LINF. 
1313 



and c down his mate 



crushing. 



crust. 
one slough and c of sin, 
woman thro' the c of iron moods 



Princess, vi. 333 

Lilian . 29 

Princess, i. , £7 
In Mem. iii. 15 

Fa lima . 12 

St S. Stylites 25 

11 . 171 

Princess, iii. 47 

11 iv. 374 

11 v. 138 

In Mem. XXXV. 23 

Maud, I. i. 7 

11 II. ii. 2r 

.. III. vi. 44 

The Daisy . 97 

Elaine . 738 

Princess, ii. 106 

St S. Stylites 2 
Princess, vii. 321 



crusted. 
thickly c one and all : . . . Mariana . 2 

crutch. 
Truth a-leaning on here, ' Clear-hcadcdfriend,'etc. iS 

cry (s.) 
none hear my cries . . . Oriana . 73 
one deep r Of great wild beasts ; . Pal. of Art . 282 
deep behind him, and a c Before. M. d' Arthur 184 
c that shivcrM to the tingling stars 11 . 199 

boy's c came to her from the field Dora . . 102 
lest a C Should break his sleep Walk, to the M. 63 
blind c of passion and of pain, . LmvandDuty-jt 
the scandal and the c ' 1 011 might have won,' etc. 16 
The plaintive c jarrM on her ire ; . Princess, iv. 374 
scared by the c they made, . 
r ise a c As if to greet the king ; . 
iron palms together with a c ; 
.She nor swoon'd, nor utter'd c: . 
a great c. The Prince is slain. 

was tho c : 
out of languor leapt a c ; . . 
from a dewy breast a c for light : . 

wild and wandering cries 
out waste places comes a c, . 
with do language but a c. 

that lasts not long . 
love's dumb c defying change 
roofs, that heard our earliest c, 
With ovcrthrowings, and with cries, 
cleave a creed in sects and cries, 
A c above the conc|uer'd years 
wounded thing with a rancourousc Maud, I 
there rises ever a passionate e . .. II. 
on a sudden a passionate c Tcp. iv. 47)11 
loyal people shouting a battle c . 11 III. v 
Whose crying is a c for gold : . The Daisy 
a cThat Edym's men were on them Enid . 
a sudden sharp and bitter c, . n 

C of children, Enids and Geraints 11 
Uttered a little tender dolorous e. Elaine 
cities burnt, and with a c she woke. Guinevere 
I cry' my c in silence, ... 11 

on a sudden a c, 'The King.' 
With his first babe's first c, . 
she started with a happy c, . 
younger ones with jubilant cries , 
hard upon (he c of ' breakers' 
send abroad a shrill and terrible e, 
half-incredulous, half-hysterical c 
wherefore he had made the c ; 
to the mother, and sent out a c 
music harmonizing our wild cries 



v. 9 t 

11 . 238 

" 344 

• 533 

11 vi. 9 

11 . 126 

11 vii. i H o 

" • 237 

In Mem. Pro. 41 
ii iii. 7 

11 liii. 20 
11 lxxiv. 10 
11 xciv. 



1 c.xu. 

1 exxvii. 

exxx. 



-7 

3 

'9 

15 

7 

34 

5 

33 

35 

94 

638 

1570 

1813 

8.3 

83 

'99 

408 

85 

• 151 

• 374 

• 549 

• 769 

• 854 
. Aylmer's F. 589 
. Sea Dreams 237 

11 . 2/7 



. En. Arden . 



36 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

caught her away with a sudden c; The Victim. 74 
Greater than I— isn't that your c ? Spiteful Let. 17 

cry (verb.) 
Call to each other and whoop and c The Merman 26 
did so laugh and c with you, D. of the O. Year 25 
cease I not to clamour and to c, . StS. Stylites 41 
for a tender voice will c . . Locksley H. 87 
C down the past, not only . . Godiva . 7 
bade him c, with sound of trumpet, it . 36 

c for strength, remaining weak, . Two Voices 95 
C, faint not : . .... 11 181-4 

c For that which all deny . . Will Water. 45 
wind sweep and the plover c 'Come not when,' etc. 5 
Earth Reels, and the herdsmen c ; Princess, v. 518 
cries against my wish for thee. fnMem.lxxxix.24 
C thro' the sense to hearten trust . 11 cxv. 7 
was I as a child that cries, . . 11 cxxiii. 19 
I to c out on pride . . . Maud, I. xii. 17 

c to the steps above my head . tr II. v. 101 
I c my cry in silence . . . Guinevere . 199 
c to these the last of theirs . . Aylmers F. 792 
I cannot c for him, Annie : . . Grandmother 15 
c to thee To kiss thy Mavors, . Lucretius . 81 

crying (part.) 
Some c there was an army . 
An infant c in the night (rep.) 
c, knows his father near 
They were c and calling 
his legions c Christ and him, 
c that his prize is death.' 
novice c, with clasp'd hands . 
c to each other And calling . 
c upon the name of Leolin, . 

crying (s.) 
Whose c is a cry for gold : . 
mine but from the c of a child.' 

crypt. 
knees are bowM in c and shrine : . 
fall'n into the dusty c . 
cold c's where they shall cease. 

crystal. 
down the streaming c dropt . 
Became a c, and he saw them 
In a shallop off ivory-beak' d, 

cube. 
hard-grained Muses of the c 

cubit. 
upon a pillar, high Six c's, . 
numbers forty c's from the soil. . it 

spear a c thro' his breast . . Enid 

cuckoo, 
c told his name to all the hills ; 
nest,' she said, 'To hatch the c. . 
l C ! c V was ever a May so fine ? . 

cuckoo-flower. 
blow the faint sweet c-f's; . 
As perfume of the c-f? . 

cud. 
chew'd The thrice-turn'd c of wrath 



Princess, iv. 463 
In Mem. liii. 18 
11 cxxiii. 20 
Maud,\. xii. 4,26 
Elaine . 305 

" - . 5.3° 
Guinevere . 309 
En. Arden . 379 
Aylmers F. 576 

The Daisy . 94 
Sea Dreams 241 

Sir Galahad 18 
Will Water. 183 
InMem.Wn. 8 

Princess, vii. 150 
Vivien . 480 

The Islet . 1 2 



Princess, Pro. 178 
StS. Stylites 86 



90 
935 



cuffd. 

Caught and c by the gale : . 

cuirass. 
on his c worn our Lady's Head, . 
spear Prick' d sharply his own c s . 

cuisses. 
c dash'd with drops Of onset ; 

cull'd. 
honey in fairy gardens c — . 
words, tho' c with choicest art, 
but one, by those fair fingers c, 
lady palms I c the spring 

cttlminaie. 
light up, and c in peace, 



Gardener* s D . 92 
Princess, iv. 347 
The Window 153 

May Queen, i. 30 

Margaret . 8 

Princess, i. 65 

Maud, I. vi. 5 

Elaine . 294 

n . 488 

M. d' 'Arthur 215 



. Elednore . 26 
D. ofF. Worn. 285 
. Gardener's D 1 48 
. Vivien . 122 



Princess, ii. 327 



culmination. 
starry c drop Balm-dews 

cultivation. 
months of toil, And years oic, 

culture. 
An universal c for the crowd, 
need More breadth of c: 



POEM. LINE- 

. Talking 0. 267 

. Ampkion . 98 

. Princess, Pro. 109 
11 v. 180 



cunn ing-simple. 
So innocent-arch, so c-s, . . Lilian . 13 

Cunobeline. 
rioted in the city of CI . . Boddicea . 60 

cup. 
drink the tr of a costly death, 
fingers round the old silver c — 
steam'd From out a golden c. 
last drop in the c of gall. 
My little oakling from the c, 
Will haunt the vacant c: 
Fill the c, and fill the can : (rep.) 
crownings, the three-times-three, In Mem. Con. 104 
indeed to drink : no c had we : . Vivien . 121 

pretty c of both my hands 11 . 124 

c's and silver on the burnish' d board En. Arden . 743 
magic c that fill'd itself anew. . Aylmer's F. 143 
There they drank in c's of emerald, Boddicea . 61 
not in any cheerful c, . . . Coquette, iii. 9 
such c's as left us friendly-warm, . Lucretius . 212 

Cupid. 
rentroll C of our rainy isles. 
The modest C of the day, 
seal was C bent above a scroll, 



Elednore . 138 
Miller's D. 10 
Pal. of Art 40 
Walk.totheM.6z 
Talking O. . 231 
Will Water. 172 
Vision of Sin 95 



Ed. Morris 
Talking O. . 
Pri?icess, i. . 



103 
67 



Cupid-boys. 
By C-b of blooming hue — 

cur. 
yelp'd the c, and yawl'd the cat ; . 
barking c Made her cheek flame : 

curate. 
and with Edward Bull The c ; 
said the fat-faced c Edward Bull, 

curb. 
Wild natures need wise c's . 

cttrbed. 
strongly groom'd and straitly c . 

curdled. 
wolf's-milk c in their veins, . 

cure (benefice.) 
The curate : he was fatter than his 

cure (remedy.) 
declined And trusted any c. 

cured. 
C lameness, palsies, cancers. 
c some halt and maim'd ; 

curious. 
Too c, Vivien, tho' you talk . 
ever be too c for a boon 
Hetairai, c in their art, . 



Day-Din. . 278 

The Goose . 33 
Godiva . 57 

Ed. Morris. 15 
11 42, 90 

Princess, v. 165 

Princess, v. 446 

Princess, vii. 113 

c. Ed. Morris 15 

Pal. 0/ Art . 156 

St S. Stylites 81 
. 13S 

Vivien . 208 

" .. . 336 

Lucretius . 52 



curiousness. 
In children a great c be well, . Vivien . •2\a t 

curl (s.) 
In many a dark delicious c, . . Arabian N's. 139 
In a golden c With a comb . . The Mermaid 6 
flow'd His coal-black c's . L.ofShalotf,\\\. 31 
streaming c's of deepest brown Mariana in theS. 16 
the light and lustrous c* s — . M. d Arthur 216 

moves not on the rounded c . . Day-Din. . 84 
took him by the c's, and led him in Vision of Sin 6 
play'd the patron with her c's . Princess, Pro. 1 38 



Melissa shook her doubtful ds± 
From the flaxen c to the gray lock 
on their c's From the high tree 
down dead-heavy sank her c's 
winds their c's about his hand : 



n 111. 59 

it iv. 406 

tt vi. 63 

11 • 131 

/;; Mem. lxv. 



little head, sunning over with c's, Maud, I. xxii. 57 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



87 



POEM. LINE. 

En. Arden . 235 
Titlwmis . 54 

Tlte Mermaid 50 
In Mem. lxxvi. 7 



Miller's D. . 


6 


T/ie Sisters . 


31 


Pal. of Art . 


2S7 


Lotos- Es . 


'57 


Day-Dm. 


25 


11 


250 


In Mem. xv. 


■i 


11 lxxviii. 


9 


Locks ley II. 


3 


Isabel . 


3' 


Pal. of Art 


33 


D. off. Worn 


ill 


Locks ley II. 


24 


Will Water. 


36 


Princess, ii. 


307 


M IV. 


282 


En. Arden . 


203 


,t 


866 


Sea Dreams 


"3 


L. o/Shalott, 


ii. 4 


11 


6 


11 11 


• 44 


D. ofF. Worn 


.103 


To J. S. . 


17 



clipt A tiny c, and gave it : . 
dim c's kindle into sunny rings; 

curl (verb. ) 
c round ray silver feet silently, 
serve to c a maiden's locks : . 

curtd. 
about His dusty forehead drily c 
c and comb'd his comely head, 
her serpent pride had c. 
the clouds are lightly c . 
Faint shadows, vapours lightly c, 
All-graceful head, so richly c, 
The forest crack'd, the waters c, 
the same cold streamlet c 

curlew. 
as of old, the c's call, 

current. 
in its onward c it absorbs 

four jets fourth 
bifting cs of the blood . 
c of my being sets to thee.' . 
runs The c of my days . 
Crystal c's of clear morning seas, 
turn'd your warmer c's all to her, 
c of his talk to graver things 
fluw'd the c of her easy tears 
then the motion of the c ceased, 

curse (s.) 
A curse is on her if she stay . 
knows not what the c may be, 
' The c is come upon me, 
was blasted with a c: . 
This is the c of time. 
this world's c, — beloved but hated — Love and Duty 47 

I, ' I toil beneath the c, . Two Voices 229 

My Shakespeare's c on ' \'o:t might ha7*e won,' etc. 27 
remembcr'd that burnt sorcerer's c Princess, v. 464 
when she turn'd, the c Had fallen In Mem. vi. 37 
we have made them a c. . . Maud, I. i. . 21 

may bring me a c. 

[arrow-hawk, My C, my 
'That is love's c, pass on, . 

t with thee— 
left their memories a world's c 
A c in his ( iod-Uess-you 

curse (verb.) 
I c not nature, no, nor death ; 
c me the blabbing lip, And c me . 

ii, hedgerow thief 
1 did not come to c thee 

cursed. 
bless'd herself, and c herself 
C be the social wants rep.) . 
c and scom'd, and bruised with 
have c him even to lifeless things) 
darken, as he c his credulousness, 
.nd my flower. 

cursing (part.) 
stood With Florian, c Cyril, 
them and my doom, 
( their lost time, and the dead man, 

CUrsir: 

she was deaf To blessing or to c . Enid . 1426 

curtain. 
In the white c, to and fro, 
1 1 1 s c s, 
Ji'.^t, that shook The c's 
'■ath-whitc c rep. ] 
if my bed 
i he c's of their seat aside — 

curtseying. 
c her obeisance, let us know 

ctir-.ie (s.) 
rainbow lives in the c of the sand ; Sea Fairies 27 
mountain, bridge, Uoat, . Ed. Morris 5 



II 


71 


. Enid . 


445 


. Elaine 


1 343 


. Guinevere . 


S46 


. Aylmer's F. 


706 


. Sea Dreams 


160 



In Mem. Ixxii. 7 
Maud, II. v. 57 
Enid . . 309 
Guinevere . 529 

The Goose . 15 
Locktley II. 59 
Two Voices 222 
Maud, I. xix. 15 
Sea /'reams 13 
'Die. Flower 8 

Princess, iv. 153 
Maud, I. xix. 51 
Enid . 1424 



. Mariana 

. Adeline 
Wall;, tat he M. 
. Maud, I. xiv. 
.. II. iv. 



Aylmer's F. 803 
Princess, ii. 6 



POEM. LINE. 

Sir L.andQ.G. 15 

In Mem. xcix. 15 

. Maud, I. ii. 10 

. Tlie Brook . 43 



In c's the yellowing river ran, 
left and right thro' meadowy c's 
least little delicate aquiline c 
With many a c my banks I fret 

curve. 
out again I c and flow . . . T/ie Brook . 182 

curved, 
c an arm about his neck, . . Vivien . 90 

curvet. 
a roan horse caper and c . . Elaine . 788 

curving, 
c a contumelious lip, . . . Maud, I. xiii. 20 

cushion. 
On silken c's half reclined ; . . Elednore . 126 
c's of whose touch may press . Talking O. 1 79 

custom (habit.) 
onegoodc should corrupt the world M. d' Arthur 242 
Appraised the Lycian c, . . Princess, ii. 112 
Disyoke their necks from c, 11 . 127 

moved beyond his c, Gama said . " vi. 212 

reverencing the c of the house . Enid . . 380 
by the power Of intermitted c; 11 811 

vicious quitch Of blood and 1." . 11 . 1752 

cut (s.) 
this c is fresh ; That ten years . Elaine . 21 

cut fverb.) 
c's atwain The knots 'Clear-headed friend,' etc. 2 
c away my tallest pines . . CEnone . 204 

c off from hope in that sad place, D. ofF. Worn. 105 
~ r, ■ .. • . ... - I ' Love thou thy 

C Prejudice against the grain : j land,' etc. 22 

where the hedge-row c's the pathway, Gardener' sD. 85 
c this epitaph above my bones ; . Princess, ii. 190 
What is she, c from love and faith. In Mem. cxiii. n 
Jealousy, down! c off from the mind Maud, I.x. 48 
with his whip, and c his check. . Enid . . 207 
little cloud Cs off the fiery highway En. Arden jgo 

.1 . 674 

. 89s 

Boiidicca . 66 



C off the length of highway . 

she c it off and gave it, . 

C the Roman boy to pieces . 

cutting, 
c eights that day upon the pond, 

cycle (s.) 
With c's of the human tale, . 
than a c of Cathay. 



Young Nature thro' five c's ran, . Two Voices 
The closing c rich in good. . . In Mem. civ. 
... 1 — _ ...:n *i*i — • ..11 1 '. 



at her will Thro' all her c's- 

cycle (verb.) 
Falls off, but c's always round. 



The Epic . 10 

Pal. of Art 146 
Loeksley H. 184 

>7 
28 



Is tawnier than her c's: 

cymbal. 
With shawms, and with c's, . 

cypress. 
With c promenaded, 
waves tile e in the palace walk 
Made c of her orange flower, 
A c in the moonlight shake, . 

Cyril. 
With C and with Florian, 
C took the child, And held her 
to close with C's random wish, 
Hither came C, and yawning 
climbing, C kept With Psyche, 
C, with whom the bcll-mouth'd glass 
stood With Florian, cursing C, 
Psyche, C> both are lied : . 
C, howe'er He deal in frolic, 
Co : C told us all . 
C met us, A little shy . 
in remorseful C . 
if C spake her true, . . 



Lucretius . 244 

Two Voices 348 

. Elaine 1179 

. DyingSwan 32 

. Amphion . 38 
. Princess, vii. 162 
/// Mem. lxxxiii. 15 
. T/ie Daisy . 82 



. Princess, 


. 51 


,162 




11 


11. 


341 




11 


111. 


«5 
108 
336 


lass 


ii 


IV. 


'37 




11 




'53 




11 




322 
23O 




11 


V. 


35 
42 

76 




11 




l6l 



88 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

fiery-short was C's counter-scoff . Princess, v. 297 
bore down a Prince, And C, one. 11 . 508 

C seeing it, pushed against . ir . 522 

Beside us, C, batter'd as he was, . 11 vi. 138 

When C pleaded, Ida came behind 11 vii. 63 

Cyrtis. 
what she did to C after fight 

Czar. 
has as many lies as a C ; 



. Princess, v. 356 
. Maud, I. iv. 9 



Princess, iii. 


2Q 7 


The Brook . 


93 


Maud, I. iii. 


14 


ir XXll. 


10 


ir III. vi. 


6 


Princess, ii. 


303 


The Sisters 


26 


D.ofF.Wom 


260 


The Blackbird 1 1 


Princess, ii. 


427 


I?i Mem. cvi. 


8 


Vivien 


700 


Aylmer*s F. 


220 


ii 


231 


" 


470 


IP 


59° 



D 

dabbled. 
d with the blood Of his own son, . Princess, vi. 
are ^with blood-red heath, . . Maud, I. i. 

dabbling. 
D a shameless hand 
d in the fount of fictive tears, 

daffodil. 
The shining aTdead, 
On a bed of d sky, 
And the shining d dies, 

daffodilly. 
clad her like an April d 

dagger. 
made my d sharp and bright, 
thrust The d thro' her side. . 
With that gold d of thy bill . 
Shot sidelong d's at us, 
Makes d's at the sharpen'd eaves, 
had she found a d there 
A d, in rich sheath with jewels 
rascal at his feet, This d with him, 
alone he pluck'd her d forth . 
d which himself Gave Edith, 

daily. 
D and hourly, more and more. 

daily-diui7idling. 
With d-d profits held the house . 

dainty (s.) 
Are but dainties cook'd again 

da in ty -woeful. 
dew Of d-w sympathies. 

dais. 
I hung The royal d round. . 

dais-throne. 
rising sun High from the d-t — 

daisy. 
linger' d there Till every d slept, . 
Touch'd by his feet the d slept. . 
the d close Her crimson fringes . 
And left the daisies rosy. 
I pluck'd a d, I gave it you. 

daisy-blossomed, 
Wash'd with still rains and d-b ; . 

daisy -chain. 
Made blossom-ball or d-c, 

dale. 
the blissful downs and d's, . 
long purples of the d 
rivulet in the flowery d . 
thro' mountain clefts the d?Was seen 
went by d, and she went by down 
Till over down and over d . 
in loops and links among the d's . 
at noon in some delicious d . 
was rising over the d, . 

dalliance. 
O the d and the wit, 

dallied. 
d with his golden chain, 



Eleanore . 71 
En. Arden . 697 
The Window 131 
Margaret . 53 
Pal. of Art 132 
M. a" Arthur 218 



Gardener' sD . 161 
Two Voices 276 
ZnMem.lxxi. 11 
Ma?id, I. xii. 24 
The Daisy . 88 



Circumstance 7 

Aylnier's F. 87 

Sea Fairies 22 
A Dirge . 31 
May Queen, i. 39 
Lotos-Es. . 20 
Lady Clare 59 
In Mem. Con. 1 10 
Elaine . 166 

Gui?ievere . 390 
Grandmot/ier 39 

D.ofF. Worn. 147 

Day-Dm. . 163 



dally. 
That with the napkin d ; 

dallying. 
lieu of idly i/with the truth, 



POEM. LINE. 

Will Water. 118 



. Elaine 



588 



dam (obstruction.) 
sleepy pool above the d, . . Miller's D. . 99 
waits a river level with the d . Princess, iv. 452 

da?n (mother.) 
a bitter bleating for its -^ . . Princess, iv. 373 

da mask-work, 
d-w, and deep inlay Of braided . Arabia?i N's. 28 

dame. 
Knight and burgher, lord and*/, L. ofShalott, iv. 43 
have a d indoors, that trims us . Ed. Morris 46 
d That whisper'd 'Asses' ears' . Princess, ii. 97 
Like that great d of Lapidoth . it vi. 16 

d's and heroines of the golden year it . 48 

behind A train of d's . . . it vii. 113 

an ancient d in dim brocade ; . Enid . . 363 
that old d, to whom full tenderly 11 508 

no more avail, D, to be gentle . it . 1564 

neither d nor damsel then Wroth . Vivien . 456 

wedded with an outland d; . 1, 564 

One old d Came suddenly . . Elaine . 725 

in the reading, lords and d's Wept, n . 1276 

the lords and d's And people, . 11 . 1336 

damp (adj.) 
The air is d^_ and hush'd, * A spirit ha?tnts,' etc. 13 



black hair D from the river ; 

damp (s.) 
hail, d, and sleet, and snow ; 
Sucking the d's for drink 

damsel. 
Sometimes a troop of d's glad, 
and his d shall be, purs.' 
and your d should be theirs.' 
let her eat ; the d is so faint/ 
While your good d rests, 
d there who sits apart, . 
^drooping in a corner of it. 
neither dame nor d then Wroth 
in this d's golden hair . 
d, in the light of your blue eyes : 
d, for I deem you know 
This will I do, dear d, . 
rose And pointed to the d, . 
dreamt the d would have died, 
You loved me, d, surely 
prettiest little d in the port, . 

Dan. 
D Chaucer, the first warbler, 

Danae. 
Earth all D to the stars, 

Danaid. 

The D of a leaky vase, . 

dance (s.) see coimtry 
with the choral starry ^Joined not 
Leaving the d and song, 
d's broke and buzz'd in knots 
at a d to change The music — 
In d and song and game 
d and song and hoodman-blind. 
wheels the circled d, and breaks 
No d, no motion, save alone 
last the d ; — till I retire: 
A dinner and then a d . 
She is weary of d and play.' 
Come hither, the d' s are done, 

dance (verb,) 
About thee breaks and d's; . 
spangle d's in bight and bay, 
says A fire d's before her 
make her d attendance ; 
And the dead begin to dance, 
to dress, to d, to thrum, 



Princess, iv. 258 

. St S. Sly 'lit 'es 16 
t- . 76 

L. o/SJialott, ii. 19 



Enid 



Vivien 
Elaine 



. 912 

• 9 2 4 
i°55 
1073 
1 148 
1459 

• 456 
. 205 
. 657 
. 686 

• 958 
1256 
1297 
1385 



. En. Arden . 12 
. D. ofF. Worn. 5 
. Prmcess, vii. 167 

. Princess, ii. 319 

da7ice. 

Pal. of Art 253 

D.ofF. Worn. 216 

Princess, i. 132 

11 iv. 566 

In Mem. xxix. 8 

11 Ixxvii. 12 

it xcvii. 30 

it civ. 23 

ir Con^ 105 

Ma7td, I. xx. 34 

11 xxii. 22 

" • 54 

Madeline . 30 
Sea Fairies 24 
CEnone . 260 
Amphio7i . 62 
Vision of Si7t 166 
Princess, iv. 498 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



Si 



POEM. LINE. 

d Its body, and reach its fatling . Princess,, vi. 121 
let the torrent d thee down . . " vii. 194 

To d with death, to beat the ground In Mem. i. 12 



</the lights on lawn and lea 
Till the red man d 
make the netted sunbeam d . 
to d and sing, be gaily drest, 

danced. 
we (/about the may-pole 
all the tables d again, . 
d The greensward into greener 
D into light, and died . 
gilded ball D like a wisp : . 
shook the woods, And d the colour 



ir cxiv. 9 

. Maud, I.xvii. 17 
. The Brook . 176 
. Coquette, ii. 3 

. May Queen, ii. 1 1 
. Tlie Goose . 47 
Gardener 's D. 132 



Princess, Pro. 64 
276 



I that </ her on my knee, 

heart D in his bosom, 
madly d our hearts with joy, 


In Man. Con 

Enid . 
Tlie Voyage 


■ 45 

50S 

3 


dancer. 
the d's dancing in tune ; 
the d's leave her alone? 
A wreath of airy d's 


Maud, I. xxii 
Guinevere . 


16 
21 
259 


dancing (part.) 
in (/after Letty Hill, . 

\ thousand pulses d . 

■lancers // in tune ; 
bur^t in (/, and the pearls 


Ed. Morris 55 
IuMcm. exxiv. 16 
Maud, I. xxii. 16 

Vivien . 302 


dancing: 
Till the d will be over . 


Maud, I. xx. 


43 


dandle. 
shall we d it amorously '! 


Doddicea 


33 


dandled. 
nor petty babes To be (/, 
arm that d you, 


Princess, iv. 
11 vi. 


r29 
165 


dandy-despot. 
What if that d-d, he 


Maud, I. vi. 


42 


Dane. 
\ orman anil 1) arc wc 


IV.toAlexan 


%V 


in our welcome . 
U l> in our welcome of thec 


ti 
, 11 


4 
33 


danger. 
life of 

ischold fled the d 

lot . 
my part Of (/on the roaring sea. 


(I'.nnne 
The Goose . 
Enid . 
The Sailor . 


161 

54 

J270 

22 


dangled, 
D a length of ribbon 


Maud, I. i. . 
/;'«. Arden . 


71 
75' 


Daniel. 
' seven and ten) . 


Sea Dreams 


148 


Danish. 
lown With D barrows : 
he D barrow overhead ; 


En. Arden . 


7 
439 



Z?(j»Af. 

world-worn ZJ grasped his song 

Danube, 

The D to the Severn gave . 
Let her great D rolling f.iir . 

dare. 
: taper fingers . 
1 think of thee, . 
1/ not 'li'-- and ee . 

. 
waited 
■' ! . 
doubt would rest. I <z*not solve, 
will ipsa* out, for I d not lie. 
I must go : 1 </not tarry' . 
' D we dream of that,' I a 

/ tl \\\ 1 1 male thunderbolts; 

' 'ic thing they (/ not do, 
. 
(/wc keep our Christmas-eve 
Nor d she trust a larger lay . 



Pal. of Art 135 

In Mem. xix. 1 
11 xcvii. 9 



Madeline 
Oriaita 



Dora 



■I ; 
93 
90 
- 1 
74 

. Love and Duty 38 

. Two Voices 313 

. 7. r/(/i> Clare 38 

. Princess, iii. 79 

11 . 280 

11 iv. 478 

11 v. 153 

. 166 

. In Mem. xxix. 4 

11 xlvii. 13 



d we to this fancy give. 
By which we d to live or die. 
D I say No spirit ever brake 
That which we d invoke to bless ; 
Who can rule and d not lie . 
That I d to look her way ; . 
D I bid her abide by her word? 
d's foreshadow for an only son 
the cause because I d not speak 
d to tell him what I think, . 
(/obey him to his harm ? 
Not d to watch the combat . 
care or d to speak^with you, 
(/ the full-fed liars say of me ? 
no man there will (/ to mock 
how (/ I call him mine ? 

dared. 
when at last I (/ to speak, 
(/to flow In these words 
yet you d To slight it. . 
i/ not tarry ' men will say, . 
d To leap the rotten pales 
have d to break our bound, . 
in a pause 1 d not break 
D not to glance at her good 
(/ to waste a perilous pity 
thought,' he had not d to do it, 
Yet d not stir to do it, . 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. Hi. 5 

11 lxxxiv. 

II xcii. 

II exxiii. 
Maud, 1. x. 

ti xvi. 



40 



66 



Idylls, Ded. 
Enid . 



Vivien 
Elaine 
Guinevere 



"5 
28 

89 
105 
985 
1003 
1719 
512 
1047 
610 



Miller's D. 
To J. S. . 
Dora . 
Two Voices 
Princess, ii. 



Enid 



scarcely d to inquire 



dares t. 



daring 



129 
6 
96 
101 
125 

518 

233 

766 

1374 

II . 1568 

Aylmer's F. 806 
. In Mem. iv. 7 
. Guinevere . 647 



. Mariana 


18 


. 'The Owl, ii. 


3 


. Arabian N's 


:o 


11 


1 6 


. Ode to Moil. 


1 . 


, 1 1 \ , 


IS 


ted II. 


S 


. Ortaua 


10 


. To 7. M. K. 


14 



now it were too d. 

dark. 
thickest (/ did trance the sky, 
Which upon the d afloat, 

diamond-plots Of (/ and bright. 
une The hollow-vaulted d, 
dimple in the (/of rushy 1 
thro' the wreaths of floating d 
All within is d as night ; 
Ere the light on (/was growing, 
into the (/Arrows of lightnings, 
the (/ was over all ; 

Yd on the borders of the d, D.of I'. //'»;«. 265 
Remaining betwixt d and bright Margaret . 28 
Shot on the sudden into d. . . 'To 7- S. . 28 
sea and air are (/ ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 63 
bright horizon rimm'd the (/. Gardener's D. 177 

sun fell, and all the land was d . Dora . 77, 1.7 
all the varied changes of the (/,' 
Till now the (/ was worn, 
in the d of ha/el eyes — 
If I make (/ my countenance, 
' If all be (/, vague voice,' 
Iresses be so (/, How d those 
twilight died into the d 
white robes are soil'd and (/, 
I float till all is d. . 
o'er the (/a glory spreads, 
(/and true and tender is the North 
wildncss, and the chances of the (/.' 
in the (/invested you, . 
bumish'd by the frosty (/; . 
Seed they laugh'd at m the d, 
mixt Their (/and gray, 
watches in the dead, the d, . 
My will is bondsman to the (/; 
all the place is (/.and all 
all is (/ where thou art not 
balmy drops in summer (/ 
marble bright in (/appears, . 
Immantled in ambrosial (/, . 
shade falls on us like the (/ . 
the drift of the Maker is (/, . 
Thro' the livelong hours of the d 
1 1" n returns die d 

/' in its funeral fold, 
tho' she lay (/ in the pool, 



MayQuei-u,'m. 26 



Ed. Morris 36 
Lo: : e and Duty 69 
Locksley It. 28 
Two Voii . 

265 
131 
. 188 
St Agnes' 

Sir Galahad 40 

. " . • 55 
Princess, iv. 80 
. 225 
• 385 
v. 251 



Day-Din. 



116 



In Mem. iv. 
11 viii. 

11 xvii. 
11 Ixvi. 
11 Ixxxviii. 
11 Con. 
Maud, I. iv. 



Ode on Well. 
Enid . 



'S 
S 
14 
93 
43 
'7 
•S 
57 
657 



90 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

D in the glass of some presageful Vivien . 144 

the court, the Icing, din your light, ti . 724 

Arthur to the banquet, d in mood, Elaine . 563 

late! and d the night and chill ! . Guinevere 166-72 
With wakes of fire we tore the d . The Voyage 52 

dark-blue. 
D-b the deep sphere overhead, 
d-b sky, Vaulted o'er the d-b sea, 

dark-brow' d. 
D-b sophist, come not anear . . Poet's Mind 8 

da rk-dawn ing. 
d-d youth, Darken'd watching . Maud, I. xix. 7 

darkeii. 
And the days d round me, . 
never more d my doors again.' 
d on the rolling brine . 
Not close and d above me 
Tho' many a light shall d, 
just heaven, that d's o'er me, 
flash of youth, would d down 
d with the gathering wolf, 

d, as he cursed his credulousness . Sea Dreams 13 
brightens and d's down on the plain The Window 2 
d's and brightens like my hope, . 11 .18 

d's and brightens and d's like my fear, ti . 19 

darkeiied. 
her eyes were d wholly " T 
all the casement^ there. _ . 
in your own light and d mine 
d sanctities with song.' . 
life is d in the brain. 
D watching a mother decline 
He had d into a frown . 
d from the high light in his eyes, 
eye d and his helmet waggM ; 
d all the northward of her Hall. 
all the sails were d in the west, 



Arabiaii N's. 
Lotos-E's. . 



M. d' Arthur 237 
Dora . . 30 
In Mem. cvi. 14 
Maud, I. xi. 9 
ir III. vi. 43 
Vivien . 780 

Elaine 1308 

Aylmer's E. 767 



L.ofShalott,iv. 31 
. Miller'sD. . 128 
. Princess, iv. 295 
In Mem.xxxvii. 24 

ir cxx. 8 
. Maud, I. xix. 8 

tr . 62 

. Enid . . 100 
. » • 1354 

. Aylmer's F. 416 
. Sea Dreams 39 



Princess, vii. 19 
Idylls, Ded. 14 
Aylmer's E. 673 

Margaret . 49 
Gardeuer'sD. 27 
Vivien . 725 

Aylmer's F. 750 

Gardener's D.115 



darkening. 
swarms of men D her female field : 
drew like eclipse, D the world. 
d thine own To thine own likeness ; 

darker. . 
Your hair is d, and your eyes 
eyes D than darkest pansies 
make men d than they are, . 
lonelier, d, earthlier for my loss. 

dark-green. 
spread his d-g layers of shade 

darkness. 
which possess' d The dof the world, Arabian N's. 72 
lashes like to rays Of d, 
All night long on d blind, 

Howling in outer d. To . 

Gross d of the inner sepulchre 

Hadwink'd and threaten'd d, 

would I were The pilot of the d 

shrivelFd into dm his head, . 

inch by inch to d crawl ? 

heads were touched Above the d 

d closed me ; and I fell. 

So much the gathering d charm'd 

A beam in d: let it grow 

Let d keep her raven gloss ; 

Else earth is d at the core, . 

jaws Of vacant d . 

slope thro' d up to God, 

blanch'd with d must I grow ! 

Death has made His .a? beautiful 

woke The d of our planet, 

makes the ^and the light, . 

in the dand the cloud, 

A treble d, Evil haunts 

Ring out the d of the land, . 

The Power in rfwhom we guess 

out of d came the hands 

over whom thy d must have spread Maud, I. xviii. 25 



. Adeline 


137 

44 


With Pal.oJ 'Art 16 
. D. o/F. Worn. 67 
M.d'Arthur,Ej>. 2 
. AudleyCt. . 71 
. Godiva . 70 


. Two Voices 


200 


. Princess, iii. 


6 


IF V. 

d : if Co?i. 


53i 
107 


. In Mem. Pro 


24 


u 1. 


10 


tF XXXIV. 


3 


ir 


16 


if liv. 


16 


ir lx. 


8 


if Ixxiii. 


12 


if lxxv. 


10 


n xcv. 


19 


tF 


21 


if xcvn. 


*3 


tF cv. 


31 


; if cxxm. 


4 


" 


2 3 



d into the light shall leap, 
And counterchanged with d ? 
Approaching thro' the d, call'd ; 
her face a d from the King : 
in the d o'er her fallen head, 
kiss'd each other In d, . 
their own d as the Highest ? 
May Pharaoh's d, folds as dense 
heaved upon it In d: 
the d from their loosen'd manes, 
There I heard them in the d 
So they chanted in the d, 

dark-foirj>le. 
in d-J> spheres of sea. 



POEM. LINE. 

. Maud, III. vi. 46 
. Vivien . 316 
. Elaine . 994 

. Guinevere . 414 

" , • 577 

. Aylmers F. 431 

" . 643 

• '' • 77i 

. Sea Dreams 91 
. Tithonus . 41 
. Boddicea . 36 
11 . 46 



Locksley H. 164 



Gardener *s D. 272 

In Mem. Con. 50 

Maud, I. i. 72 

ti xii. 32 

tt xx. 49 

Vivie?i . 247 

Elaine . 261 

Aylmer's F. 380 

Grandmother 24-56 

. The Victim 73 

. The Brook . 36 
ti . 132 



dark-splen did. 
face before her lived, D-s, . . Elaine . 337 

darling. 
The d of my manhood, 
Her feet, my d, on the dead ; 
the moon-faced d of all, — 
You are not her d. 
All homage to his own d, 
shall it? answer, d, answer, no. 
great knight, the d of the court, 
pale she had look'd D, to-night 
Seventy years ago, my d, 
me, not him, my d, no V 

Darnley. 
There is D bridge, 
crost the common into D chase 

dart (s.) 
Love tipt his keenest d's ; . 
Brandishing in her hand a d 
Madly dash'd the d's together. 
Clash the ds and on the buckler 

dart (verb. ) 
forward d again, and play . 

darted. 
thro' his manful breast d the pang. Enid . . 121 

dash. 
on the light D themselves dead. . Princess, iv. 475 
^"myself down and die. . . Mazid, I. i. 54 

Waves on a diamond shingle d, . The Islet . 16 
d the brains of the little one out, . Boddicea . 68 
D them anew together . . Lucretius 

dash'd (rushed, etc.] 



D. o/F. Worn. 173 

, Boddicea . 71 

tr . 74 

it . 79 

, In Mem. xii. 17 



243 



D downward in a cataract. . . Day-Dm. . 148 

d about the drunken leaves . . Amfthion . 55 

D together in blinding dew : . Visio?i of Shi 42 

into rhythm have (/The passion . Princess, iv. 121 
d Unopen'd at her feet : if . 449 

d Your cities into shards . . tt v. 132 

roll The torrents, a? to the vale : . if . 340 

a postscript d across the rest. . ir . 414 

wildly d on tower and tree . , In Mem. xv. 7 

D on every rocky square . . Ode on Well. 125 
uttering a dry shriek, D on Geraint Enid . 1311 

d Into the chronicle of a deedful . Aylmer's F. 195 

in flood, and d his angry heart . tt . 633 

Again we d into the dawn ! . . The Voyage 24 

a ground-swell rfon the strand, . W. to Alexan. 23 

Madly d the darts together, . Boddicea . 74 

dash'd (bespatter* d, etc.) 

t^with drops Of onset ; . . M.d'Arthur-vis 

dv/ith. death He reddens what he . Princess, v. . 157 

d with wandering isles of night . InMem.xxiv. 4 

life is d with flecks of sin. . . 11 li. 14 

Deep tulips d with fiery dew, . 11 lxxxii. 11 

where it <^the reddening meadow, Lucretius . 49 

dashing, 

d down on a tall wayside flower, . Guinevere . 251 

date. 

when his d Doubled her own, . Aylmer's F. 80 



TEX.VYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



91 



daughter. poem. LINE. 

It is the miller's d. Miller's D. 169 

I am the d of a River-God, . . iEnone . 37 
We were two d's of one race . The Sisters 1 

The d of a hundred Earls, . L.C.V.deVere 7 

Ad of the gods, divinely tall, . D. o/F. Worn. 87 
The d of the warrior Gileadite . 11 . 197 

went To see the Gardener's D ; . Gardener's D. 3 
Go and see The Gardener's d: . 11 . 30 

not heard Of Rose, the Gardener's*/? m . 51 

The d's of the year, One after one, u . 195 

She is my brother's d : . . . Dora . . 15 
for his sake 1 bred His d Dora : . 11 . .18 
A labourer's d, Mary Morrison. 11 . 3S 

d of a cottager, Out of her sphere, Walk, to the M. 51 
like the d's of the horseleech, . Golden Year 12 
preaching down a d's heart, . . Locksley II. 94 
His little d, whose sweet face . Two Voices 253 
old Earl's d died at my breast ; . Lady Clare 25 
knowledge, so my d held, . . Princess, i. . 134 
(/and his nousemaid were the boys : m . 1S8 

we saw The Lady Blanche's d . 11 ii. 300 

d's of the plough, stronger than men, 11 iv. 259 
A NiobSan d, one arm out, 11 . 352 

Fair d, when we sent the Prince . 11 . 379 

eight mighty d's of the plough . <i . 528 

I would he had our d . 11 v. 205 

hen To her false d's in the pool : . n . 319 

eight d's of the plough Came 11 . 329 

loved A d of our house ; . In Mem. Cm. 7 

d of our meadows, yet not coarse TIte Brook . 69 
was the thing his a wish'd, . . " . 140 

love of all Thy d's cherish Thee . Idylls, Ded. 
were she the «/of a king, . . Enid . 

ice of Enid, Yniol's d, . 11 . . 
Enid, all in faded silk, Her d. 11 

turn'd her d rotind, and said 
I iny sons EUld little (/fled 
With children : first a d. 
evermore the d prest upon her 
tell my d Annie, whom I saw 
sons of men D's of God : 

freely with his d> . 
I ilie Jeptha's d, 

never yet had set his d forth 
contriving their dear ■ 

their own d's death ! 
contrived their ds good, 

from over the sea, . IV.toAlexan. t 

happy as f.iir, . 11 .26 

Ycll'd and shrick'd between her d's Boddicea 6, 72 

daw. 
haunted by the wrangling d ; 
all the windy clamour of the d's 

as with his tenant, Jocky D. 

dawt 
breeze of a joyful d blew free, 
dewy d of memory, 
dew-impcarlcd winds of d 
Fronting the d he moved 
tearful glimmer of the languid d 

■ wings :it d. 
the white d's creeping beams, 



Elaine 
En. Arden 



Aylmers F. 



■:. : 1 

:,'■■' 

367 

74" 

270 

41 » 
883 
45 
270 
280 

347 
781 

783 
848 



. In Mem. xcix. 12 
. Enid . 1 104 

. Walk.totheM.2i 



He will not sec the (/of dav 



Arabian N's. 1 
Ode to Mem. 7, 45, 124 

„. " • '4 

CEnone . 57 

D. o/F. Worn. 74 

11 . 180 

ti . 261 

D.o/theO. Year 1 



bridal dot thunder-peals, ' Lone thou thy land ',' 'etc. 51 

oust the verge of d . M.d 'Arthur 271 

1 lakes every hour for (/: 11 /;'/. 11 

to (/, when dp ' feci . " .18 

like a dreary d; . . . LocksleyH. 114 

in glimmering d . Two Voices 305 

of d. Vision of Sin 50,224 

sent with </ . Princess, i. 241 

fr then commenced the d: 11 ii. 122 

strange as in dark summer d's 

at eve ami ,/ With 1,1a. Ida . 

I the tomb, 

' ■ '/. 

thou thus, dim d, xcviii. 1) 
I 'ic d, the (/,' and died away 



" iv. 31 
" . 412 

In M, m..x\v. 6 
11 Ixvi. 16 
11 Ixxi. 1 
11 xciv. 61 



POEM. LINK. 

A light-blue lane of early d, In Mem. cxviii. 7 

thither I climb'd at d . . . Maud, I. xiv. 5 
Now and then in the dim gray d; « . 32 

They sigh'd for the d and thee. . 11 xxii. 52 

d of Eden bright over earth and . 11 II. i. 8 

In the shuddering d, behold, . 11 iv. 52 

the rich d of an ampler day — . Ded. oj Idylls. 35 
gray d stole o'er the dewy world, . Enid . 12^4 

with the (/ascending lets the day 11 . 1540 

passing one, at the high peep of d, Vivien . 410 

high d piercing the royal rose . n . 589 

woke with d, and past Down . Elaine . 842 

lo ! the bloodred light of d . . 11 1019 

the d of rosy childhood past, . En. Arden . 37 

as a figure seen in early d . 11 . 354 

the chill November d's 11 . 6rr 

the mate had seen at early d . 11 . 632 

Such dear familiarities of d? . Aylmcr's F. 131 

d Aroused the black republic . 11 . 528 

Again we dash'd into the d ! . The Voyage 24 

rose at d and, fired with hope, . Sailor Boy . 1 
by their chariots, waiting for the d. Spec. 0/ Iliad 22 

dawn (verb.) 
let your blue eyes d Upon me . Margaret . 67 

dawned. 
twilight d: and morn by morn the Princess, vii. 



D sometime thro' the doorway ? . Aylmers F. 



30 
685 



dawning (part. ] 
All the spirit deeply d . 
he saw Death d on him, 



Locksley II. 2S 
En. Arden . 833 



dawning (s.) 
in a fiery d wild with wind . . Elaine 1014 

thro' that (/gleam'd a kindlier hope En. Arden . 834 

day. 
As noble till the latest d! . . TotheQueen 22 
only said, ' The d is dreary, . Mariana . 33 

d Was sloping toward his western 11 . 79 

gloom of yesternight On the white d; Ode to Mem. 10 
prime labour of thine early d's: . 11 . 94 

Looking at the set of d . .A deline . 1 7 

It was the middle of the d. . . Dying Swan 8 
Now is done thy long d's work ; . A Dirge . 1 
could I look upon the d? . . Oriana . 59 
at the closing of the d . . L. o/Shalott, iv. 15 
d increased from heat to heat, Mariana in theS. 39 
sometimes in the falling (/ 11 73 

From heat to heat the (/decreased, 11 

d to night, the night to morn (rep.) 11 

we may die the self-same d. . . Miller's D. 
Flush'd like the coming of the d ; 11 

gave you, Alice, on the d 11 

(/, when in the chesnut shade . 11 

while (/sank or mounted higher . Pal. 0/ Art 
Crown'd dying d with stars, . 11 

the maddest, merriest (/; . May Queen, i. 
loud when the d begins to break : n 

woo me any summer (/, . . 11 

we had a merry (/;... 11 ii, 

before the d I die .... 11 

call me before the c/is born . . 11 

ere this d is done .... 11 iii. 

AM its allotted length of d's, . Lotos- E's, . 

Lull'd echoes of laborious d . . Mai 
gave you on your natal d . 11 . 

will not see the dawn of d . D.oftheO.Ycar 11 
Make bright our d's '0/ eld sat Freedom,' etc. 22 

those, not blind, who wait for d, \ ' ^. m "jf>» "W 

' ( land, etc. 15 
freshest in the fashion of the (/ The Epic . 32 

OfCamelot, asinthe d's that were. M. d' Arthur ;t 
In those old d's, one summer noon, 11 . 29 

the d's darken round me . . 11 , 237 



78 

8r 

24 

132 

162 

201 

46 

184 

3.43 

10 

23 

9 

16 

49 

53 

80 

29 

42 



feel the truth and stir of (/, . 
morning is the morning of the d, 
ill-- dwe wot To sec her. . 
as tho' he were the bird of d. 
full (/dwelt on her brows, 



chambers of the heart, Let in the d.' 



.. Fp. .9 

Gardeners D. 1 

11 . 74 

11 . 95 

• '35 



=45 



9 2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Gardeners D. 266 
. Dora . . 8 



dwelt on by the common d. . 
d When Allan call'd his son, 
d's went on, and there was born if .46 

the d when first she came, . ti . 104 

either twilight and the d between ; Ed. Morris 37 
her name alone. Thrice-happy d's! 11 . 68 

a part of those fresh d's to me ; . ir . 142 

The modest Cupid of the d, . . Talking O, 67 
ah! my friend, the d's were brief 11 . 185 

little more : the d was warm . 11 . 205 

Some happy future d. . 11 . 252 

eye glazed o'er with sapless d's, Love and Duty 16 
A tongue-tied Poet in the feverous d's, Golden Year 10 



Happy d's Roll onward, leading up 

The long d wanes : the slow moon Ulysses 

in old d's Moved earth a*id heaven ; 



lighting upon d's like these? 
"When I heard my d's before me 
at the gateways of the d. 
sweep into the younger d: . 
sweep the tracts of d and night, 
grows the d of human power? ' 
hope that warm'd me in the d's 
d's that never come again. . 
troubles number with his d's: 
Stillness with love, and ^with light 
strove in other d's to pass, . 
deep into the dying d . 
Beyond the night, across the d, 
In d's of old Amphion, 
runs The current of my d's : 
down Into the common d ? . 
d's, that deal in ana, . 
God's blessing on the dl 
they twain will spend their d's 
1 She is more beautiful than d.' 
When a blanket wraps the d, 



Locks ley H. 



40 

5S 
66 
99 
110 

158 



Two Voices . 69 



122 
324 
33° 

9 2 

no 

171 
195 



Day-Dm. 



A mphion 

Will Water. 36 

" • 154 

II . 199 

Lady Clare 8 
L.of Burleigh 36 
Beggar Maid 8 
Vision of Sin 



Princess, Pro. ioi 
15 
40 
251 
11 . 446 

ir iii. 160 
" - 315 

ir IV. 25 

II _. 273 

II VI. 46 

" • 95 

" ..• 343 

11 vu. 91 

II . 247 

" r ■ 3 2 5 

1 1 C on. 75 
In Mem . Pro. 1 7 

ir vii. 12 

1 r xv. 2 

tr xvii. 7 

n xxiv. 1 



tender grace of a d that is dead Break, break?_etc. 15 

Took this fair d for text, 

in the midst of men and d, . 

d's drew nigh that I should wed, 

gentler d's, your arrow-wounded fawn 

then d droopt : the chapel bells . 

Agreed to, this, the d fled on 

mould The woman to the fuller d. 

the d's that are no more, (rep.) 

not thus, O Princess, in old d's: 

a d Blanch'd in our annals, . 

a d Rose from the distance . 

the d, Descending, struck 

memories of her kindlier d's 

shares with man His nights, his d 

the new d comes, the light . 

the genial d, the happy crowd, 

little systems have their d: . 

bald street breaks the blank d. 

roar from yonder dropping d: 

Week after week : the d's go by 

d of my delight As pure 

The very source and fount of D 

the d prepared The daily burden 

Old sisters of a d gone by, . 

the cheerful d from night : . 

■wert thou, brother, those four d's 

life that leads melodious d's. 

d When first she wears . 

he forgets the d's before 

d's have vanished, tone and tint, 

D's order'd in a wealthy peace, 

The twilight of eternal d. 

She sighs amid her narrow d's, 

tease her till the d draws by : 

His inner d can never die, . 

d's that grow to something strange, 

D, when my crown'd estate begun 

D } mark'd as with some hideous crime, 

Climb thy thick noon, disastrous d; 

care not in these fading d's . 

Can trouble live with April d's, . 

now the d was drawing on, . 

sun by sun the happy d's 



ii 

II xxv. 

n xxix. 

II xxx. 

if xxxi. 

11 xxxiii. 

ii xxxix. 

11 xliii. 



xlv. 

xlix. 

lix. 

lxvl 
lxx. 

lxxi. 



M IxXlV. 

m lxxxii. 
ir lxxxiii. 



POEM. LINE. 

Whatever way my d's decline, InMem. lxxxiv. 41 
1 Ixxxviii. 
r lxxxix. 



break the livelong summer d 
will not yield them for a d. . 
cast Together in the d's behind, 
Spirits irom their golden d, . 
broaden into boundless d. 
The d's she never can forget 
D, when I lost the flower of men 
two have striven half the d, . 
landmark breathes of other d's, 
It is the d when he was born, 
We keep the d. With festal cheer, 
d's of happy commune dead 

d's and hours, your work is this, 
breathers of an ampler d 

think of early d's and thee, . 
In that it is thy marriage d . 
Since that dark d a d like this ; 
wish them store of happy d's. 
But these are the d's of advance, 
slurring the d's gone by 
riding at set of d . 

1 shall have had my d. . 

this is the d when I must speak (rep. 

Go not, happy d, (rep.) 

fair stars that crown a happy d 

the fragments of the golden d. 

On the d when Maud was born 

half to the rising d ; 

■The d comes, a dull red ball 

tithes in the d's that are gone, 

catch a friend of mine one stormy^; 

knew her in her English d's, 

d's That most she loves to talk of, 

Warring on a later d, . 

A d of onsets of despair ! 

Peace, it is a dof pain . 

in the rich dawn of an ampler d- 



xci. 

xciii. 

xciv. 

xcvi. 

xcviii, 

ci. 

ciii. 

cvi, 

exv. 
cxvi. 

ex vii. 

cxviii. 

Con. 



Maud, I. i 



84 

25 

■ 33 

ix. 5 

xi. 7,14 

xvi. 7 



xvn. 
xviii. 

xix. 
xxii. 

II. iv. 



The Brook 



224 

n . 225 

Ode on Well. 102 

ir . 124 

» 235-7 

Idylls, Ded. 35 



nephew fights In next d's tourney Enid . . 476 
Danced inhis bosom, seeing better d's. it . . 505 
third d from the hunting morn Made ir . . 597 
In former d's you saw me favourably, ti . 1164 

overtoil'd By that d's grief and travel m . 1226 

lets the d Strike where it clung : . h . 1540 

hardest tyrants in their d of power, 11 . 1543 

clothed her in apparel like the d. . 11 . 1796 

on a dull d in an Ocean cave . Vivien . 80 

the d's when I was all unknown 11 351 

Well, those were not our d's: v 462 

Dull d's were those, till our good Elaine . 279 
next d broke from underground, 11 412 

our knight thro' whom we won the d \\ . . 528 
my good d's are done ' . . h . 943 

There came a d as still as heaven, Gumevere . 250 
in the golden d's before thy sin. . 11 . 496 

The d's will grow to weeks, . 11 . 617 

sombre close of that voluptuous d, 11 . 680 

pass his d's in peace among hisown. Eu. Arden . 147, 
passes here (He named the d) . ir . 215 

d, that Enoch mention'd, came, . 11 . 238 

in d's of difficulty And pressure, . ir . 253 

the dead flame of the fallen d . ir . 438 

November d Was growing duller . 11 . 722 

the chronicle of a deedful d, . Aylmer's F. 196 

many thousand d's Were dipt by horror 11 . 602 

Darkly that d rose : n . 609 

In her nest at peep of dl (rep.) . Sea Dreams 282 
d that followed the d she was wed, The Islet . 4 
autumn into seeming-leafless d's . A Dedication 10 
My life is full of weary d's, l My life is full? etc. 1 
first beam of my latest d? . . Lucretius . 59 
and the sun from the dl . . The Window 39 
for ever and ever, and one d more h . 147 

Love, fix ad. .... ti . 165 

You shall fix a d.' 11 . 173 

In honour of the day. ti . 177 

daylight. 
Flood with full d glebe and town ? Two Voices . 87 

daylong. 
His weary d chirping . . . The Brook . 53 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



93 



dazed. poem line. 

sudden light D me half-blind : .Princess, v. n 

dazzled. 

That both his eyes were d, . . M.d Arthur 59 

rhymes are d from their place . Day-Dm. . 19 

1 ream involved and d down Princess, iv. 430 

iy the wildfire Love . . 1; v. 431 

d by the livid-flickering fork, . Vivien . 790 

dazzling. 
Sun came d thro' the leaves, L. ofSlialott, iii. 3 

dead. 
I would that I were d!' (rep.) 
look'd so grand when he was d, 
of the rising from the d, 
I beheld young Laurence d. 
soldier found Me lying d, 
And the old year is d. . 
he'll be (/before. 



. Mariana . 12 
. The Sisters 32 
. Pal. of Art 206 
L. C. V. de Vere 28 
D. o/F. Worn. 162 
. 248 
D.qftheO. Year 32 
■ blossoms of the </; ' Love tlum thy land,' etc. 94 



true old times are d, 

, Wh j married, 
d, become Merc highway dust? 
thou wert (/before me, 

IS (/, • . 

11 the chamels of the d, 
canst thou show the (/arc d. 
Wc find no motion in the d* 

the silent (/: 
thy kiss would wake the d !' 
'a nee. 
mi </, 



M. d'Arthttr22g 

. AudleyCt. . 28 

Love and Duty 10 

. Locksley II. 56 

11 . 73 

. Two Voices. 215 

11 . 267 

1. . 279 

, Day- Dm. . 113 

11 . 184 

. Vision of Sin 166 

'Cwueuot, when,' etc. 1 



grace of a day that is d . ' Break, break' etc. 15 

Peace be with her. Sheis</. . Princess, iv. 118 



( r thine and thee 
watching like a watcher by the </. 

I -e than she were (/. 
old ' '—I 1 if wai him iclf were (/, 
Home 1 1 her warrior d 

he li\ /' : . . 

he is d, Or all as (/: 

■ he (/, tin: dark, . 
lift thine eyes ; my doubts are d, 

:lie uixler-l\ in^ it, 
hear the ritu 
lies tli ly it ; 

its. . 

ne (/, 

: he happy d? 

lid still be near 



thro' and thro'. . " i-> 

the it ; . . " lvi. 14 

f iliee a, d: . " Ixvii. 4 

amerce with the d; . n Ixxxiv. 93 

11 lxxxix. 5 

mmunion with the d. <• xciii. 4 

' the '/.■ . . 11 xciv. 24 

11 xcviii. 8 

t the d, . . 11 cii. 3 

call the d . 11 cxvii. 5 

with (/. 11 cwvi. :; 

n Con. 17 

. on the (/; . 11 .50 

HI d, . . Maud, I. iii. 14 

" vi 70 

ntury <t ; . 

Strike (/ the v. 

. 
it it, and the time is at hand 
dying or </, 
. 
1 peace, . 

. Enid 
■ 'urn tunn'd or d, 

No, no, not dV 

''. Why wail you 

were I */ whi weep 

yonder man is surely d; 



VII. 



56. 

59 
89 

139 
532 
106 
'53 
88 
327 



In Mem. 

" xviii. 12 

11 xx. 4 

11 xxxii. 3 
" x 

11 xliii. r 

1. , 



XXII. 72 

II 

■ ... 7" 

111. 8 

iv. 48 



11 . 15 

11 25, 40, 70 
The Lttt 

'3>3 
1390 
'395 
'436 
1460 
1520 



POEM. LINE. 

surely knew my lord was d,' . Enid . 1569 

diedEarlDoormbyhimhecountedrf.il . 1578 

Coming and going, and he lay as d Vivien 62, 494 
by the cold Hie Jacets of the d !' 11 . 603 

in the hollow oak he lay as d, . 11 . 818 

that will strike my blossom d. . Elaine . 966 

good fortune, I will strike him d, 11 . 1065 

d Steer' d by the dumb went upward 11 . 1147 

not seem as d But fast asleep, . 11 . 1154 

may judge the living by the d, . 11 . 1359 

happy, d before thy shame ? . . Guinevere . 420 
strike him d, and meet myself Death 11 . 570 

thinking ' d or d to me !' . . En. A rden . 690 
could tell her you had seen him d, 11 . 809 

reveal it, till you see me d.' ' D' 11 . 840 

my children care to see me d, . 11 . 889 

Were d to him already : bent as . Aylmer's F. 445 
Yes, as the d we weep for testify — 11 . 747 

D for two years before his death . 11 . 837 

must forgive the d.' ' D ! who is d ? ' Sea Dreams 261 
(/of heart-disease.' ' D ? he ? (rep. ) 11 . 264 

was d before he was born, . Grandmother^,^ 
if they be alive or d. . . . " -84 

grassy barrows of the happier d. . Tithonus . 71 
half the crew are sick or d . . The I 'oyage 92 
was as the voice of the (/, . . V. ofCauterctz 8 
voice of the d was a living voice . 11 .10 

deadly wounded Falling on the d. The Captain 64 
once at d of night did greet Troy's On a Mourner 32 
shineamongthcrfHereafter : tales! Lucretius . 129 
when I am there and d and gone, TIu Window 1 16 

detid. 
afoor moy Sally wur d, . . N. Farmer 17 

toner 'cd shot un as das a naail. . 11 -35 

dead-blue. 
a lack-lustre d-b eye, . . . A Character 17 

deaden. 
learns to deaden Love of self, . Ode on Well. 204 

dead-heavy. 
down d-h sank her curls, . Princess, vi. 131 

Dead March. 
the D M wails in the people's ears : Ode on Well. 267 

dead-pale. 
D-p between the houses high, L.ofShalott,\v. 40 

deaf. 

parch'd and wither'd, d and blind, Fatima . 6 
end draws nigh: half 1/ 1 am, . StS.Stylites 36 
this dreamer, d and blind, . . Two Voices 175 
she was d To blessing or to cursing Enid . 1426 

deafened. 
d with the stammering cracks . Vivien . 791 

deal. 

know so ill to d with time, . . L.C.V.deVerc6$ 

Nor d in watch-words overmuch i ' L ?~ M ,'{'"" "V „ 
( taint, etc. 28 

Ere days, that (/ in ana, . . Will Wat 

' Leave me to (/ with that.' . . Princess, iii. 133 

it's in that Which men delight in, 11 . 199 

d's with the other distance . . 11 iv. 68 

Cyril, howe'er He (/ in frolic, . 11 . 231 

learn With whom they (/, . . 11 . 492 

Shall we d with it as an infant ? . Doiidicea . 33 

dealing (part) 

memory (/ but with time, . . Two Voices 376 
(/goodly counsel from a height . Aylmer's F. 172 

dealing (s.) 
full of d's with the world? . . Miller's D. 8 

dealt. 

dcathful stabs were (/apace. . Oriana . 50 

My nerves have rf with stiffer, . Will Wat 

of tales that d with knights Princess.! 

md with mortal powers, . In Mem.xxx\i. 5 
this d him at Caerlyle ; . .22 

of Arthur's noblest din scorn ; . Gait: -.ere . 41 



94 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Miller's D. . 
Lotos-E's. . 



Dean {forest. ) poem. line. 
Before him came a forester of D, Enid . . 148 

dean (dignitary.) 
prudes for proctors, dowagersfor d's, Princess, Pro. 141 
they vext the souls of d's; it . 161 

dear. 
she is grown so d, so d, 
D is the memory of our wedded 
d the last embraces 
As thou art lief and d, . 
holds thee d For this good pint 
wrong As a bitter jest is d. . 
ancient ties Would still be d 
D as remember'd kisses 
no rose that's half so d . 
D as the mother to the son, . 
d to me as sacred wine . 
count new things as </as old : 
Knowing the primrose yet is d, 
this hath made them trebly d.' 
If / be d to some one else, (rep. ) 
makes Love himself more d.' 
D to the man that is d to God ; 
those are few we hold as d ; . 
His Memory — since he held themd, 
d to Science, d to Art, . 
D to thy land and ours, 
D, near and true — no truer Time 



170 
114 

11 ■ 115 

M.d' Arthur 80 

Will Water. 211 

Vision of Sin 198 

Princess, ii. 246 

tr iv. 36 

ti v. 152 

hi Mem. ix. 19 

it xxxvii. 19 

ir xxxix. 28 

11 lxxxiv. 118 

it ci. 16 

Maud, I. xv. 3 

it xvhi. 61 

To F.D.Maurice 36 

. 46 

Ded. of Idylls 1 

" • 39 

11 .40 

A Dedication 1 



Yet both are near, and both are d, The Victim 63 
down to the window-pane of my d, The Window 17 
frost is here, And fuel is d . . n -44 

dearer. 
a little d than his horse. . . Locksley H. 50 

All he shows her makes him d: . L. of Burleigh 33 
Our wood, that is <^than all ; . Maud,\. xxii. 38 
therefore tenfold d by the power . Enid . . 810 
reverence, D to true young hearts, Elaine . 43^8 

make you evermore D and nearer A Dedication 3 
The fuel is all the d, . The Window 57 

dearest. 
I, thy d, sat apart, . . . In Mem. cix. 13 

our nearest, Were it our d, {rep.) . The Victi7n 14 

dearness. 
with a d not his due, . . . Locksley H. 91 
A distant d in the hill, . . . hi Mem. Ixiii. 19 

death. 
gentler (/shall Falsehood ' s Clear-headed 'friend ',' 'etc. 16 
Life, anguish, d, immortal love, . Arabian N's. 73 
repose An hour before d * A Spirit haunts* etc. 15 
He saw thro' life and d . . The Poet. . 5 

In your eye there is d . . . Poet's Mind 16 
D, walking all alone . . Dove and Death 5 
creates the shade of d;_ . . 11 . 13 

drink the cup of a costly ^ . . Eleanore . 138 
I should die an early d: . . Miller s D. . 90 

d, d, d, thou ever floating cloud, CEnone . 234 
cold and starless road of D, ..11 . 255 
d and life she hated equally . Pal. of Art 265 
sweeter far is d than life . . May Queen, iii. 8 
D is the end of life : . . . Lotos-Es. . 86 
d, dark d, or dreamful ease. . it .98 
There is confusion worse than d . i> . 128 
The downward slope to d. . . D. o/F. Worn. 16 
bright ^quivered at the victim's . 11 . 115 

1 was ripe for d. . . . , ti . 208 
knew that Love can vanquish D, . 11 . 269 
thro' mine own doors D did pass ; To J. S. . 19 
D is blown in every wind ;' . . 11 .46 
fluting a wild carol ere her d, . M. d' Arthur 26 j 
Dora lived unmarried till her d. . Dora . . 167 
had wlther'd, nipt to d by him . Ed. Morris 101 
all thy martyrs die one d? . . StS. Stylites 49 
whole years long, a life of d . 11 -53 
hope ere d Spreads more and more 11 , 154 
Like D betwixt thy dear embrace Love and Duty 48 
Like bitter accusation ev'n to d . tt -79 
sweat her sixty minutes to the d, . Golden Year 68 
D closes all ; but something . Ulysses . 51 
hadst not between (/and birth . Two Voices. 169 



n . 245 

L. oj c Burleigh 66 
Vision of Sin 60 

11 74, 194 

11 . 179 

Princess, Pro. 38 

11 . 150 



. 287 

■ 3H 
134 

. 196 
. 268 

- 346 
36 

. 40 

. 148 

16 

■ 71 

- 157 
. 170 
• 350 

225 
. 260 

104 
. 141 
. 189 

296 
7 



POEM. LINE. 

Know I not D ? the outward signs ? Two Voices 270 
ever truly long*d for d. n . 396 

life, not d, for which we pant ; 11 . 398 

mellow D } like some late guest, . Will Water. 239 
carved cross-bones, the types of D 
Pale again as d did prove : . 
gap-tooth'd man as lean as d, 
Let us hob-and-nob with D. 
D is king, and Vivat Rex ! . 
nor shunn'd a soldier's d, 
make it d For any male thing 
As blank as d in marble ; 

MAN ENTER IN ON PAIN OF D 

I give thee to the d My brother / 

give three gallant gentlemen to d. 

war to come and many d's, . 

you will shock him ev'n to d, 

Of immolation, any phase of d, 

Sun Grew broader toward his d. 

remember'd kisses after d, 

O D in Life, the days that are 

Melissa clamoured ' Flee the d ;' 

clamouring etiquette to d. 

mourn half-shrouded over d . 

dash'd with d He reddens what 

had not shunn'd the d, 

to combat for my claim till d. 

that there is no one hurt to d t 

might mix his draught with d 

well-nigh close to d For weakness 

fiery Passion from the brinks of d 

cares to walk With D and Morning 11 

in sad experience worse than d, n 

Thou madest D ; and lo, thy foot hiMem. Pro, 

To dance with d, to beat the ground n i. 

Priestess in the vaults of D, 
No hint of d in all his frame 
Cold in that atmosphere of D, 
If D were seen At first as D, 
that vague fear implied in d ; 
If Sleep and D be truly one, 
(If D so taste Lethean springs) 
Beyond the second birth of D. 
must be wisdom with great D : 

1 bring to life, I bring to d: . 
Sleep D's twin-brother, times my 
Sleep, D's twin-brother, knows not D, 
kinsman thou to d and trance 
curse not nature, no, nor d; 
D has made His darkness beautiful 
holy D ere Arthur died 
D returns an answer sweet : 
wage not any feud with D . 
blame I D, because he bare . 
For this alone on D I wreak 
till Doubt and D, 111 brethren, 
make Confusion worse than d, 
shocks of Chance — The blows of D. 
dim lights, like life and d, 
gleams On Lethe in the eyes of D, 
unto myriads more, of d 
one would sing the d of war, 
dive below the wells of D ? . 
on the depths of d there swims 
cannot fight the fear of d. 
Paul with beasts, I fought with D 
slip the thoughts of life and d; 
Unpalsied when he met with D, 
whatever is ask'd her, answers ' D 
To the d, for their native land. 
Singing of D, and of Honour 
like a fool of the sleep of d. 
sullen-seeming D may give . 
fair banquet with the dust of d? 
strand of D inwoven here 
given false d her hand, 
by a right from birth till d, . 
battle, and seas of d. 
All in the valley of D. (rep.) 
Into the jaws of D, (rep.) 
pierced to d before mine eyes, . Enid 



XXXV. 

xl. 

xlii. 

xliii. 

xliv. 

1, 

lv. 

lxvii. 

lxx. 

Ixxii. 
lxxiii. 
lxxix. 

lxxx. 
lxxxi. 



it lxxxv. 
it lxxxix. 



If xcvn. 

n xcviii. 

n cii. 

u cvii. 

it cxiii. 
11 cxix. 
it exxi. 
11 exxvii. 
Maud, I. i. 



14 



16 



xiv. 
xviii. 



It XIX. 

11 Ill.vi. 
Lt. Brigade 



16 

38 
46 

56 
60 
68 
42 
37 
3 
24 
104 



TEAWYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



95 



POEM. 

Enid . 



Vivien 
Elaine 



he would put me soon to d, . 

or hunger for my d, 

I am weary to the d* . 

that he sickens nigh to d ; 

himself nigh wounded to the d.' . 

crown'd A happy life with a faird, 

Funic that follows d \s nothing 

the bare-grinning skeleton of d I . 

daughter tied From bonds or d t . 

no prizes, for my prize is d! . 

crying that his prize is d.' 

died the d In any knightly fashion 

or d,' she mutter d t 'dor him,' (rep.) 

to the d, as tho' you were my blood, 

D, like a friend's voice . 

Song of Love and D,' 
dwho puts an end to pain 

then bitter d must be : 
bitter : sweet is d to me. 
if d be sweeter, let me die. . 
Sweet d, that seems to make us . 
I needs must follow d, . 
ever shrieks before a d,' 
' oiard it even in d. 

d \V.i> ruber in the fantasy . 
bruise and blow, With d's of others, 
my true love has been my d. 
fir this most gentle maiden's d . 
would have help'd her from herrf.' 
after heaven, on our dull side of d, 
help it from the d that cannot die Guinevere . 
thought 'he spies a field of d ;' . n 

mystic lay of life and d . n 

thou shall be guarded till my d. . » 

in and the flaming d, n 
strike him dead, and meet myself D, n 
In those two d t he read God's . En. Arden . 
H y*s d t her growing poverty, n 

saw D dawning on hint, . . h 

peace which each had prick'd to d. Aylmer's F. 
i alter her: . . ■■ 

r toward the d, . n 

letter edged with d Beside him . n 

went and gazed upon his d. . . n 

■ ■ touch'd her . 
Vnd double d . 
I to the d that cannot die ; 
z their own daughter's dt . 
Stunibh ■ market to hist/, 

I cfirc his d . 
■iiuir reverencing d . 
he of life and d: 
that ever I thought of d. 

i stay . 

father raves of d and wreck, . 

■• than any d to me.' 

ret d for ever, . 

i i^ d : . 

tk body toward d, . 

deathbed. 
Kind? but the d desire 

death-blow. 
d-b struck the 



LINK 

• 463 

• 93° 
1207 
1348 
1767 
1816 

3'4 
696 
277 
SOS 
S3" 
SS06 



956 
993 
999 
1002 
1004 
1005 
1006 
1008 
1011 
1017 
1 109 
1125 
1160 
1270 
J 283 
1302 

J 373 
66 
1 •; 
■-'1 
445 
534 
57J 
57- 
706 
§33 
5- 
41S 

. 5°0 

• 595 

• 599 
. 604 
. 6,7 
. 662 
■ 783 
. 820 
. 837 
. 842 

Sea urtanu 147 

Grandmother (■> 1 

Sailor Boy . 13 

. 19 

«4 

'3 

6 

1 >4 



. Coquette, iii. 

■i- 
. Lucretius . 



. Aland, I. xi.v. 77 

Lucretius . 233 

death/ul-griuning. 
d-g mouths of the fortress, . . Maud,lll.\\. 52 

death-hymn. 
wild twin's & il . Dying Swan 21 

t-li/e. 
' d-i-l 
\ud wretched age— . Lu 

deathless. 
■ lods there arc, and (/. . Lucretius . 121 

deathlike. 
Luminous, gemlikc, ghostlike, d . Maud, I. iii. 8 

deathly-pale. 
d-p Stood grasping what was . Elaine . 960 



En. Arden . 566 
»S4 



death-pale. POEM. line. 

D-p, for lack of gentle maiden's aid. Elaine . 761 

death-scajffbld. 
hear Her own d-s raising, . . En. Arden . 175 

death's-head. 
not a d-h at the wine . . . Princess, iv. 69 

death-ivatch. 
dog howl, mother, or the d-tv beat AIayQueen,\x\, 21 

death-white. 
beheld The d-iv curtain drawn . AIaud,\.x\v. 34 
d-w curtain meant but sleep, .11 - 37 

debate. 
Where once we held d, . TttJBfem.haocri. 21 

debating. 
D his command of silence given, . Enid . 1215 

debt. 

Love the gift is Love the d . . Aimer's D. 207 
Deep, indeed, '1 heir debt of thanks Princess, ii. 125 

my d to him. This nightmare . 11 vi. 280 

lawyers and harass' d with d : . Aland, I. xix. 22 

I feel I shall owe you ad,. . 11 -87 

That I owe this d to you . . n .90 

voice, with which to pay the d . Ode on Well. 156 

the whole dear d of alt you are. . Enid . 1168 

debtors, 
d's for our lives to you . . . Princess, ii. 334 

decod. 
Thro' sunny d's new and strange, Day-Dm. . 234 
Averill was a d and a half . . Aylmer's F. 82 
buried now seven d's deep . 11 . 442 

decay (s.) 
Upon the general d of faith . . The Epic . 1 8 
on one side a castle in d, . . Enid . . 245 

decay (verb.) 
The woods d. the woods d and fall, Tithonns . 1 
And all her stars d.' The Ringlet 10 

decay'd. 
old prowess were in aught d: . Elaine . 583 

decease. 
from the Queen's d she brought . Princess, iii. 70 
chains regret to his d. . . . JnA/e/u.xxix. 3 

deceased. 
when our summers have d. . . Aland, I. xviii. 14 

deceit. 
some coquettish d. . Maud, I. vi. 26,90 

then, perhaps, as a child of d . ir xiii. 30 

deceived. 
I never will be twice d. . . Tlic Letters 30 

December. 
The gloom of ten D's. . . . Will Water. 104 
meeting, made D June, . . fttAfem.xcvi. it 

decent, 
d not to fail In offices of . . Ulysses . 40 

decide. 

' l> not ere you pause. . . . Princess, iii. 140 

Eft it, '(death I against my father's 11 v. 288 

' D it here : why not ? . 11 . 300 

decided. 
beardless apple-arbiter J3 fairest. . Lucretius . 93 

decision. 

The intuitive dot a bright . . Isabel . .13 

kept watch, waiting d, . . . CEnent . 141 

Since, what dt if we fail, . . Princess, v. 312 

deck (s.) 
d s were dense with stately forms At. d' Arthur 196 
glimmer on the dewy d' s. . . In Mem. iv 1 _• 
man we lov'd was there on d, . \< cii. 41 

1 Ion a giant d . . . Aland, III 

And on the black d't laid her . Elaine 1141 

while he stood on d Waving, . En. Arden . 243 



9 6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

d's were shatter'd, Bullets fell . The Captain 45 
Over mast and d were scattered . it -47 

Spars were splinter'd ; d's were broken : 11 . 49 

On the d's as they were lying . tr -53 

deck (verb.) 
To d thy cradle, Eleanore . . Eleanore . 21 
flowers or leaves To ^the banquet, hi Mem. cvi. 6 
d it like the Queen's For richness, Elaine 1112 

to her pearls ; D her with these ; 11 . 1219 

deck'd. 

d her out For worship without end; Princess, vii. 153 
A life that all the Muses d . In MemAxxxiv. 45 
d her, as the loveliest, . . . Enid . .17 

declare. 
D when last Olivia came . . Talking O. 99 
Such as no language may d* . Two Voices 384 

declared, 
d that ancient ties Would still . Princess, ii. 245 

decli?te (s.) 
Looks thro' in his sad d . . Adeli?ie . 13 

dec li ?ie (verb.) 
d On a lower range of feelings . Locksley H. 43 
Sap dries up ; the plant d's . . Two Voices. 268 
Whatever way my da} T s d, . In Mem. lxxxiv. 41 
Darken'd watching a mother d . Maud, I. xix. 8 

declined. 
like some sick man d, . 
thou, as one that once d, 

decrease. 
now dilate, and now d, 



. Pal. of Art 155 
. In Mem. lxi. 5 



In Mem. xxviii. 10 



decreased. 
From heat to heat the day d. Marianain tlie S. 78 

decree. 
By shaping some august d . .To the Queen 33 
mould a mighty state's d's, . . In Mem. Ixiii. 11 

dedicate. 
I d,\ d, I consecrate with tears . Ded. of Idylls, 3 

Dee. 

Bala lake Fills all the sacred D. . Enid . 1778 

deed. 

a 12fe of shocks, Dangers and d's GEnoue . 161 
possession of man's mind and d. . Pal. of Art 209 
great d's as half-forgotten things . Lotos-E's. . 123 
serve his kind in ^and word ' Love thou thy la?id^etc. 86 
souls with talk of knightly d's . M. d' Arthur 19 
the Powers, who wait On noble d's, Godiva . 72 
Fruitful of further thought and d, Two Voices 144 
a noise of tongues and as ti . 206 

Day-Din. . 114 
Lady Clare 74 
Princess, iii., 226 
n . 237 

v. 310 



perish'd in their daring d's.' 

I am yours in word and in d. 

your great d's For issue, 

great d's carinot die ; 

on the highest Foam of men's d's 

In loveliness of perfect d's . 

Her secret meaning in her d's, 

What fame is left for human d's 

On songs, and d's, and lives 

true in word, and tried in d, 

Perplext in faith, but pure in d's it xcv, 

thro' our d's and make them pure, i» cxxx, 

Feeling from her mate the D. . Tlie Brook . 

Bright let it be with its blazon'd ^'.y, Ode 071 Well. 

far-sounded among men For noble oVs ? Enid 

grateful is the noise of noble d' s . 11 

knew my d's were known, . . 11 

love of God and men And noble d"s Vivien 

each incited each to noble d's . n 

the great d's Of Lancelot, . . Elaine 

almost overdo the d's Of Lancelot ; 11 

here and there a d Of prowess . Guinevere 

worship her by years of noble d's, ti 

hear high talk of noble d's . . 11 

for her good d's and her pure life, if 



In Mem. xxxvi. 

11 liv. 10 

it lxxii. 11 

v lxxvi. 3 

ii lxxxiv. 5 

9 

4 

95 

56 

. 428 

• 437 
1706 

• 263 
. 264 
. 82 
. 46S 

• 455 
. 47 2 
. 495 
. 685 



POEM. LrNH. 

Nor d's of gift, but gifts of grace . Sea Dreams i83 
d's yet live, the worst is yet . tt . 301 

thine the d's to be celebrated . Boadicea . 41 

deem, 
d this maid Might wear 
d this prize of ours is rashly . 
for I d you know full well . 



. Elaine 



• 239 
.1 . 540 

" . 686 

deem'd. 
d no mist of earth could dull . Ode to Mem. 38 

the peace, that I d no peace, . Maud, III. vi. 50 
wherein she afshelook'd her best, . Elaine . 903 

rfder death Was rather in the . 11 11 25 

had d he felt the tale Less . . En. Arden 712 
Things in an Aylmer d impossible Aylmer's F. 305 

deeming. 
Vivien d Merlin overborne . . Vivien . 649 
D our courtesy is the truest law, . Elaine . 708 

deep (adj.) 
Tho' d not fathomless, . . Ode to Mem. 34 

full and d In thy large eyes . Eleanore . 85 

So full, so d, so slow ... ti -95 

then, because his wound was d, . M. d' Arthur 5 
rain That makes thee broad and d ! Talking O. 280 
D as Hell I count his error. . The Captain 3 

deep (s.) 
drove The fragrant, glistening d's Arabian ISPs. 14 
coiled sleeps in the central d's . The Mermaid 24 
drives them to the d. . Pal. of Art 204 

The abysmal d's of Personality, . 11 . 223 

roaring d's and fiery sands, . . Lotos-E's. . 160 
wrought it, sitting in the d's . M. a" Arthur 105 

He heard the d behind him, . n , 184 

d Moans round with many voices. Ulysses . 55 
Drag inward from the d's, . . Princess, vii. 22 
From barren d's to conquer all 11 . 149 

heaves but with the heaving d. . In Mem. xi. 20 
stir the spirit's inner d's . . » xli. 10 

A higher height, a deeper d. . u lxii. 12 

we to draw From ^ to ^, . . 11 cii. 39 

landlike slept along the d. tt ■ 56 

rolls the d where grew the tree . ti cxxii. 1 

tumbled in the Godless d; . . 11 cxxiii. 12 

seek thee on the mystic d's . . 11 cxxiv. 14 

of the height, and Powers of the d, Maud, II. ii. 82 
the Black and the Baltic d, . . tt III. vi. 51 
Glimmer away to the lonely d, To F. D. Maurice '28 
a sudden wind across the d's, . Vivien . 50 

wild down above the windy d, . tt . 508 

either haven open'd on the d's, . En. Arden . 672 
in perilous places o'er a d: . . Sea Dreams n 
from out the boundless outer d . \\ .86 

the motion of the boundless d . it .89 

motion of the great d bore me on, it . 107 

To the waste d's together. ti . 231 

deep-asleep, 
d-a he seem'd, yet all awake . Lotos-Es. . 35 

deep-blue. 
Floods all the d-b gloom . . D.ofF. lVo;n.iS6 

deep-cliested. 
D-c music, and to this result. . T/ie Epic . 51 

deep-desired. 
on thy bosom [d-d relief!) . . Love and Duty 42 

deep-domed. 
as the d-d empyrean Rings . . Milton . 7 

deepen. 

d's on and up ! the gates Roll back, St Agnes' Eve 29 
Ay me, the sorrow d's down, . InMcm. xlviii. 14 
old rut would d year by year . Aylmer's F. 34 

deepened. 
battle if in its place, . . . Oriana . 51 

deepening. 
i/thro' the silent spheres, . Mariana in the S. 91 
D the courts of twilight . . Princess, Con. 113 
D thy voice with the^of the night, V. ofCautereta 2 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



97 



deep-hued. poem. line. 

many a d-h bell-like flower . . Eteiinore . 37 

deep-inrunning. 
sand and cliff and d-i cave, . . Sen Dreams. 17 

deeply-wounded. 
mythic Uther's d-w son . . Pal. of Art 105 

deep-meadow' d. 
lies D-m, happy, fair . . . M.d' A rthur 262 

deep-seated. 
D-s in our mystic frame, . . InMem.xxxri. 2 

deep-set. 
d-s windows, stain'd and traced . Pal. of Art 49 

deep-uddered. 
dewy-fresh, browsed by d-u kine, Gardener's D. 45 

To chase the d at five ; . . . Talking O. 52 

lie coverts of the d, . SirL.andQ.G. 21 

monstrous horns of elk and d, . Princess, Pro. it, 

shook the branches of the d, . » Con. 98 

Arthur's d. . . 7 'lie Brook . 133 

hat haunt a wound, or a! . Aylmer's F. 571 

cattle died, and d in wood, . . The Victim iS 

defacing. 
Defaming and d, till she left 



defame. 
These bonds that so d me : . 

defamed. 
D by every charlatan, . 



. Vivien . 653 
. Elaine 141 1 

. In Mem. ex. 23 



defaming. 
D and defacing, till she left . . Vivien . 653 

defeat. 
wish me victory or d, . . . Enid . . 929 
not dwell on that d of fame . . Guinevere . 621 

defect. 

each fulfils D in each, . . . Princess, vii. 286 

if doubt, and taints of bleod ; In Mem. fin. 4 

ur's rfof the rose, . . . Maud, I. ii. 3 

trust To make up that d: . . Elaine 1187 

was allow'd as part of his «/, . . Guinevere . 44 

defence. 
war would arise in d of the right, . Maud, III. v i . 19 

defend. 
thou might*st d The thesis . Two Voices 337 

And there d his marches ; . . Enid . 41,1737 

deferentially, 
{d With ncaring chair . . . Aylmer's F. 266 

defance. 
! 'Adown Gagclikc to man, . Princess, v. 1C9 
With message and it, went and came : " . 360 

With one smile of still it . . The Captain 59 

defiant. 
Sullen, d, pitying, wroth . . Aylmer's F. 492 

deficiency. 

Who'll weep for thy d> . Two Voices 39 

defied. 

i chafing at his own great self </, . Aylmer's F. 537 
define. 
Hold thou the good : d it well : . hi Mem. lii. 13 

defined. 
olation grows d. . . . InMem.xMv. 12 

1 deformed. 

Vext with unworthy madness, and d. Aylmer's F. 333 
defying. 
rink (/trouble . . . Will Water. 94 
dumb cry (/change . . In Metn.xdv.3j 

degrade. 
ihroncd races may d; . . In Mem.cxxvu. 7 

• re. 

by d's to fullness wrought ' You aikmevihy,' etc, 14 



. 



['OEM. LINE. 

all are changed by still d's, ' Love thou tlty land,' etc. 43 
thro' soft d's Subdue them . . Ulysses . 37 
What for order or (// . . . Vision of Sin 86 
More than is of man's d . . Ode on Well. 242 

deity. 

Such is Rome, and this her (/; . Boiidicea . 20 

will outlast thy 1) < D ? nay, . Lucretius . 72 

D false in human-amorous . n .90 

Delay (s.) 
Haste, half-sister to D. 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 96 

easy grace, No doubt, for slight (/, Princess, iv. 312 

dull the voyage was with long d's, En. Ardcn . 656 

Ah, the long d. .... The Window lyt 

delay (verb.) 
now (/not: take Excalibur . . M.d' Arthur 36 
tender ash d's To clothe herself, . Princess, iv. 88 
Delaying long, d no more. . . In Mem. l.\x.\ii. 4 
*Z> no longer, speak yc-ur wish . Elaine . 920 

delayest. 

D the sorrow in my blood, . . InMem.hcxxii.14 

delaying. 

D as the tender ash delays . . Princess, iv. 88 

new-year (/ long . . . In Mem. lxxxii. 2, 1 3 

D long, delay no more. . . 11 .4 

delayingly. 
yet she hcldhimon(/. . . En. A rden . 465 

delicacy. 
could not out of bashful (/; . . Enid . . 66 

delica te-handed. 
dilettante, D-h priest intone ; . Maud, I. viii, 11 

delicately. 
Most (/hour by hour . . . A Character 19 
Enid took a little d Enid . 1061 

delicious. 
made the air Of Life (/, . . Gardened 's D. 69 

Were not his words d, . . . Ed. Morris 71 

delicto. 
what's the Latin word '!—!) : . Walk.tothcM.ij 

delight (s.) 
So took echo with (/, rep.) . . The Owl, ii. 4 
(/, Life, anguish, death . . Arabian N's. 72 
Falling into a still d, . . . Eleiinore . 106 
1 die with my (/,.... 11 . 140 

piere'd thro' with tierce (/, . . Fatima . 34 
' I marvel if my still (/ . . . Pal. of Art 190 

?reat d and shuddering took hold MayQueen.m. 35 
knew not for (/ . . . . D.ifp. Worn. 169 
feedeth The senses with a still (/ Margaret . 17 
Thy sole (/ is, sitting still, . . The Blackbird va 
common mouth, So gross to express (/ Gardener's D.$$ 
drunk (/of battle with my peers, . Ulysses . 16 
tgue emotion of (/ . . Two Voices 361 
shape the song for your d . . Day-Dm. . 274 
chambers emptied of d: . . InMem.vm. 8 
day of my (/As pure . p xxiv. 1 

shower*d largess of (/, ... u xxix. 7 
what d's can equal those . . 11 .\li. 9 

Thy converse drew us with (/, . 11 cix. I 

J) a hundredfold accrue, . . u cxvi. 8 

Maud the (/of the village, . . Maud, 1. i. 70 

seems But an ashen-gray (/. . n vi. 22 

something Read with a boy's (/, . n vii. 10 

my D Had a sudden desire, . 11 xiv. 19 

have spread With such d . . ir xviiii. 26 

My bride to be, my evermore (/, . 11 -73 

Breaking up my dream of(/. . 11 xix. 2 

The d of early skies ... 11 II. iv. 25 

The </ of happy laughter, . . 11 .29 

The l/oflow replies. ... ir .30 

1 dear (/ . . . "III. vi. 1 s 

in extremity of (/, . Enid . 1068 

themselves with some insane (/, . Vivien . 683 

and fill'd her with (/ : . . . Elaine . 376 

delight (verb, 
in her web she still d's . , L. ofSlialatt, ii. 28 



9 8 



CONCORDANCE TO 



D our souls with talk of 
deals in that Which men ^in f 



POEM. LINE. 

M.d Arthur 19 
, Princess t iii. 200 



Sea Fairies 12 
The Merman 25 
The Mermaid 40 
D. of F. Worn. 1S3 
tr . 787 

Two Voices* 71 
The Daisy . 9 



delighted. 
!T> with the freshness and the sound. Ed. Morris 99 
I am all as well d, ... Maud, I. xx. 40 

delighieth. 
d to proleng Her low preamble . /W. of Art 173 

delirium. 
catch Her hand in wild 6?, . . Princess, vii. 78 

the Sun, Apollo, D. or of older . Lticretius . 125 

_Z? not the tasks of might ' Love thou thy land? etc. 13 
D me the blessed sacrament ; . StS. Stylites 215 
Thy tribute wave d, . . A Farewell 2 

IgnoranceZ^'-s-brawlingjudgments, Vivien . 515 

take This diamond, and d it, . Elaine . 545 

deliverer. 
and call'd them dear d's . . Princess, vi. 76 

delivering. 
D, that to me, by common voice . CEnone . 82 
D seal'd dispatches which the Head Princess, iv. 360 

dell. 
live-green heart of the d's 
call aloud in the dreamy d's, 
diamond-ledges that jut from the d's 
in falling thro' the d, 
splinter' d crags that wall the d 
furzy prickle fire the d's, 
How richly down the rocky d 

snowy d's in a golden air. . 11 . btf 

little d's of cowslip, fairy palms, . Aylmcr's F. 91 

delver. 
careful robins eye the d's toil, . Enid . 774, 1280 

demand (s.) 
make d of modern rhyme, . . To the Queen 11 

demand (verb.) 
king d An act unprofitable, . . M. d' Arthur 95 
sense of human will d's . In Mem. lxxxiv. 39 

D not thou a marriage lay ; . 11 Con. 2 

sent Her maiden to d it . . Enid . . 193 
maiden to d the name, . tr . 411 

demanded. 
^ who we were, And why we came? Princess, iii. 119 
then, d if her mother knew, . . ir iv. 214 

Was this d — if he yearn'd . . In Me77t. xx*xi. 3 
when the King d how she knew, . Elaine . 574 

demandi7ig. 
then to me d why? . . . The Epic . 29 
D, so to bring relief . . In Mem. lxxxiv. 6 

dejnigod. 
Where paced the D's of old, . Princess, iii. 325 

democrat. 
what care I, Aristocrat, d, . . Maud, I. x. 65 

de?non, 
Pallas from the brain Of D's 1 . InMem. cxiii. 13 

demo7istra turn, 
female hands With flawless d: . Princess, ii. 351 

demur. 

wroth and red, with fierce d: . Princess, v. 348 

den. 
lion roaring from his d . . . D.o/F. Wo7n. 222 
Trooping from their mouldy d's . VisiotiofSzn 171 

de7t ial. 
by d flush her babbling wells . Pri7icess, v. 324 

denied. 

closer prest, d\t not, . . . Princess, iv. 213 

she affirm'd not, or d: . _ . . 11 . 215 

'you never yet D my fancies — . Elaine 1105 



FOEM. LINE. 

^his heart his dearest wish, . . En. Arde7i . 333 
with us Father Philip ' he d; . 11 . 365 

de7iou7icing. 
like a Ghost's D judgment, . . Guinevere . 418 

de7tse. 
decks were d with stately forms . M. d' Arthur 196 
d as those Which hid the Holiest Ayh7iers F. 771 

de7iy. 
What! d it now? Nay, draw . StS. Stylites 203 
For that which all d them — . . Will Water. 46 
hold your own, d not hers to her, Princess^ vi. 162 
father, tender and true, D me not,' Elaine 1105 

would if ask'd d\t. . . . En. Ardeu . 44 

de7iyi7tg. 
D not these weather-beaten limbs StS. Stylites 19 

de7iyi7igly: 
How hard you look and how dl . Vivie7t . 187 

depart. 
craved a fair permission to d, . E7iid . . 40 

departed. 
cousin stole Upon us and d: . Ed. Morris 116 

James d vext with him and her.' . The Brook . no 
then d, hot in haste to join . E7iid . 1422 

watch'd it, and Sweeping for him ; E?i. Arden . 245 

departest. 
before thine answer given D, „ Titho7ius . 45 

departi72g. 
With frequent smile and nod d . E7tid . . 515 

deplore. 

Still mine, that cannot but d, l7iMe7n.\xxxYv.zog 

lay the man whom we d ? . . Ode on Well. 8 

Such was he whom we d. u .40 

deplori7ig. 

Matter enough for d, . . . 1865-1866 . 8 

depress'd. 

lips d as he were meek, . . A Cluxracter 25 

depth. 

springs of life, the d's of awe, . Two Voices 140 

d oi some divine despair . . Princess, iv. 22 

on the d's of death there swims . InMem. cvii. 11 

derive. 

D *s it not from what we have . In Me7U. Iiv. 3 

desce7id. 
d, and proffer these The brethren Pri7icess, vi. 54 

D below the golden hills, . l7iMei7i. lxxxiii. 28 

D, and touch, and enter ; .11 xcii. 13 

then my scorn might well d . .11 cxxvii. 21 

Would the happy Spirit d, . . Ma7td,ll.iv. 81 

desce7idant. 

On him their last d, Ayhner's F. 834 

desce7ided. 

The country-side d; . . . Amphion . 52 

D to the courts that lay . . Pri7ioess, iii. 4 

As we d following Hope, . . l7iMe7n.xx\\. n 
in her ancient suit again, And so d. Enid . . 771 

Then all d to the port, . . . E71. Arde7i . 443 

desc87idi7ig. 
angels rising and d met, . . Pal. of Art 143 
^theywere ware That all the decks M.d Arthur 1*95 
Once she lean'd on me, D ; . . Princess, iv. 9 
D, burst the great bronze valves, . ir vi. 59 

day, D, struck athwart the hall, . v . 344 

d met them at the gates, . . Enid . . 833 
Phantom sound of blows d, . . Boadicea . 25 

descefit. 
Smile at the claims of long d. . L.C. V.deVere $z 
might by a true d be untrue ; . Maud, I, xiii. 31 

descried. 
wall Of purple cliffs, aloof d: . Ode toMe77t. 54 

descry, 
d The stern black-bearded kings . D.ofF. Worn, nc 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



9? 



desert (merit.) poem. line. 

To one of less (/allows, . . To the Queen. 6 

partly conscious of my own d's, . Princess, iv. 286 

bowing at their own d's: . . Tlie Brook 128 

desert {waste.) 

that long d to the south. . . Falima . 14 

a din the mind, . . InMem. hcv. 6 

deserve. 
</That we this night should pluck Princess, iv. 394 
might that man not d of me, . 11 v. ioi 

deserved. 

Since we (/the name of friends, . In Mem. Ixiv. 9 

design. 

were wrought Two grand it's; . Princess, vii. 107 

A miracle of dt .... Maud, II. ii. 8 

rf'j Of his labour'd rampart-lines Ode on Well. 104 

I mo of their fierce d . . Elaine ,. 274 

d wherein they lost themselves, . " . 440 

vast d and purpose of the king. . Guinevere . 662 

design' d. 

Not less than truth d. . . . Pal. of Art 92 

Not less than life, d. . . . 11 . 128 

desire (s.) 

Visit my low (/.' .... Ode to Mem. 4 

many dreams Of high d. . . The Poet . 32 

yield consent to my d: . . . Miller's D. . 138 

loop down in their d ; . . Fathna . -yi 

d is but to pass to Him . . May Queen, iii.20 

ceased to be, with my (/of life. . 11 .43 

came to me that equall'd my d. . D.o/F. Worn. 230 

</'/, like fitful blasts of balm . Gardener 'sD. 67 

my (/, like all strongest hopes . n . 232 

in d . Ulysses . 30 

Which did accomplish their (/, . Two Voices 217 

bird t! r [one*/ ' Youmighthavewonfetc. 31 

lent my knee (/to kneel, . . Princess, u\. 177 

t In high </,... 11 . 263 

every hoof a knell to my d's . 11 iv. 156 

th' hi should'st fail from thy d . In Mem. iv. 6 

not a moth with vain (/ . . . 11 liii. 10 

utre of a world's d; . . 11 lxiii. 16 

If any vague ./ should rise, . . 11 Ixxix. 1 

I their least (/, . . 11 lxxxiii. 17 

born of love, the vague d . . n cix. 19 

.Submitting all things to (/. . . 11 cxiii. 8 

/'"fir ibly sweet; . 11 cxvi. 6 

friend, far off, my lost (/, . 11 exxviii. 1 

udden (/ . Maud, 1. xiv. 20 

"fthe . 11 xix. 48 

but the deathbed </ Spurn'd 11 -77 

beat with one d; . » III. vi. 49 

pleasure; Enid . 1062 

low d Not to feel lowest . Vivien . 676 

hi her a wild d, . . Elaine . 356 

you work against your own d; 11 . 1090 

court 1 1 i/ of fame, . Guinevere . 478 

the sit lit of low d's . Aylmer's F. 673 

ir own (/accomplish'd . " . 776 

Melt into stars far the land's d! . W.to Alexan. 21 

welcom uie the land's (/, 11 . 25 

and throstle, and have your d! . The Window 157 

desire (verb. ) 

1 (/the truth. 'OfoldsalFrecdom/clc.ij 

And I (/ to rest . . ' Come not, wlwn,' etc. 10 

not of those that men d, . . Princess, ii. 62 

(/ you mire Than growing boys . 11 iv. 437 

infuse . . 11 v. 230 

I . .In Mem. 1. 1 

tdmire, if a man . Maud, I. iv. 41 

1 !l women (/, . 11 x. 13 

'i '/it, We will not . Enid . . 310 

' hild to live, . Elaine 1089 

'Silence, Guinevere . 204 

in any way To vary. . . Tilhonus . 28 
She d' 1 the blest, . Wages . 8 

desired. 
•lie to be (/. . . L.C.V.deVerei 
d A certain miracle of symmetry, . Gardener sD. 10 



POEM. LINE. 

(/his name, and sent Her maiden. Enid . , 192 
now d the humbling of their best, 11 . 1485 

broke the bond which they d to break, Aylmer's F.-j-jZ 
Had what they d: . . . The Captain 38 

desiring. 
.Dwhat is mingled with past years, D. o/F. Worn. 2S2 

desk. 

clerk Brow-beats his d below. . To J. M. K. 12 

cast and balance at a (/, . . AudleyCt. . 43 

Erect behind a (/ of satin-wood, . Princess, ii. 90 

cramp the student at his d, . In Mem. exxvii. 1 8 

deskwork. 
a dozen years Of dust and d: . Sea Dreams 78 

desolate. 
Yourhouseisleftuntoyou(/.' Aylmer's F. 629 et Jiass. 
' My house is left unto me d.' . 11 . 721 

his one word was '(/;' 11 . 836 

desolation. 

her d came Upon her, . . . Enid . 1367 

Against the d's of the world. . Aylmer's F. 634 

No (/ but by sword and fire? . 11 . 748 

despair. 
Plagued her with sore d . . Pal. of Art 224 
nothing saw, for her d, . . 11 . 266 

lest I wither by d. . . . Locksley H. 98 

Whispered ' Listen to my d: . Ed. Gray . 22 

shake The midriff of (/with laughter, Princess, i. 193 
baser courses, children of d.' . 11 iii. 197 

from the depth of some divine d . 11 iv. 22 

becomes no man to nurse d, . 11 . 444 

If any calm, a calm (/: . . In Mem. xi. 16 

Can calm (/ and wild unrest . . 11 xvi. 2 

IJ of Hope, and earth of thee. . n lxxxiii. 16 

ever wann'd with (/,... Maud, I. i. 10 
yet it lighten'd my d ... 11 III. vi. 18 
A day of onsets of (/.' . . . Ode on Well. 124 

despaired. 
approach To save the life (/of, . En. A rden . 832 

despise. 

my flesh, which I d and hate, . St S. Stylites 57 

strong sons of the world d; . . The Brook . 3 

his pride too much d's me : . . Enid . . 464 

1 myself sometimes (/myself; .11.. 465 

despite. 
have done d and wrong To one . Elaine 1203 

despondence. 
Listless in all d,— read ; . . Aylmer's F. 534 

desfot. 
fire Where smoulder their dead d's ; Princess, v. 370 

destined. 
opposite Of all my heart had d . Guinevere . 488 

destiny. 
can be more wise than (/. . . D.o/F. Wom.gi 
heavy hands, The weight of d: . Princess, iv. 532 

destroy'd. 
not one life shall be d, . . . In Mem. liii. 6 
this (/him; for the wicked broth . Lucretius . 19 

destructive. 

was as a boy D, . . . Walk, to the M. 74 

detaching, 
d, fold by fold, From those still . Vision of Sin 51 

detail. 
Another kind of beauty in d . Princess, iv. 428 

detention. 
for the rest, Our own (/, why, . Princess, v. 206 

determined. 
Thus Enoch in his heart (/all : . En. A rden . 148 

detestable. 
might not rank with those (/ . Princess, v. 447 



CONCORDANCE TO 



75 



9 
194 



POEM. LINE. 

Beyond all grades d? . . . Gardeners D. 236 

developme?it. 
present The world with some d. . Two Voices 

device, 
ourd: wrought to the life ; . . Princess, iii 
All the d's blazon' d on the shield Elaine 
at teast with some dnot mine.' . ir 

devil. 

A glorious D, large in To . With Pal. of Art 5 

some brainless d enters in, . . Pal. of Art 203 

Quoth she, ' The D take the goose, The Goose . 55 

Vex'd with a morbid d\xi his blood Walk, to the '71/. 13 

his d goes with him, . . . 11 .20 

scarce meet For troops of d's, . StS.Stylites 4 

D's pluck'd my sleeve ; . . tr 168 

Comfort? comfort scorned of d's ! Locksley H. 75 

and the D may pipe to his own. . Maud, I. i. 76 

Knvy calls you D's son 

stirs the pulse With d's leaps, 

by his own stale d spurr'd, . 

True D's with no ear, . 

in tune With nothing but the D 

d in man, there is an angel too, 

A d rises in my heart, . 

Devil-born. 
You tell me, doubt is D-b. . 

devised. 
Lavaine to write as she d 
he wrote The letter she d ; . 
her lips, Who had d the letter, 

devising. 
moist and dry, d long, ' Love thou thy land/ etc. 38 
d their own daughter's death ! . Aylmer's F. 783 

devoir. 
weary of my service and d, . 

devolved. 
D his rounded periods. 

Devon. 
A tributary prince of D, 
I am Geraint Of D — . . ir 

was it for him she wept In D V . n 

devotion. 

gaze upon him With such a fixt d, Vivien 

dew. 

and there rain'd a ghastly d . 
crofts and pastures wet with d 
Dash'd together in blinding d: 
gracious d's Began to glisten 
blossom-fragrant slipt the heavy d's 
the d Dwelt in her eye; 



Vivien 317-47 
Guinevere . 518 
Aylmer's F. 290 
Sea Dreams 252 
" • 253 

ir . 267 

Sailor Boy . 24 
In Mem. xcv. 4 



Elaine 



Elaine 



1097 
1103 



. A Character 18 



Enid . 



410 
1247 



39 



. Locksley H. 123 
. Two Voices 14 
. Vision of Sin 42 
. Princess, ii. 295 

233 
120 



on these d's that drench the furze In Mem. xi. 6 

all our path was fresh with d, . 11 lxvii. 6 

tulips dash'd with fiery d, . . m lxxxii. 11 

sweep of scythe in morning d, . v lxxxviii. 18 

hack we come at fall of d . . tr Con. 100 

The d of their great labour, . . Enid . . 568 

than the sward with drops of d, , tr . 1538 

dewed, 

d with showery drops, . . . Lotos-E's. . 17 

dewdrop. 

when two d's on the petal shake . Princess, vii. 53 

dew-fed. 

in the moon Nightly d-f; . . Lotos-E's. . 75 

dew-impearled. 

d-i winds of dawn have kiss'd, . Ode to Mem. 14 

dewless. 

grass Is dry and d. Miller s D. 246 

dew-lit. 

those d-l eyes of thine, . . . Adeline . 47 

dewy-dark. 

lawn was d-d, And d-d aloft . CEnone . 47 



POEM. LINE. 

. Gardener's D. 45 



dewy-fresh. 
The fields between Are d-f 

dewy-gloo7ii ing. 
November dawns and d-g downs, En. Arde?i . 611 

dewy-tassell' d. 
green gleam of d-t trees : 
Thro' all the d-t wood, 



Princess, i. 93 
InMemAxxxv. 6 



dewy-warm. 
eyelids, growing d-w With kisses Tithoims . 58 

dexter. 
Eagle rising or, the Sun In ^chief; Vivien . 326 

diagonal. 
I moved as in a strange d, . . Princess, Con. 27 

dial. 
this high d, which my sorrow crowns St S. Stylites 94 

diamo7id. 
fillip'd at the d in her ear ; . . Godiva . 25 
bracelets of the d bright : . . Day-Djn. . 90 
For the great d in the d jousts . Elaine . 31 

since a d was the prize, . .if . . 33 

king, had on a crown Of d's, ?r . -47 

Lancelot won the d of the year, .11 . .69 

Now for the central d and the last u . . 74 

my love is more Than many d's* .it . .89 

make complete The tale of d's tr . .92 

unknown At Camelot for the d, . ir . . 191 

some one put this d in her hand, n 212 

And you shall win this d — . 11 . 227 

I hear, It is a fair large d, tr . . 228 

'A fair large d,' added plain ti 230 

the last d of the nameless king. ir 443 

take your prize The d ;' it 503 

i dme No d's! for God's love, 11 503 

take This d, and deliver it, . tr . . 545 

he took, And gave, the d: . .11 . . 550 

with his d, wearied of the quest, tr . 613 

with you ; the d also : here ! . .it . . 688 

love or not, A d is a d. 11 692 

hand to which he gave, The d, . " . . 699 

gave the d: she will render it; . ti . . 709 

with mine own hand give his d . tr . . 756 
'Ay, ay, the d: wit you well, .11.. 767 

saying * Your prize the d . tr . . 817 

tale Of King and Prince, the d sent tr . . 820 

laid the d in his open hand. . tr . 823 

The nine-years-fought-for d's : . tr . 1161 

What are these? Z>\y for me ! . tr . 1206 

add my d's to her pearls ; ti . 1218 

Was richer than these d's tr 1223 

flash' d, as it were, D's to meet them, ir . 1230 

diamon d-drift. 

showering wide Sleet of d-d . . VisionofSin 22 

dia mo7id-ledge. 
d-Vs that jut from the dells ; , . The Mermaid 40 

dia mond-plot. 
d-p's Of dark and bright. . . Arabian N's. 85 

Dia 7i. 
set a wrathful D's moon on flame, Pri7icess, vi. 348 

diaper*d. 
Engarlanded and ^With inwrought Arabia7iN's. 148 

Dictator. 
The mulberry-faced D's orgies . Lucretizis . 54 

die. 
The breezes pause and d, . . Clarzbel . 2 
death shall Falsehood^, 'Clear-headed f7'ie7id,' etc.16 
dare not ^and come to thee, . Oriana . 96 

D in their hearts for the love of me. The Mer7naid 30 
Live forgotten and ^forlorn.' Maria7ia t'71 theS. 60,72 
I (/with my delight, . . . E/eaJiore . 140 
My own sweet Alice, we must d . Miller's D. . 18 
may d the selfsame day. . . 11 . 24 

I watch'd the little circles d; . 11 . 74 

I should d an early death : . t. .90 

I will possess him or will d. . . Fatwia . 39 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

Grow, live, (/looking on his face, Fatima . 41 

nothcr Ida, harken ere I d GLnone2T,etpass. 

shall be alone until Yd. . . 11 . 190 

shadow all my soul, that I may d 11 . 238 

heavy on my eyelids : let me it. . 11 . 240 

I will not (/alone 11 242-53 

have found A new land, but I d.' . Pal. of Art 284 

save me lest I dV . . . . it \.~^ 

r so before the day I d. . MayQlteen,\\. 20 

tefore the snowdrop came . 11 iii. 4 

to Heaven and d among the stars. " . 40 

Waiting to see me d. . . . D.ofF.Wom.wz 

my arms Contented there to d! . " . 152 

I .. iuld be born and d. . 11 • 204 

tutiful a thing it was to d . . 11 . 231 

Old year, you must not d D.oftheO.Yeardctftass. 

half a mind to <r" with you, .11 .26 

Old year, if you must d .11 -27 

e him a, across the waste m . 30 

hands, before you d. .11 . 42 

ik out before you d. h -45 

see before I d The palms ' Yonaskmevihy' etc. 27 

re, or elsewhere, till I d, . M.d 'Arthur 154 

[ hath taken cold, and I shall d.' " . 166 

fear it is too late, and I shall d.' . 11 . 180 

'Arth iin: he cannot </.' 11 Eft. 24 

grandchild on my knees before I dz Dora . .11 

all thy martyrs a one death? . . St S. Slylites 49 

I d here, To-day, and whole years 11 . 5^ 

resile with thee till 1 (/.* if . 117 

phesy that I shall d to-night, 11 . 217 

the western stars, until I d. Ulysses . 61 

. . . Godiva . 23 

I wept, ' Tho' 1 should d, I know Two Voices 58 

once from dread of pain to d . " . 105 

itter me that I may tt f . 11 . 204 

simple as a tiling that d's. . 11 . 288 

idred summers*^ Fay-Dm. . 69 

The thick-set hazel d's; . . Wilt Water. 234 

now the Poet cannot </ ' You might have won,' etc. 13 

■heard within his tree, 11 11 . 32 

Tho' I should d to-night.' . . Lady Clare \i 

ut d's a man, . . Vistono/Sin 97 

»e will not d forlorn. . . n . 206 

mil slander d. . Princess, ii. 79 

'id Cyril . . 11 

, and let the topic d' . . " iii. 189 

like them well : but children d: . 11 . 236 

I deeds cannot d; ..." . 237 

ve, they d in yon rich sky . ■■ . 360 
follow up the worthiest till he d: . n iv. .}(<> 

f 1 martyr of our cause, />: . 11 . 485 
innumerous leaf and d's, 11 v. 13 

either she will d from want of care, " . 82 

ettled d.' . . . u . 307 

' She must weep or she will </.' . n . 535 

irm d ! . . 11 vi. 318 

my friend, I will not have thee d! n . 371 

I that I should d : . 11 vii. 85 

t. [ shall d to-night. . n . 134 

ere I d.' 11 . 135 

made to d; . In Mem. Pro. n 

all the ll's off . . 11 viii. 6 

1 may d. .11 -24 

in me : . . 11 xviii. 16 

. but endures with pain, 11 -17 

they too will d. « xxix. 16 

i heir mortal . n xxx. 22 

telling / . . . 11 xxxi. 7 

\ little patience ere I //; . it xxxiv, ia 
ir is there hope in dust:' tt xxxv. 4 

1 I to know that 1 shall </.' tt . 16 

from the distance d's . . 11 xxxviii. 3 

their petty cells and d. . » xlbc 13 

Vs, . 11 Ivi. 9 

t's, . 11 Ixi. 10 

never </, . . it Ixv. 15 

tnlight it's ; . 11 lxvi. io 

1 ' ut </.' . . " Ixxvii. 17 

1 ire to live or <l. . it batxxiv. 40 
very parting was to d. . 11 xcvi. 12 



1 IBM. LINE. 

I think once more he seems to d. In Mem. xcix 20 
Ring out, wild bells, and let him d. 11 cv. 4 

let the ape and tiger d. . - 11 cxvii. 28 

ready, thou, to d with him, . . 11 cxx. 2 

heavenly friend that canst not d, . 11 exxviii. 7 
I shall not lose thee tho' 1 d. . 11 exxix. 16 

Cheat and be cheated, and d : . Maud, I. i. 32 
dash myself down and d . it .54 

and of Honour that cannot d, . 11 v. 16 

I must tell her, or d . . 11 xvi. 34 

do accept my madness, and would d 11 xviii. 44-6 
Not d; but live a life of . . tt . 53 

so did I let my freshness d. . . 11 xix. 1 1 

To faint in his light, and to d. . 11 xxii. 12 
my ears, till I d, till Id. . . 11 II. i. 35 
comfort her tho' Id.. . ti ii. £3 

When thou shalt more than d. . 11 iii. 9 

for yourself, and howl, and d. . it v. 56 

And the shining daffodil d's, . 11 III. vi. 6 

hysterical mock-disease should d.' 11 • 33 

not to d a listener, I arose, . . The Brook . 163 
Thcir's but to do and d; . . I, t. Brigade 15 
shalt thou do, or thou shalt d.' . Enid . . 586 
cast it on the mixen that it d' 11 672 

liever by his dear hand had I d, . 11 . . 917 
if he d, why earth has earth enough 11 . 1403 

not look at wine until I d.' . . ti . 1515 

if 1 draw it, you will d.' . . Elaine . 512 

' I d already with it : draw — tt . 513 

in daily douht Whether to live or d, n . . 520 
And ridd'n away to dl ' . ,11. . 567 

' Ueing so very wilful you must d.' 11 . . 779 
not love mc : now then? must I </.' 11 . . 889 
half the night repeating, 'must \dV 11 . . 89s 
dtor want of one bold word.' tt 923 

I love you : let mc d.' . . .11 . . 926 
if death be sweeter, let me d. . 11 . 1006 
I follow, 1 follow ! lei me d.' . tt . 1012 

she shrilling, ' Let me dl' . . 11 . 1020 

I should but d the sooner ; . . n . 1092 

let me shrive me clean, and </.' . 11 . 1094 

letter in my hand A little ere I d, 11 . 1108 
do hold our Arthur cannot d, .11 . 1251 

knowing he should </a holy man. 11 . 1419 

help it from the death that cannot d, Guinevere . 66 
vast pity almost makes me d . v . 530 

let me hold my purpose till I </. . En. Arden . 876 
the living scandal that shall d — . AylmersF. 444 
wounded to the death that cannot d: 11 . 662 
what heart had he To d of? . . Sea Dreams 266 
after many a summer d's the swan Tithonus . 4 
happy men that have the power to d, ti . 70 

tie, but ah how soon to d ! Reguiescat . 5 
tears that Love can d. . . . Coquette, iii. 8 
i of going on, and not to d. . Wages . 10 
soul flies out and d's in the air.' . Lucretius . 270 
I may </ but the grass will grow. . The Window 109 

died. 

D round the bulbul as he sung ; . Arabian N's. 70 
Singing in her song she </, . L.o/S/ialott,\v. 35 
D the sound of royal cheer, . . 11 .48 

She d : she went to burning flame : The Sisters 7 
to Him that d for me. . . . May Queen, iii. 20 
The dim red morn had d, . . D.o/F. Worn. 61 
Many drew swords and d. . 11 . 95 

for such a face had boldly d,' . tt .98 

there 10 die ! And there he d: . 11 . 153 

I da Queen. The Roman soldier ii . i6t 

d To save her father's VOW ; . . 11 . 195 

the Egyptian: 'O, you tamely dl 11 . 258 

1 iii mere the wailing </ away. . M. d 'Arthur 27a 
into light, and (/into the shade ; . Gardener sV.ic/8 
hard words, and parted, and he d Dora . . 16 
and in harvest time he d. .11. . 53 

when William d, he d at peace 11 141 

like endless welcome, lived and d. Love and Duty&6 
face, that two hours since bath d ; Two I ones 24a 
twilight d into the dark. . . Day-Dm. . 188 
stowd when classic Canning d) . Will Water. iot 
old Earl's daughter dM my breast ; Lady Clare 25 



IC2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Then before her time she d. . . L. of Burleigh 88 
music touch'd the gates and d: . Vision of Sin 23 
When the years have d away.' . Poefs Song 16 
laid about them at their wills and d ; Princess, Pro. 31 
teaching him that d Of hemlock; . 11 iii. 285 

rock the snowy cradle till Id. . tf iv. 86 

Better have d and spilt our bones ir . 511 

My dream had never d . . . n vi. 1 

Ida has a heart' — just ere she d — if . 218 

d Of fright in far apartments. . if . 350 

holy Death ere Arthur d . . In Mem. lxxix. 2 
He that d in Holy Land . . it lxxxiii. 42 
* The dawn, the dawn,' and i/away ; it xciv. 61 
So many a summer since she d, . Maud, I. vi. 66 
old grand-father has lately d, 11 x. 5 

past in bridal white, And d to live, u xviii. 66 
he d at Florence, quite worn out, The Brook 



. Enid . 



Vivien- 



- 35 
1026 
1578 
1806 

- 566 
• 74o 

- 767 



Guinevere 



iin 
1129 
1297 
1315 



but, overtaken, d the death 

So d Earl Doorm by him he 

and the spiteful whisper d: . 

it lived with her : she d: 

his anger slowly d Within him, 

better have d Thrice than have ask'd >f 

the living smile D from his lips, . Elaine 

</the death In any knightly fashion n 

the littie bed on which Id. . n 

closed the hand upon it, and she d. n 

dreamt the damsel would have d . if 

this she would not, and she d.* 

and he d Kill'd in a tilt, 

till in time their Abbess d. 

that mysterious instinct wholly d. 

Surely the man had d of solitude. 

that I d Blessing her, 

my son that I d blessing him. 

That dimpling d into each other, . Aylmer's F. 

scandals that have lived and d, 

her dear Lord who d for all, 

thought I could have d to save it) 

musical note Swell' d up and d ; 

he d, and I could not weep — 

that I, too, then could have d : 

when the zoning eve has d . . Ona Mourner 21 

So think they d the people cried . The Victim 5 

cattle d, and deer in wood, . n .18 

first embrace had d Between them Lucretius . 3 

diest. 
shalt thou do or else thou d. 



En. Arden . 522 
11 . 622 

. S79 
. 886 



" - 443 

Sea Dreams 47 

11 . 130 

11 . 204 

Grandmother 72 

7 



. Enid 



. 580 



differ. 

Or do my peptics d ? . . Will Water. 80 

at most d as Heaven and Earth, . Vivien . 663 

difference. 
Might I not tell Of d, . . . Gardener* sD. 252 
thy peculiar d Is cancell'd . . Two Voices 41 
They have as many d's as we. . Princess, v. 173 
cleave the rift of d deeper yet ; . 11 . 291 

Not like to like, but like in d. . if vii. 262 

Ay me, the d I discern ! . . InMem.xxxix.2-L 
girl and boy, Sir, know their d's!' Aylmer's F. 274 
when some heat of </ sparkled out, "if . 705 

difficulty. 
With d in mild obedience . . Enid . . 953 
in days of d And pressure, . . En. Arden . 253 

diffused. 
Z> the shock thro* all my life, InMem.haodv. 55 

Thy God is far d in noble groves . Aylmer's F. 653 

diffusing. 
A central warmth d bliss . In Mem. lxxxiii. 6 

dig. 
builds the house, or d's the grave, In Mem. xxxvi. 14 
d t pick, open, find and read . Vivien . 510 

dilate. 
That now (/and now decrease, In Mem. xxviii. 10 
joyous to d, as toward the light. . Ay liner's F. 77 

dilating. 
wind of prophecy D on the future ; Princess, ii. 155 



dilation. 
her eye with slow dToll'd 

dilettante. 
snowy-banded, d, Delicate-handed Maud, I. viii. 10 

dim (adj.) 
heart is breaking, and my eyes are d, CEnone 
d with gazing on the pilot-stars. . Lotos-E's. 
Till all the paths were d, 
eyes are d with glorious tears, 
sung, tho' every eye was d, . 
Is d, or will be d, with weeds : 
I remain'd, whose hopes were d t 
all things ever d And dimmer, 
Myself would work eye d, . 
hall was d with steam of flesh : 
eye was d, hand tremulous ; . 
He saw not far : his eyes were d: T/ie Voyage 

dim (verb.) 
in hues to d The Titianic Flora. . Gardener' s D .166 

dim-gray. 
Now and then in the d-g dawn ; 

diminutive, 
babyisms, and dear d's, 

dim-lit. 
while he past the d-l woods, 

dim vi 'd. 
thro' the cloud that d her broke 

trust in things above Be </of sorrow, In Jllem. Ixxxiv. 10 
the sorrow d her sight, 

dimmer. 
all things ever dim And d, . 

dimple. 
the lightning laughters d 
dm. the dark of rushy coves, 
d's your transparent cheek, 

dimpled. 
laughter dm. his swarthy cheek ; 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, vi. 172 



3i 

I 3 2 

Talking O. . 298 

Two Voices . 151 

In Mem. xxx. 14 

11 Ixxii. 10 

u lxxxiv. 29 

h cxx. 3 

Enid , . 628 

» - 1451 

En. Arden . 241 

75 



Maud, I. xiv. 32 

Aylmer's F. 539 

Guinevere . 249 

Princess, vi. 264 
IfiMem^ 

Elaine 

In Mem. cxx. 



Lilian 
Ode to Mem. 
Margaret . 



. Will Water. 224 

. Princess, ii. 41 r 

Maud, I. xx. 25, 31 

11 . 34 



Ed. Morris 6% 

dimpling. 
knolls That d died into each other, Aylmer's F. 149 

dim-yellow. 
fair head in the d-y light, . . Enid . . 600 

din. 
groves within The wild-bird's d. . Poefs Mind 21 
The dust and ifand steam of town '.InMem. lxxxviii.8 
when the heart is full of d, . . if xciii. 13 

dine. 
have no scandal while you d, ToF. D. Maurice 17 
shall we fast, or d '? . . . Enid . 1339 

dinner. 
steam Of thirty- thousand d's. 
the bell For d, let us go !' . 
A grand political d 
A d, and then a dance . 

dinnerless. 
when I left your mowers d. . 
lusty mowers labouring d 

dint. 
Sharp-smitten with the d of armed . M. d Arthur ^190 
every*/ a sword had beaten in it, . Elaine . 19 

dinted. 
crush'd and (/into the ground, . Maud, I. i 7 

Diotima. 
beneath an emerald plane Sits D, Princess, iii. 285 

_ dif{s.) 

The d of certain strata to the North, 
the last d of the vanishing sail 

dip (verb.) 
prime swallow d's his wing, 
should not d His hand into thfe bag 
d's Her laurel in the wine, . 



Enid . 



1083 
1 100 



. Princess, iii. 154 
En. Arden 244 



Ed. Morris 145 

: Golden Year 70 

Will Water. 17 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



POEM. LINE. 

D forward under starry light, ' Move eastward; etc. 10 
(/Their wings in tears, and skim away. InMem.xWi. 15 
D down upon the northern shore, 11 Irani 1 

dipt. 
D down to sea and sands. . . Pal. of Art 32 
ere he (/the surface, rose an arm M.d' Arthur 143 
d And mix'd with shadows . Gardener's D. 133 
ever and anon D by itself . . A udley Ct. . 87 
a' and rose, And turn'd to look at her. Talking O. 131 
"A'hen I d into the future . Loc&sley If .15,119 
d in all That treats of whatsoever Princess, ii. 357 
d Beneath the satin dome . 11 iv. 12 

dearer being, all d In Angel instincts " vii. 301 
sleep till du>k is d in gray : . .In Mem. txvi. 12 
/in baths of hissing tears, . . 11 cwii. 23 
until they d below the downs. . Elaine . 395 

d Against the rush of the air . Aylmer's F. 85 

direct. 
Now over and now under, now d, Lucretius . 62 

dirt. 
these, tho' fed with careful d, . Amphion . 89 

disappear. 
black earth yawns : the mortal d's Ode on Well. 269 

disappeared. 
up the rocky pathway d, . Enid . 1092 

disarmed. 
The proud was half d of pride, . In if em. (XL. 6 
let him into lodging and d. . . Elaine . 171 

disarrayed. 
found, Half d as to her rest, . Enid . . 516 

dish 

bidding him D himself, and scatter Enid . 1646 

discern, 
d The roofs of Sumner-placc ! (rep.) TalkingO. 31 
Till a d's . . . L. of Burleigh qi 

Ay me, the difference I d! . In Mem. xxxix. 21 
I wake, and I d the truth 11 lxvii. 14 

discerned. 
into my inmost ring A pleasure I d, Talking O. 174 

discerning, 
d to fulfil This labour, . . . Ulysses . 36 

disclaimed. 
each D all knowledge of us : . Princess, iv. 210 

disclosed. 
D a fruit of pure Hesperian gold . CEnone . 65 

discomfort. 
this d he hath done the house.' . Elaine 1066 

disconsolate. 
the Robin piped D, . . . En. Arden . 678 

discontent. 
ik'd with d. . . . Talking O. no 

ie pulse of hope to d. . Two Voices 450 

muttering (/Cursed me and my flower. TlieFlmoer 7 

discord. 

«ul Of D race the risingwind. { '^f^.'* 68 

A monster then, a dream A d. . In Mem. Iv. 22 

: e d's dear to the musician Sea Dreams 230 

discos 

I grew d, Sir ; but since I knew . Princess, iii. 137 

discourse. 
I n such d we gain'd the garden rails, Princess, Con. 80 

discourtesy. 

I pray jron, use some rough d . Elaine . 968 

.'that he used. . . 11 . 982 

some ./Against my nature : . . 11 1294 

discover d. 

All precious things, d late, . . Day-Dm. . 701 

discovery. 

the d And newness of thine art .Ode to Mem. 87 



discredit. poem. line. 

heaven, how much I shall d him ! Enid . 
Far liefer than so much d him. 11 . 629 

discuss. 
We might d the Northern sin To F. D. Maurice 29 

discitss'd. 
d the farm, The fourfield system, A udley Ct. 32 
D his tutor, rough to common men, Princess, Pro. 114 
D a doubt and tost it to and fro : 11 ii. 422 

D the books to love or hate, In Mem. Ixxxviii. 34 

discussing. 
D how their courtship grew, . In Mem. Con. 97 

discussion. 

That from Z>".f lip may fall ' Love thou thy land,' elc.23 

disdain. 
my dis my reply. . . L.C. V. deVereaz 

with some d Answer* d the Princess Princess, iv. 43 
surprise and thrice as much dTum'jtl Enid . 557 

not with half d Hid under grace, . Elaine . 263 

disdained. 
Tolerant of what he half d . . Vivien . 34 

Perceiving that she was but half d, u . 33 

disease. 
sickening of a vague d, . L. C. V. de Vere 62 

Ring out old shapes of foul d; . In Mem. cv. 25 
A </, a hard mechanic ghost . . Maud, II. ii. 34 
like a new d, unknown to men, . Guinevere . 514 
wretched age — and worst d of all, Lucretius . 155 

diseased. 

thought my heart too far d ; . In Mem. Ix v. 1 

ours he swore were afl d. . . The I r oyage 76 

The land is sick, the people d, . The Victim 47 

disedge. 
served a little to d The sharpness. Enid . 1033 

disembarked. 
touching Breton sands, they d . Vivien . 51 

disgrace. 

hidden from the heart's d, . . Locksley H. 57 

Alone might hint of my d; . . Two Voices 360 

Heap'd on her terms of d, . . Maud, II. i. 14 

why, the greater their d! . . Aylmer's F. 384 

disguise. 

common light of smiles at our d . Princess, v. 261 

disgust. 
Sir Lancelot leant, in half </At love Elaine 1231 

dish. 
thrust the (/before her, crying, 
harpies miring every d 

dishelmed. 
saw me lying stark, D and mute, Princess, vi. 85 

dishonour. 

Doing (/to my clay.' . . . Two Voices. 102 

Becomes d to her race — ii . 255 

honour rooted in d stood, . . Elaine . S72 

dishonourable. 
Ungenerous, d, base, . . . Aylmer's F. 292 

dishorsed. 
each, </and drawing, lash'd at each Enid . . 563 

disjoint. 
Nor wielded axe (/,... Talking O. 262 

disk. 
studded wide With d's and tiars, . Arabian N's. 64 
with flames her (/of seed, . . In Mem. c. . 6 

disliuked. 
D with shrieks and laughter : . Princess, Pro. 70 
she (/herself at once and rose, . Vivien . 758 

dislodging. 

D pinnacle and parapet . . D. of F. Worn. ;G 

dismay d. 

Was there a man d? . . Lt. Brigade 10 



. Enid . 
. Lucretius 



1503 
159 



104 



CONCODRANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Talking O. 261 



dismember. 
May never saw d thee, 

dismiss* 

D me, and I prophesy your plan . Princess, iv. 335 
Your oath is broken : we dyou: . 11 . 341 

dismissal. 
spoke, and bowing waved D : . Princess, ii. 85 

dismissed, 
d in shame to live No wiser . . Princess, iv. 492 

dismoun ting, 

d like a man That skins . . Enid . . 941 

d, pick'd the lance That pleased him, u . 1028 

d on the sward They let the horses h . 1059 

at his side all pale D, loosed . n . 1360 

disobey. 

Deep harm to d, . . . . M. d' Arthur 93 

needs must d him for his good ; . Enid . . 984 

not to d her lord's behest, ti I2 99 

disorderly. 

P the women. Alone I stood . Princess, iv. 152 
from the high door streaming, brake D, Elaine 1338 

dispa ragemen t. 

with some prelude of d, . . TJie Epic . 49 

Flush'd slightly at the slight d . Elaine . 234 

silent smiles of slow d; . . Gtti?ievere . 15 

dispass ionate. 
Quiet, d, and cold, . . . A Character 28 

dispatch. 
Delivering sealed d'es which the . Princess, iv. 360 

dispell' d. 
I loved, and love d the fear . 



Miller's D. 89 

Gardener 'sE '.181 

P?'incess, vii. 273 

Elaine . 880 

, En. Arden . 377 



dispenser. 
drowsy hours, d's of all good, 

dispensing. 
D harvest, sowing the To-be, 

dispersed. 
D his resolution like a cloud. 
a plunge To the bottom, and d 

displaced. 
this false traitor have d his lord . G?tinevere . 214 

display d. 
D a splendid silk of foreign loom, Enid . 1535 

dispraise. 
hissing ^Because their natures are Maud, I. iv. 52 
In praise and in d the same, . . OdeonWell. 73 

disprinced. 
one rag, ^ffrom head to heel. . Princess, v. 29 

disproof. 
To make d of scorn, . . . Aylmer>s F. 446 

dispute (s.) 
breed D betwixt myself and mine : Princess, i. 156 
she took no part In our d: . . n Con.^ 30 

deep d, and graceful jest ; . hi Mem. lxxxiii. 24 

dispute (verb.) 
D the claims, arrange the . To F. D. Maurice 31 

disquiet. 
long d merged in rest. . . Two Voices 249 

disrobed. 
If gazing on divinity d . . . CEnone . 154 
D the glimmering statue . . Princess, Cou.ny 

disrooted. 
Whate'er I was D, what I am 



POEM. LINE. 

Lucretius . 115 



disruption. 
To make d in the Table Round 



Princess, ii. 202 
Guinevere . 18 



Eleduore 


132 


Poet's Mind 


30 


Dying- S-wan 


11 


Gardener 's D 


. <H 


Locksley H. 


S 


" 


84 


11 


1B1 


Day-Dm. . 


62 


Princess, iv. 


6} 


ti 


68 


II VI. 


67 


" 


96 


TI 


1 70 


hi Mem. xii. 


11 


II XXXV1U 


3 


11 XC1!. 


11 


II CX1V. 


6 


H CXV1. 


=i 


E7iid , 


250 




1023 


To J. S. . 


SS 


Dora . 


103 



dissecting. 
wayward modem mind D passion. Ed, Morris 88 

dissipated. 
For fear our solid aim be d . . Princess, iii. 249 



dissoluble. 
Gods Being atomic not be d, 

dissolution. 
nerves to rush Upon their d, Love and Duty 76 

dissolve, 
d the precious seal on a bond, . Maud, I. xix. 45 

dissolved, 
d the mystery Of folded sleep . D. o/F. Worn. 262 
now the whole round table is d M. d' Arthur 234 
D the riddle of the earth. . . Two Voices 170 
thereat the crowd Muttering, d: . Princess, iv. 502 

dissolvijig-ly. 
to all my frame D and slowly : . ~ 

distance. 
stands in the d yonder : 
blue peaks in the d rose, 
such a d from his youth in grief, . 
in the d overlooks the sandy 
a song from out the d . 
Not in vain the d beacons. . 
shows At d like a little wood 
A trumpet in the d pealing news . 
other rfand the hues Of promise ; 
but Blanche At d follow'd : . 
Rose from the d on her memory, . 
made No purple in the d, 
see the sails at d rise, . 
The purple from the d dies, . 
O, from the d of the abyss . 
The d takes a lovelier hue, . 
out of d might ensue 
like a clamour of the rooks At d . 
thunder of the huger fall At d 

distant. 
in her throat Her voice seem'd d . 
from the field, More and more d . 

distill'd. 
D from some worm-canker'd homily 

distilling: 
D odours on me as they went 

distinct. 
D with vivid stars inlaid, 
D in individualities 

distress. 
flow Of subtle-paced counsel in d . 
Small thought was there of life's d; 
utterly consumed with sharp d, 
then d'es came on him ; 
Who show'd a token of d? . 
No limit to his d; . 

distribute. 
Walk your dim cloister, and d dole 

disturb. 
Woman, d me not now at the last, 

disturbed. 
D me with the doubt 'if this were Princess, iv. 

disyoke. 
D their necks from custom, . 

dive. 
they shall d, and they shall run, . 
d below the wells of Death ? . 
d's In yonder greening gleam, 

dived. 
Uina hoard of tales . 

diverse. 
not undeveloped man, But d: 

divide, 
d the night with flying flame, 
these two parties still d the world — 
Eternal form shall still d 
D us not, be with me now, . 
of a mother d the shuddering night 
She seem'd to d in a dream . 



To J. M. K. 6 

Gardener'sD. 183 

A rabianN's. 90 
Princess, vii. 275 

Isabel . .21 
Ode to Mem. 37 
Lotos-E's. . 58 
Dora . • . 47 
In Mem.htx1rn.x-3 
Maud, II. v. 31 

Guinevere . 675 

En. Arden . 875 



Princess, ii. 127 

Locksley H. 169 

InMem.cm. 8 

11 cxiv. 13 

Princess, Pro. 29 

Princess, vii. 260 

D.ofF. Worn. 225 
-Walk, to the M.69 
In Mem. xlvi. 6 
11 cxxi. 10 
Maud, I. i. . 16 
11 III. vi. 10 



TEXNYSOJVS WORK'S. 



10; 



D's threefold to show the fruit 
scarce d it from her foolish dream : 

divided. 
rfquite The kingdom of her thought. 
/> in a graceful quiet . . 
Of shingle, and a walk d it . 

dividing. 
rfthe swift mind In act to throw 
the crowd d clove An advent 
Divil. 
blessed fealdswi'the /)'joan team. 

divine (adj.) 
Scarce of earth nor all d, 
You are not less d, 
That my youth was half d . 
Thou seemest human and d . 
known and unknown : human, d; 
the Teacher whom he held d. 

divine (verb.) 
A deeper tale my heart d's. . 

: meaning can d, 
She is not of us, as I d . 

divinely. 
D thro' all hindrance finds the man 

divinity. 
Saw no d in grass .... 
If gazing on d disrobed 
jift the woman's fall'n d 

division. 
in d of the records of the mind ? . 
' betwixt these two D smoulders . 



POEM. LINE. 

The Brook 73,208 
Enid . . 686 

Pal. of Art 227 
Gardener's D. 153 
En. Arden . 73S 

M.d' Arthur 60 
Princess, iv. 264 



N. Farmer. 


62 


A delate 


3 
13 


VisionofSin 
In Mem. Pro. 


tr cxxvui. 
Lucretius . 


5 
'3 



Two Voices 269 
L. of Burleigh 54 
Maud, II. v. 69 



Elaine 



■ 332 



A Character 8 
(Enoue . 1 54 
Princess, iii. 207 

Lochs ley H. 69 
Princess, iii. 62 



Ji~'p rce. 
D the Feeling from her mate the . The Brook . 95 

divorced. 
your plan, D from my experience, Princess, iv. 336 

doat. 

sisters That (/upon each To . With Pal. of A rt 1 1 

heart that d's on truer charms . L.C. V.de Vere 14 

dock'd. 

For which his gains were </, . . Sea Dreams 7 

doctor. 

hooded D's, . Princess, ii. 354 

then the Ifs I O to hear The D's I m . 399 

■ of a week !' says d; Grandmother n 



■' , abean an' agoan ; 
they knaws nowt, . 

tottler, lass. 
tat break rules for D, . 

doctrine. 
if we held the d sound . 



A'. Parmer. 



. hi Mem. Iii. 



dodged, 
d me with a long and loose account. Sea Dreams 145 

doe. 

Ronald brought a lily-white d. Lady Clare 3 

lily-white (/ Lord Ronald had brought 11 . 61 

follow'd up by a hundred airy d's Princess, vi. 71 

doff'd. 
I : ntil the grave churchwarden d . The Goose 
his lance aside, And d his helm : . Enid . 

do 7 . 
did not hear the (/ howl, mother, . BfayQueen,m, 31 
Love thou thy land,' etc. 85 
't and dove were cat audi/. Walk, to the AT. 50 
:tter than his d, . Locksley //. 50 
' '. he hunts in dreams. . 11 -79 

' the hall, amonghisrf'f Godiva . 17 
with p d's. .11 . 31 

. Day-Dm. . 136 
• r's d's ; Princess,} 
nd all the d's — " i. 1 ,1 

, his d's The Brook 



■ »9 
M44 



Ed. Morris . 5 
StS.Stytites 121 
Princess, iv. 544 

j 1 30 



Guinevere . 675 



LINK. 

advanced, Each growling like a d Enid . 1407 

lash you from them like a d; . Ayhner's F. 325 
d With inward yelp, and restless . Lucretius . 44 

doing. 
See here, my d: . 
their own d; this is none of mine 
With all its d's had and had not 

dole (lamentation.) 
that day there was d in Astolat . Elaine 

dole (pittance.) 
distribute d To poor sick people , 

dole (verb.) 
I mete and d Unequal laws . 

dome. 
beneath the d Of hollow boughs. 
Upon the mooned d's aloof . 
dipt Beneath the satin d . . 
Arno, and the (/Of Brunelleschi ; 
Thro' the d of the golden cross ; , 

domestic. 
Many a gallant gay d . 

dominion. 
D in the head and breast." . 
Think I may hold d sweet . 

doom (s.) 
Hard is my d and thine : 

miss'd the irreverent d ' You might have won ,' etc. 9 
lies and dreads his d. . . . Princess, vii. 139 
souls, the lesser lords of d. . . In Mem. cxi. 8 
batter'd with the shocks of d. . 11 cxvii. 

While I rose up against my d, . 11 exxi. 

I was cursing them and my d, . Maud, I xix. 
purpose of God, and the (/assign'd. 11 III. vi. 

Bellowing victory, bellowing d: . Ode on Well. 
own false d, That shadow of mistrust Enid . 
with that love which was her </. . Elaine 
into sanctuary, And bide my d.' . Guinevere 
that he scape the d of fire, . . ■■ 

weep for her, who drew him tohis<£' 11 
that I march to meet my d. . 11 

i/of treason and the flaming death, ■■ 
that my d'\s, I love thee still. . n 

I know not what mysterious d. . 11 

moving ghostlike to his d. . . 11 

in their eyes and faces read his d; En. Arden 
lonely d Came suddenly to an end. 11 

like the blast of d. Would shatter 



Ulysses 



Arabian X's. 41 
ir . 127 

Princess, iv. 13 
The Brook . 189 
Ode on Well. 61 



L. of Burleigh 47 

Two Voices 21 
Maud, I. xvi. 12 

. Love and Duty 53 



voice that calls D upon kings, 
Announced the coming d, 
Boanerges with his threats of d, 
thunder Roaring out their*/; 
struck the dateless d of kings, 

doom (verb. ) 
O Ringlet, I (/you to the flame. 

doomed. 
D them to the lash. 

doomsday. 
as grand as d and as grave : . 



24 

2 

51 

59 

66 

1096 

. 260 

. I2X 

• 345 

• 346 

• 447 

• 534 

• 555 

• 571 
- 599 

• 73 
. 627 
. 770 

. Ayhner's F. 742 
. Sea Dreams 22 
11 . 243 

. The Caf>iain 42 
. Lucretius . 233 

The Ringlet 50 

The Captain \i 



185 



Princess, i 

Doon (sec Bonny Doou. ) 

door, 
d's upon their hinges creak'd 
faces glimmer'd thro' the d's, 
costly d's flung open wide. . 
Right to the carven cedarn d's 
stand beside my father's </, . 
1 d and windows wide : 

no murmur at the d, 
Close the d, the shutters close, 

image seem'd to pass the d, Mariana in theS. 65, 74 
The very air about the d . . Miller's D. 103 
near this </you sat apart, 11 . 158 

guilt of blood is at your (/: . /,. C. / '. (/,• I 'ert 1 | 
from the threshold of the (/; . MayQuei 

thro' the (/ Hearing the holyorgan D. if p. Worn. 190 



Mariana . 62 

■ b6 

Arabian .\"s. 17 

. 115 

Ode to Mem. 57 

Deserted If. 3 

11 . 7 

9 



io6 



COXCORDAXCE TO 



POEM. LIXE. 

alone, And waiteth at the d . D.oftlieO . Year$i 
a new face at the d \ rep. ) . n -53 

thro' mine own d's Death did pass ; To y. S. . 19 
There strode a stranger to the d t . TJie Goose 3, 39 
d's, that bar The secret bridal Gardener's D. 243 

never more darken my d's again.' Dora . . 30 
The (/was off the latch : theypeep'd 11 . . 127 
■whined in lobbies, tapt at d's, Walk, to tlie M. 29 
I say, that time is at the d's . St S. Stylites 189 

same grand year is ever at the d's. Golden Year 73 
Every d is barrM with gold, . Locksley H. 100 

all Should keep within, d shut, . Godiva . 41 
feet that ran, and ds that clapt, . Day-Din. 
lifts me to the golden d's; . 
stalls are void, the d's are wide, 
One fix'd for ever at the d, . 
Bows before him at the d. 
that same fair creature at the d. 
Psyche's child to cast it from the d's ; 
came a little stir About the d's, . 
I will go and sit beside the d's, . 
He batter'd at the d's ; none came ; 
glance he caught Thro' open d's of Ida 
' Fling our d's wide ! all, all, 
bare Straight to the d's : to them the d's 
long-laid galleries past a hundred d's 
roll the torrent out of dusky d's : . 
D's, where my heart was (rep. cxviii. \) hiMem.ym.. 3 
creep At earliest morning to the d 
as if a d Were shut between me and 
enter in at lowly d's. 
They chatter'd trifles at the d: 
crowd that stream from yawning d's, 
Another name was on the d: 
out the d's where I was bred, 
Thou listenest to the closing d, 
touch with shade the bridal d's, . 
Look, a horse at the d, . . Maud, I. xii. 

even then I heard her close the d, 11 xviii. 11 

Did he stand at the diamond d . 11 II. ii. 16 

when they follow'd us from Philip's d, Tfie Brook 167 

456 
665 
1121 
1230 
5S3 



St Agnes' Eve 25 
Sir Galahad 31 
Will Water. 143 
L. of Burleigh 48 
Princess, ii. 308 
219 
355 
93 
327 

333 
3i4 
3 2 9 
354 
vil. 193 



11 XXVlll. 

ti xxxvi. 
11 lxviii. 

11 lxix. 
11 lxxxvi. 
ti cii. 
11 cxx. 

Con. 



Thro' open d's and hospitality ; . Enid 
Glanced at the d's or gambol'd down 11 
d, Push'd from without, drave . 11 
heard the wild Earl at the d, 11 

found a d And darkling felt . . Vivien 
entering barr d her d, . . . Elaine 

guide me to that palace, to the d's.' 11 . 1123 

two stood arm'd, and kept the d; 11 . 1240 

pointed to the damsel, and the d's. 11 . 1256 

people, from the high d streaming, 11 . 1337 

some doubtful noise of creaking d's, Guinevere . 72 

rode an armed warrior to the d's. 11 . 406 

long gallery from the outer d's ._ 11 . 410 

waiting by the d 's the warhorse neigh'd 11 .526 

lo, he sat on horseback at the d ! . 11 . 583 
Paus'd for a moment at an inner d, En. Arden . 277 

there At Annie's d he paus'd . n . 444 
A lily-avenue climbing to the d's; Ayhner'sF. 162 

Withdrawing by the counter d _ . 11 . 282 

Should I find you by my d's again 11 . 324 

heard the ponderous d Close, . 11 . 337 

the noise about their d's, 11 . 488 

oaken finials till he touch' d the d. 11 . 823 
Often they come to the d . . Grandmotlier 82 

jam the d's, and bear The keepers Lucre this . 169 

Doonti. 

D, whom his shaking vassals call'd, Enid . 1288 

may meet the horsemen of Earl D, 11 . 1341 

took him for a victim of Earl D, . 11 . 1373 

flying from the wrath of D 11 1379 

at the point of noon the huge Earl/?, 11 . 1385 

bore him to the naked hall of D, . 11 . 1418 

The huge Earl D with plunder . 11 . 1440 

Earl D Struck with a knife's haft 11 . 1447 

when Earl D had eaten all he would, 11 . 1457 

died Earl D by him he counted dead, n . 1578 

took you for a bandit knight of D; 11 . 1634 

mouthpiece of our King to D .11 . 1644 

lo the powers of D Are scatter'd' . n . 1649 



doorway. 
God shut the d's of his head. 
Dawn'd sometime thro' the d ? 



POEM. LINE. 

7nMem.xlw. 4 

Ay liner's F. 



68s 



Dora. 
at the farm abode William and D Dora 
D felt her uncle's will in all . 
Thought not of D . 
Now therefore look to D 
for his sake I bred His daughter D : 
1 1 cannot marry D ; {rep. ) . 
ways were harsh ; But D bore them 
D promised, being meek. 
D stored what little she could save, 
Then D went to Mary. 
Hard things of D. D came 
D took the child, and "went . 
Dare tell him D waited 
D would have risen and gone to him 
D cast her eyes upon the ground . 
wreath of flowers fell At D's feet . 
saw the boy Was not with D. 
now I come For D : take her back ; 
take D back And let all this be . 
D hid her face By Mary. 
D lived unmarried till her death. . 



• 34 

■ 44 

■ 5° 
54, i°8 

• 56 
. 69 

• 74 

■ 75 

• 87 

. IOI 

. no 

. 140 

. 351 

- i53 

. 167 



dorjnouse. 
blue woodlouse, and the plump d, T/te Window 51 

dot. 
one black (/against the verge . M.cC Arthur 271 

dote, 
d and pore on yonder cloud . . In Mem. xv. 16 

double. 
And then we drank it d; . . Will Water. 96 

dotible (verb.) 
d in and out the boles . . . Princess, iv. 243 

doubled. 
(/his own warmth against her lips, Gardener 1 'sD '.137 
Was wroth, and d up his hands, . Dora . . 23 
when his date D her own, . . Aylmer's F. 81 

doiibling. 
d all his master's vice of pride, . Enid . . 195 

doubt (s. ) 
Roof 'd the world with d and fear . Eleanore . 99 
dmy mother would not see ; . Miller's D. . 154 

In d and great perplexity, . . Pal. of Art 278 
empty breath Ajid rumours of a (/? M.d'Art/tur 100 
all my mind is clouded with a d) . 11 . 258 

Free space for every human d, . Two Voices 137 
are wrapt in d and dread, if . 266 

There must be answer to his d. 11 . 309 

d would rest, I dare not solve. . if . 313 

Discuss'd a (a? and tost it to and fro Princess, u. 422 
the d ' if this were she ' . . n iv. 198 

the weird seizure and the d: . 11 . 538 

spite of d's And sudden ghostly . 11 . 548 

Deeper than those weird d's . 11 vii. 36 

have heard Of your strange d's: . it . 316 

my d's are dead, My haunting sense 11 . 327 

spectral d which makes me cold, . hi Mem. xl. 19 
turn thee round resolve the d; . 11 xHii. 14 

Such as closed Grave d's . . u xlvii. 3 

slender shade of (/may flit, . . 11 .7 

Defects of d, and taints of blood ; 11 Uii. 4 

can my dream resolve the d: . ir lxvii. 12 

D and Death, 111 brethren, . . it lxxxv. n 

(/beside the portal waits, . . n xciii. 14 

d's that drive the coward back, . it xciv. 30 

Was cancell'd, stricken thro' with d. 11 . 44 

You tell me, d is Devil-born. . ir xcv. 4 

lives more faith in honest d . . v . .11 

fought his d's and gather'd strength 11 . . 13 
seize and throw the rf'^ of man ; . ir cviii. 6 

Our dearest faith : our ghastliest d; u cxxiii. 2 
like a child in d and fear : . . if . . 17 

Mix not memory with d, . . Ma?td,Il.iv. 57 
in daily (/Whether to live or die . Elaine . 519 
lying thus inactive, d and gloom. En. Arden . 113 



TEiVA T YSOX'S WORKS. 



107 



" 



Enid 



1814 
1212 



797 



Princess, iii. 255 
Vivien . 40 

. Miller's D. 41 

. Gardener's D. 88 

11 . 219 

Walk.totheM. 50 

'./</)• //. ig 
87 

Bg 

130 
206 

-5 



POEM. LINE. 

Such (/V and fears were common En. Arden . 517 
One spiritual d she did not soothe ? Aylmer's F, 704 
</'* and fears were all amiss, . The Ringlet 19 

doubt (verb.) 
I d not thro' the ages . . . Locksley H. 137 
By which he d's against the sense 1 Two Voices 285 
..' she said, ' We d not that.' Princess, Pro.167 
' D my word again ! ' he said . " 174 

can I d, who knew thee keen . In Mem. cxii. 5 
I d not what thou wouldst have been : 11 .8 

we d not that for one so true . Ode on Well. 255 

I j find, at some place Enid . . 218 
Henceforward I will rather die than d. 11 
nor did he d her more . . . ". • 
I rfnot that however changed . Elaine' 
To d her fairness were to want . 11 
To dhcr pureness were to want . 11 
D ye not the Gods have answered, Boadicea 

doubted. 
I d whether filial tenderness 

doubtful. 
I answer'd nothing, d in myself 
old man Tho' d, felt the flattery 

dove. 
oft I heard the tender d 

"f the well-contented d's. 
Like d's about a dovecote . 
lovc< ! d and d . 

changes on the bumish'd d ; 

un their milky Princess, ii 

lurtnur of the d, . n iii. 

.-.-. d's athwart the dusk, 11 iv. 

if d's in immemorial elms. " vii. 

somewhere, meek unconscious d. In litem, vi. 

as a d when 11 js . . 11 xii. 1 

flew i 1 uiht a summons 11 cii. 15 

a, my dear, . Maud, I. xxii. 61 

My own d with the tender eye? . " II, iv. 46 

I would not one of thine own d's, Lucretius . 68 

merry, the linnet and d . . The Window 156 

dovecote. 
Like doves about a d, . . . Gardener 'sD. 219 

draecole-doors. 
some one batters at the d-d's, . Princess, iv. 151 

dowa 
prudes for proctors, d's for deans, Princess.Pro. 141 

dower. 

your mortal (/Of pensive thought Margaret . 5 

dowered. 
D with the hate of hate, . . The Poet . 3 

down (hill.) 
the blissful d's and dales, . Sea Fairies 22 

the >■■ 1 red with palm, Lotos-Els. . 21 

1 d's . >i . 149 
went by (/, Lady Clare 59 

fire: . In Mem. Con.ioS 

mder d, . » . 109 

Till ovei tale . . 11 .no 

night is lair on the dewy d's, . Maud, III. vi. =; 

fa noble d. ToF.D.Mauricnb 

the windy deep. Vivien . 308 

. Elaine . 163 

until ■ 

d's, 
' With I i.mi !i ban 
like hollow of the (/. . „ 

in the leafy Innes behind the d, . <i 

'I, . . . 1, 

ding half the weary d, . « 

November dawns and dewy-glooming </".r,ii 
feathers.) 

ft folds, upon yielding d, . EUSnort . 28 

', . Pal. «I Art 122 

Stood withthe d on his beak, . Poet's Song . 11 



n . . 3-)5 

» • . 399.785 

En. Arden . 6 

.1 . 9 

11 . 97 

337 

;.' ) 

611 



LINE. 

Princess, iv. 14 
In Mem. lxvii. 1 

Maud, I. ii. 5 

Fatima . 27 

Arabian N's 147 



in broider'd d we sank Our elbows ; 
When in the d I sink my head, . 

dozoucast. 
her eyes were d, not to be seen) . 

down-deepening. 
D-d from swoon to swoon, . 

do^vji-drooped. 
D-d, in many a floating fold, 

down-dropt. 
Eyes not d-d nor overbright, . Isabel . . 1 

With d-d eyes I sat alone, . . CEnoue . 55 

downfall. 

'tween the spring and (/of the light, StS.Stylitcs io3 

down-glancing. 
a spear D-g lamed the charger, . Elaine . 487 

down-lapsing. 
by d-l thought Stream'd onward, D. ofF. Worn. 49 

doivn-st reaming. 
dread sweep of the d-s seas : . En. Arden . 55 

doivry. 
Large dowries doth the raptur'd . Ode to Mem. 72 

doy (die.) 
gin I mun d I mun d . . . N. Farmer 64-8 

doze. 

Fell in a d; and half-awake I heard The Epic . 13 

half in d I seemed To float about . Princess, i. 242 

Did I hear it half in a d . . Maud,l.\\\. 1 

I n a wakeful d I sorrow . . 11 II. iv. 26 

dozed. 
the pimpernel don the lea ; . . Maud,\.xxn. 48 
rfawhile herself, but overtoil'd . Enid . 122s 
Miriam watch'd and (/at intervals, En. Arden . 908 

dozing. 
Lay, din the vale of A valon, . Pal. of Art 107 

draff. 
chaff and (/, much better burnt.' . The Epic . 40 

drag. 

will have weight to (/thee down. . Locksley II. 48 

poor Psyche whom she d's in low.' Princess, iii. 87 

(/youdown, and some great Nemesis 11 vi. 158 

d's me down From my fixt height n . 288 

black cloud D inward from the deeps 11 vii. 22 

seem to keep her up but (/her down — 11 . 254 

onward d's a labouring breast, . In Mem. xv. 18 

And that d's down his life : . . Sea Dreams 173 

dragged, 
d her to the college tower . . Walk. to theM.it 

<t my brains for such a song, . Princess, iv. 136 

madden'd beach (/down by the . Maud, I. iii. 12 

by f.irce they (/him to the King. . Vivien . 490 

He (/ his eyebrow bushes down, . M . 656 

What Roman would be (/in triumph Lucretius . 231 

dragging. 
Grimy nakedness (/his trucks 
a dream Of (/ down his enemy 

dragon. 
golden gorge of d's spouted forth . 
catch a d in a cherry net, 
D's of the prime That tare . 
to his cr Iden (/ clung, . 

the (/writhed in gold 
behind him crept Two d's gilded . 
The Z 1 of the great Pendra 
the golden (/clung Of Britain ; 
A gilded (/, also, fur the babes. 

Dragon (Inn Sign, 
At the D on the heath I 

dragon-fly. 
' To-day I saw the (/-/ . 
glancing like a df In summer suit 



Maud, I. x. 
Elaine 



Pal. of Art 23 

Princess, v. 162 

In Mem. Iv. 22 

Elaine . 433 

ii . . 434 

• +36 
Guiin-crey)$, 592 

• 589 
En. Arden . 536 

Vision of .Sin 72 



Two I 
Enid . 



8 
172 



ioS 



CONCORDANCE TO 



drain (s.) poem. line. 

sucking up the- d's, . . . Princess, v. 514 

drain (verb.) 
a lip to d thy trouble dry. . . Locksley H. 88 
d's The chalice of the grapes of God ; In Mem. x. 15 

drained, 
Ida stood nor spoke, d of her force Princess, vi. 249 
d My capabilities of love ; . InJlfem.lxxxiv.il 

scheme that had left us flaccid and d. Maud, I. i. 20 
flowing, d their force. . . . Enid . . 569 
hurt that d her dear lord's life. . ir . 1365 

drank. 
d the Libyan Sun to sleep, . 
The butler d, the steward scrawl'd, 
d the gale That blown about the . 
Nor ever d the inviolate spring 
d, and loyally d to him. 
D till he jested with all ease, 
then you d And knew no more, . 
a' The magic cup that fill'd itself. 
d and past it ; till at length the . 
D the large air, and saw, 
Sat at his table : d his costly wines 
^ himself into his grave. 
There they d in cups of emerald, . 



D.ofF. Worn. 145 

Day-Dm. . 142 

Princess, iii. 104 

. In AIem.lxxxix.2 

. The Daisy . 24 

. Enid . 1 139 

. Vivien . 125 

Aylmers F. 142 

11 . 408 

. Sea Dreams 34 

* 74 

Grandmother 6 

Boadicea . 61 



. Princess, ii. 


94 


. Elednore 


13Q 


. Two Voices 


35° 


. SirL.audQ 


G. q 


. Princess, ii. 


233 


IP VI. 


260 


. hi Mem. vi. 


II 


. Princess, v. 


5o6 


. Enid . 


■ 935 


II 


1122 


. Vivien 


. 50 


e Elaine 


• 4Q7 


s 11 


. 886 



draped. 
sweet sculpture </from head to foot, Princess, v. 

drapery. 
a child, In shining draperies 

dr aiight. 
delirious d's of warmest life. 
Some d of Lethe might await 
From d's of balmy air. . 
mix the foaming d Of fever, 
you might mix his d with death, . 
ere half thy d be done, 

drave. 
I d Among the thickest 
D the long spear a cubit thro* 
door, Push'd from without, d 
the boat D with a sudden wind 
d his kith and kin And all the Table 
afher ere her time across the fields 

draw. 
mountain d's it from heaven above Poet's Mind 32 
d itself to what it was before ; . Elednore . 94 
seas d backward from the land . Pal. of Art 251 
her stately stature d's ; . . . D.ofF. Worn. 102 
what main-currents d the ' Love thou thy land,' 'etc. 21 
* My end d's nigh : 'tis time that M. d' Arthur 163 
d's The greater to the lesser, . Gardener's D. 9 
end d's nigh ; I hope my end d's . StS. Stylites 35 
deny it now? Nay, d, d, d nigh. . 11 . 204 

D's different threads, and late and Two Voices 179 
d's the veil from hidden worth. . Day-Dm. . 104 
D me, thy bride, a glittering star, St Agnes' Eve 23 
d's me down into the common day? Will Water. 153 
what mother's blood You d from, 
the moon may d the sea ; * . 
d The sting from pain ; . 
t^him home to those that mourn 
scarce endure to d the breath, 
d's near the birth of Christ : (ciii. 
D forth the cheerful day from night 
birds the charming serpent d's, 
D down yEonian hills, . 
d The deepest measure from the . 
tease her till the day d's by : 
virtue such as d's A faithful answer 
we to d From deep to deep, 
To d, to sheathe a useless sword, 
they must go, the time d's on, 
A soul shall d from out the vast . 11 . 123 

undercurrentwoeThatseemsto^ — Maud,\. xviii. 84 
d them all along, and flow . . The Brook . 63 
faiFd to d The quiet night . . Enid . . 531 
as the worm d's in the wiLher'd leaf 11 _ . 1481 

to Sir Lavaine, V the lance-head:' Elaine . 510 



Princess, v. 


395 


II VI. 


364 


II vu. 


48 


In Mem. ix. 


5 


If XX. 


IS 


) 11 xxviii. 


1 


t : 11 xxx. 


30 


II XXXIV. 


14 


IF XXXV. 


11 


ir xlvii. 


11 


it lix. 


14 


r 11 Ixxxiv. 


13 


tl cu. 


38 


II cxxvn. 


13 


11 Con. 


89 



POEM. LINE. 

' I dread me, if I d it, you will die.' Elaine . 512 
' I die already with it, d — D' . 11 . 513 

I will d me into sanctuary, . . Guinevere . 120 
but held off to d him on ; . . En. Arden . 473 
hunters round a hunted creature d Aylmer's F. 495 
D toward the long frost . . A Dedication n 

yet he d's Nearer and nearer, . Lucretius . 191 

drawing. 
D into his narrow earthen um, . Ode to Mem. 61 
D nigh Half- whisper' d in his ear . OEnone . 18 r 

bright river d slowly ; His waters . Lotos-E's. . 137 
o'er him, d it, the winter moon, . M.d' Arthur 53 
spoke King Arthur, d thicker breath : 1. . 148 
newer knowledge, d nigh, . . Day-Dm. . 71 
slowly d near, A vapour heavy, . Vision of Sin 52 
now the day was d on, . . In Mem.lxxxm. 10 
each, dishorsed and d, lashed at each Enid . 563 
d foul ensample from fair names, . Guinevere . 4S6 

drawn. 
thro' the garden I was d — . . Arabian N's.100 
hast d of fairest Or boldest since . Ode to Mem. 89 
all night it is ever d Poet's Mind 28 

D from each other mellow-deep ; Eleanore . 67 
from pine to pine, And loiters, slowly d. (Enone 5 
dew, D from the spirit . . . To J. S. . 38 
dusky highway near and nearer d, Locksley H. 113 



Sir Galahad 17 

Princess, v. 347 

m vii. 114 

In Mem. lxvi. 13 

If lxxx. 12 

n lxxxviii. 21 



all my heart is d above, 
reasons d from age and state, 
foreheads d in Roman scowls 
then I know the mist is d 
might have d from after-heat. 

bliss, when all in circle d . 
silvery haze of summer d ; . . 11 xciv. 4 
boat is d upon the shore ; . . if cxx. 6 
beheld The death-white curtain d; Maud,l.xiv. 34 
souls the old serpent long had d . Enid . 1480 
cloth of gold D to her waist, . Elaine 1152 
till */thro' either chasm, . . En. Arden . 671 
body that never had d a breath. . Grandmother 62 
twilight slowly downward d, . The Voyage 22 

dread (s.) 

Deep rfand loathing of her solitude Pal. of Art 229 

once from d of pain to die. . . Two Voices 105 

things are wrapt in doubt and d, . 11 . 266 

in d To hear my father's clamour Princess, i. 103 

am I sick of a jealous d? . . Bland, I. x. 1 

dream of her beauty with tender d, 11 xvi. 14 

dread (verb.) 
might I d that you, With only Fame Princess, iii. 225 

1 d his wildness, and the chances 11 iv. 224 
lies and d's his doom. . . . 11 vii. 139 
No inner vileness that we d ? . In Mem. 1. . 4 
rather d the loss of use than fame ; Vivien . 369 
'I dme, if I draw it, you will die.' Elaine . 512 

dreaded. 
he, she d most, bare down upon him, Enid 1005 

dream (s.) 
sweet d's softer than unbroken rest Ode to Mem. 29 
flow'd upon the soul in many d's . The Poet . 31 
shake All evil d's of power— . " -47 

Dreaming, she knew it was a d: Mariana in theS. 49 
Before I dream'd that pleasant d— Miller's D. 46 
like one that hath a weary d. . Lotos-E's. . 6 
thick with sighs As in a d. . D. o/E. Worn. 
The captain of my d's Ruled . 11 

Into that wondrous track of d's . 11 

But no two d's are like 



no 
263 
11 . 279 

11 . 280 

, ( 'OfoldsatFree- 
bnght our days and light our d s, -j J dom , gtc 22 

Black-stoled, black-hooded.likeaoT— M.d'Arthunqi 
when d's Begin to feel the truth 11 Ep. 18 

sweeter than the d Dream'd by a Gardener's D. 70 
The pilot of the darkness and the d A udley Ct. 71 
give to light on such a dV . . Ed. Morris 58 
Should it cross thy d's, . Love and Duty 89 

Like a dog, he hunts in d's, . Locksley H. 79 

Fool, again the d, the fancy 1 11 173 



T£X.\'ySO.V'S WORK'S. 



lO) 



POEM. LINE. 

said the voice, 'thy d was good, . Two Voices 157 
did not dream it was a d ; " . 213 

men Forget the d that happens then ir . 353 

Like glimpses of forgotten d's— . <• . 381 

' I talk,' said he, ' Not with thy d's. « . 386 

whose odours haunt my d's; .Sir Galahad 68 
But, as in d' s, 1 could not. . . Vision 0/ Sin 57 
like shadows in a d— . . . Princess, Pro.222 
truly, waking d's were, more or less, 11 i. 12 

feel myself the shadow of a d. . 11 . 18 

read My sickness down to happy d's? 11 ii. 235 

her, who rapt in glorious d's, . ir . 419 

I myself the shadow of a d, . . " iii. 172 

d our d's : perhaps he mixt 11 _ . 204 

I found My boyish d involved . " iv. 430 

. im myself the shadow of a d: 11 v. 470 

seem'd a d, I dream'd Of lighting. » . 481 

and in my d I glanced aside, . » . 496 

make my d All that I would. . 11 . 508 

d and truth Flow'd from me ; 11 . 530 

My d had never died ... " vi. 1 

lonely listenings to my mutterM d, 11 vii. 95 
what [ think you, some ssveet d, . 11 . 130 

if a d. Sweet d, be perfect. " . 133 

A d That once was mine ! " . 290 

with as wise a d As some of theirs — tt Con. 69 
wildest d's Are but the needful . " -73 

ring him: we have idle d's: In Mem. x. 9 
I h>t suffer in a d; ... 11 xiii. 14 

d can hit the mood Of Love " xlvi. 11 

ns my d: but what am I 1 . 11 liii. 17 

Nature lends such evil d's? . 11 liv. 6 

aster then, a d, A discord. . <• Iv. 21 

feels, as in a pensive d, . . 11 Ixiii. 17 

ny d resolve the doubt : . " l.wii. 12 

■ne Socratic d; . . nlxxxviii. 36 

dream my d, and hold it true ; . m exxii. 10 

Id, (dream a d of good, . iicxxviii. 11 

What is she now? My a'* are bad. Maud, I. i. 73 
warm in the heart of my d's, . 11 vi. iS 

in d's to the chink of his pence, 11 x. 43 

nig up iny d o( delight. . 11 xix. 2 

My d f do I dream <»f bliss? .11 .3 

Half in (/V 1 sorrow after . . 11 II. iv. 24 

And I wake, my d is lied ; . . 11 .51 

in a d from a band of the blest, . 11 III. vi, 10 

was but a (/ yet it yielded a dear 11 .15 

tbo' but in a d, upon eyes so fair, 11 . 16 

but a (/, yet it lighten'd my despair i» . 18 

a glimmering strangeness in his d. The Brook . 216 

all men else their nobler d's forget, Ode on Well. 152 

.■-.irrior in his d's ; Enid . 72 

late into the morn, Lost in sweet d's, 11 . 158 

All overshadowed by the foolish </, it . 675 

scarce divide il lish</; 11 . 686 

hear you even in his d's' 11 1278 

in the jumbled rubbish of a d, . Vivien . 197 

tiny-trumpeting gnat can break our d Elaine . 138 

I I him in my d's Gaunt . n . 759 

■ d Of dragging down his enemy . u . 809 

in il An awful*/; Guinevere 76 

'in its a vision or a d, . Jin. Arden . 353 

teeth that ground As in a dreadful d,Ay liner's F. 329 

After an angry d this kindlier glow 11 . 411 

1 d The father 11 . 5J7 

. Sea Dreams 84 

'That was then your d,' she said, i> . 102 

\ I tee My (/was Life; . . 11 . 133 

you made and broke your d: . u . 139 

A trifle makes a d, a trifle breaks.' o . 140 

! the woman in my d. . n . 143 

But will you hear my d, ■■ . 198 

ved In her strange d, : 11 . 223 

11 what arc</\f ? 11 . 239 

ih to make your </: . 11 . 246 

in a 1 pleasant kind of a d. . . Grandmother Zt 

white-hair'. I I linglikearf Tithonus . 8 

quiet i/of life this hour may cease. Requiescat . 6 

what d's, ye holy Gods, what d's ! Lucretius . 33 

I after d's, . . •• .34 

d's that come Just ere the waking : 11 .35 



POEM. LINE. 

that was mine, my d, I knew it — Lucretius . 43 
thought my d would show to me, 11 . 51 

dream (verb. ) 

sweet it was to d of Father-land, . Lotos-Els. . 39 

To d and d, like yonder amber light •• . 102 
by prayer Than this world d's of. . M. d' Arthur 248 

Ellen Aubrey, sleep, and*/ of me: Audley Ct. 61 
haply </ her arm is mine. . . 11 .63 

Ellen Aubrey, love, and d of me.' » . 72 
as much as this — Or else I d— . St S. Slyliles 92 

She sleeps, nor d's, but ever dwells Day-Dm. . 99 
D's over lake and lawn, and isles . Vision of Sin n 

Indeed, We d not of him : . . Princess, ii. 45 

' Dare we dot that,' 1 ask'd, . 11 iii. 280 

but to dour maids should ape . 11 . 292 

To d myself the shadow of a dream: 11 y. 470 

To </thy cause embraced in mine, 11 vi. 183 

made me d I rank'd with him. . In Mem. xli. 4 

Nor can I d of thee as dead : . >< lxvii. 4 

rather </that there, A treble darkness, 11 xcvii. 12 

dot human love and truth, . . 11 cxvii. 3 

d my dream, and hold it true ; . 11 exxii. 10 

Behold, I d a dream of good, . n exxviii. n 

Did I d it an hour ago, . . Maud, I. vii. 3 

dot her beauty with tender dread, 11 xvi. 14 

My dream'/ do I dot bliss? . . 11 xix. 3 

Perchance, to (/you still beside me. The Daisy . 107 

(/she could be guilty of foul act, . Enid . . 120 

full oft shall d 1 see my princess, . 11 . . 751 

' Man d's of Fame while woman . Vivien . 310 

because you d they babble of you.' 11 . 540 

wholly true to d untruth in thee, . Guinevere . 537 

Let no man d but that I love . 11 . 556 

Let no man (/but that he loves . 11 . 666 

to (/ That Love could bind them . Aylmer's F. 40 

D in the sliding tides. . . . Requiescat . 4 

dreamed. 
Before I d that pleasant dream — . Miller's D. . 46 
the dream D by a happy man, . Gardener sD. 71 
In midst of knowledge, (/not yet. Two Voices 90 
I too d, until at last . . . Day-Dm. . 9 
t'dadream, I (/Of fighting. Princess, v. 481 
1 (/there would be Spring no more, ZnMem.lxvuL 1 
I (/a vision of the dead . . 11 cii. 3 

her smile were all that I d, . . Maud, I. vi. 37,93 
maiden (/That some one put this . Elaine . six 

had not d she was so beautiful. . 11 . . 352 
(/my knight the greatest knight 11 664 

' And if / (/,' said Gawain, . . 11 . . 665 
if she slept, she d An awful dream ; Guinevere . 75 
such a feast As never man had (/; ir . 262 

and as yet no sin was d,\ » . 385 

' I d Of such a tide swelling. . Sea Dreams 84 
I (/that still The motion . . 11 . 106 

having </ Of that same coast. . 11 . 200 

such as that you d about, . . 11 248 

dreamer. 

we forward: d's both : . . Golden Year 66 

Much less this d, deaf and blind, . Two Voices 175 

in the Northern d's heavens, . Aylmer's F. 161 

dreaming, 
knew it was a dream : MarianaintlieS.i<y 
A glorious child, (/alone, . . EleSnore . 27 
a* on your damask cheek, . . Day-Dm. . 3 
and, behind . . •■ .7 

For pastime. (/ of the sky ; . . InMemAxv, 14 
how should England (/ of his sons Did, of Idylls 30 
dot her love For Lancelot. . . Enid . . 158 
wrathful, petulant, D some rival, Lucretius . 15 

dreamt. 

(/herself was such a faded form . Enid . . 654 

(/ Of some vast charm concluded . Vivien . 361 

(/ the damsel would have died, . Elaine 

drea ry. 

She only said, ' My life is </, rep.) Mariana . 9 



irtgs. 



D of life, and Ices of man : 



Vision of Sin 205 



CONCORDANCE TO 



drench, poem. line. 

stoop'd To d his dark locks . . Princess, iv. 169 
on these dews that d the furze, . In Mem. xi. 6 
clouds that d the morning star, . 11 Ixxi. 22 

drench' d, 
dark wood-walks d in dew, . . D.ofF. Worn. 75 
For I was d with ooze, . . . Princess, v. 27 
So d it is with tempest, . . t > vii. 127 

dress (s. ) 
This if and that by turns you tried, Miller's D. 147 
■ Bring the d and put it on her, . L. of Burleigh 95 
In the d that she was wed in, . u -99 

* What do you here ? and in this d ? Princess, ii. 172 
look well too in your woman's d .* . u iv. 508 
Nay, the plainness of her d's ? . Maud, I. xx. 14 
your worst and meanest d . . Enid . 130, 848 
came on her Drest in that d, 11 141, 843 
all her foolish fears about the d, . n 142, 844 
(His d a suit of fray'd magnificence ti . . 296 
she cast her eyes upon her d, 11 . 609 
d that now she look'd on to the d . 11 . . 613 
Enid fell in longing for a d . 11 . 630 
your wretched d, A wretched insult 11 . 1176 

dress (verb.) 
d the victim to the offering up, . Princess, iv 112 
to flaunt, to d, to dance, to thrum, u . 498 

d her beautifully and keep her true Enid . . 899 

dressing. 
Z>theirhairwiththewhitesea-nower, TJieMerman 13 
flout and scorn By d it in rags? . Enid . 1524 

dressed — drest. 
come you a? like a village maid . Lady Clare 67-9 
her body, d In the dress . . L. of Burleigh 98 
each by other d with care . . Princess, iii. 3 

* What, if you d it up poetically ! ' » Con. 6 
came on her, D in that dress, . Enid . 141,843 
A tribe of women, d in many hues, v . 1446 
to dance and sing, be gaily d, . Coquette, ii. 3 

drew. 
she if her casement-curtain by . Mariana . 19 
Thro' rosy taper fingers d . Mariana in the S. 15 
from her bosom ^ Old letters, . 11 .61 

once he d With one long kiss . Fatima . 19 
rosy slender fingers backward d . (Euone . 172 

half-asleep his breath he d, . . The Sisters . 28 
morn from Memnon, d Rivers of . Pal. of Art 171 
Many d swords and died. . . D. ofF. Wont. 95 
they d into two burning rings . w . 174 

D forth the poison with her balmy 11 . 271 

d he forth the brand Excalibur, . M. d* Arthur 52 
d him under in the mere. . . 11 146,161 

^ the languid hands . . . " . X74 

Came, if your pencil from you, . Gardener 'sD '. 26 
one large cloud D downward : 11 -78 

such a breast As never pencil d. . u . 139 

Light pretexts d me : 11 . 188 

d My little oakling from the cup, . Talking O. 230 
rear'd a font of stone And d . Princess, Pro. 60 

days d nigh that I should wed, . 11 i. 40 

I (f near; I gazed. ... » iii. 166 

the flood d ; yet I caught her ; . 11 iv. 164 

d My burthen from mine arms ; . 11 . 173 

on the earth and rose again and d : it v. 486 

D from my neck the painting . 11 vi. 94 

<f Her robe to meet his lips it . 139 

Whence if you this steel temper? . 11 . 215 

D the great night into themselves, 11 vii. 34 

Thy converse d us with delight . In Mem. cix. 1 
D in the expression of an eye, . it ex. 19 

from which their omens all men d, Ode on Well. 36 
Round affrighted Lisbon d . " . 103 

up the snowy Splugen d, . . T/zc Daisy . 86 
shadow of His loss d like eclipse, . Ded. of Idylls 13 
d from those dead wolves . . Enid . 1029 

never since I first d breath, h 1467 

d The vast and shaggy mantle . Vivien . 104 

magnet-like she d The rustiest iron it . 423 

if back, and let her eyes Speak . it . 465 

D the vast eyelid of an inky cloud, it . 484 



when the time d nigh Spake 
she d Nearer and stood, 
draw — Draw,' — and Lavaine d, 
D near, and sigh'd in passing 
when she d No answer, by and by 
weep for her, who d him to his 
if The knighthood-errant of this . 
as their faces d together, groan'd, 
thro' all his blood D in the dewy 
amulet d her down to that old oak 
the great ridge d t Lessening 

dried. 
tears fell ere the dews were d; 
all his juice is d, and all his joints 
d his wings : like gauze they grew : 

drift 
city lies Beneath its d of smoke ; . 
Thro' scudding d's the rainy 
in the d's that pass To darken. 
For the d of the Maker is dark, . 
Wrapt in d's of lurid smoke 



POEM. LINE. 

Elaine . 78 


t> 


348 


" • 


514 


Guinevere . 


1340 
IS9 


» 


346 


En. Arden . 


457 
74 


Aylmer's F. 
Sea Dreams 


661 

507 
213 



Mariana . 14 

AudleyCt. . 45 

Two Voices 13 

Talking O. 6 

Ulysses . 10 

InMem. cvi. 13 

Maud, I. iv. 43 

ti II. iv. £6 



drifted. 
These d, stranding on an isle . En. Arden 553 

drifting, 
d up the stream In fancy, . . Sea Dreams 104 

drill, 
d the raw world for the march . Ode on Well. 168 

drink (s.) 
sometimes Sucking the damps for d, StS. Stylites 76 
Yea ev'n of wretched meat and d, Maud, I. xv. 8 
pinch a murderous dust into her d, Vivien . 460 
at times, she mingled with his d, . Lucretius . 18 

drink (verb.) 
d the cup of a costly death, . . Eleanore . 138 
I will d Life to the lees : . . Ulysses . 6 
We d defying trouble, . . . Will Water. 94 
I am old, but let me d ; . . Vision of Sin 75 
D, and let the parties rave ; , . ti . 123 

D to lofty hopes that cool — . u . 147 

D we, last, the public fool, . . 11 . 149 

D to Fortune, d to Chance, . n . 191 

D to heavy Ignorance \ . . 11 . 193 

-Ddeep, until the habits of the slave, Princess, ii. 77 
To d the cooler air, and mark In Mem. lxxxviii. 15 
tftohim, whate'er he be, . . n cvi. 23 

' D, then,' he answerM. 'Here!' Enid ; 1506 

D therefore and the wine will change 11 . 1511 

I will not d Till my dear lord . 11 . 1512 

bid me do it, And d with me : . n 1514 

Not eat nor d? And wherefore wail 11 . 1522 

open'd lip, Except indeed to d: . Vivien . 121 

Forgot to 13? to Lancelot and the Queen, Elaine . 733 

drinketh. 
as sunlight d dew. . . . Fatima . 21 

drinking. 
^health to bride and groom . In Mem. Con. 83 

Men were d together, . . . Maud, I. vii. 5 

drinking-song. 
why should Love, like men ind-s's, Maud, I. xviii. 55 

drip. 
woodbine and eglatere D sweeter dews A Dirge 24 
When the rotten woodland d's, . Vision of Sin Si 
d with a silent horror of blood, . Maud Li. 3 

dripping. 
D with Saba^an spice . . . Adeline . 53 

drive (s.) 
What d's about the fresh CascinS, The Daisy . 43 

drive (verb.) 
d's them to the deep.' . . . Pal. of Art 204 
Nature's evil star D men ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 74 
shoals of pucker'd faces d; . InMem. lxix. 10 

doubts that d the coward back, . 11 xciv. 30 

Is enough to d one mad. . . Maud, II. v. 20 
' D them on Before you ;' . . Enid 948, 1033 
d The Heathen, who, some say, . Elaine . 65 



T£-V.VVSO.V'S WORKS. 



dh: POE.M. LINE. 

morning d her plow of pearl Lave and Duty 96 

plumes (/backward by the wind . Elaine . 479 

dra 

Let us alone. Time (/onward fast, Lotos-E"s. . 88 

driving. 
D, hurrying, marrying, burying, . Maud, II. v. 12 
in mild obedience O them on : . Enid . . 954 
blood by Sylla shed Camea? rainlike Lucretius . 48 

drizzle. 
Thicker the d grew, . En. Arden . 680 

bill of sale gleam'd thro' the d) . 11 . 689 

droofi. 

Fair-fronted Truth shalh/ ' C lear-Iteadea 'friend ','etc. 12 

it veil, or d my sight, . Eleiinore . 87 

re yarding thee, m . iig 

inded with his shining eye : Fatima . 38 

irple flowers d . . (Enom . 28 

•m'd bower . Locksley II. 163 

Vs the banner on the tower, Day-Din. . 33 

D sleepily : 11 .40 

v > n the double rosebud d's n . 259 

acock like a . Princess, vii. 165 

.r, . Vivien . 92 

. to d, to fall ; . Ay Inter's F. 835 

drooped — droopt. 

leopard-skin D from his shoulder, CEnone , 58 

■ : . . I'al. 0/ Art 119 

re him, . . /.. of Burleigh 85 

ipel bells Called Princess, ii. 446 

i' iv. 143 

11 . 253 

flate, . . In Mem.xW. 14 

:re she d: . Enid . 1096 

r clear germander eye D . Sea Dreams 5 

drooping. 
A damsel d in a corner ut it. 
:eck head yet 1), . 



. Enid 



•459 
1489 

drop 

t be a d of rain . May Queen i. 35 

tos-E"s. . 17 
if onset; M.d' Arthur 315 
ill. . _ «•'««■ 

iend. I'rincess,v\. 266 

r dark . . In Mem. xvii. 15 

u lvii. 3 

Tdcw . .£«;'</ . 1538 

verb. ) 

down . . Madeline 34, 46 

;ht. .Lot s-E's. . 79 

. - Stylites 4 j 

ilm-dews Talking O. 267 

1 , mltry (/ //•'/'// ll'a: 

d's at Glory's temple-gates, ■! ' J '"" 'f'f" *"»» 
r * ' ( «wi, rCc. . 34 

d thy ;>on my 'Come not, when' etc. 2 

•'.>■ .S',i«^ 8 

• ii. 230 

mdering grave. In Mem. vi. 16 

11 xxxiv. 15 

xxxv. 3 

a flower. Tlte Window 26,31 

dropped dropt. 

■ their shade, . D.ofF. Wont. 1 

. /'<> 7. 5 1 . . 56 

-; rit the |>clf, '/'//<• <7(ww . 13 

Id, and turning Gardener's 1). 154 

. i$'/5'. .Stylites 29 

. . Talking O. 209 

!cn head, . 11 . 227 

I, And (/ before him. Godiva 71 

, Lady Clare 03 

: cess, Pro. 76 

iiyone, wci/, n i. 107 

town . 11 

11 

i il gloom . . 11 iv. 



at top with pain, D on the sward, 
down the streaming crystal d; 
find him d upon the firths of ice, . 
d the dust on tearless eyes ; . 
D off gorged from a scheme 
suddenly d dead of heart -d i 
Nor anchor d at eve or morn ; 
Down they d — no word was spoken 
a flower, a flower, D, a flower. 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, iv. 191 

11 vii. 150 

11 . 191 

InMcm. lxxix. 4 

Maud, I. i. 20 

Sea Dreams 264 

The Voyage 82 

— The Captain$\ 

daw 34 



dropping, 
d low their crimson bells 
slowly d fragrant dew, . 
d bitter tears against his brow 
d d< iwn with costly bales ; . 
Autumn, d fruits of power ; . 
D the too rough H in Hell . 



. Aralian JV's. (2 
ne . 104 

. M.d'. Arthur 211 

ley II. 122 

. Princess, vi. 39 

. Sea Dreams 192 



dropping-ivells. 
Laburnums, d-w of fire. . In Mem. lxxxii. 12 

dropwise. 
gather'd trickling d from the cleft, Vivien . 123 

dross. 
scurf of salt, and scum of d . . Vision of Sin 211 

drought. 
stony </and steaming salt ; . Mariana in tlie S. 40 

drouth. 
I look'd athwart the burning d. . Fatima . 13 
Oasis in the dust and dOt city life ! Ed. Morris 3 
dust and d of London Life . 11 143 

drove (s.) 
watch the darkening d's of swine Pal. of Art 199 
of all the d should touch me : swine!' Vivien 549 

drove .verb.) 
d The fragrant, glistening deeps. . Arabian N's 13 
Hi^ own tnougDt d him ukeagoad. M.d' Arthur 185 
(/ his heel into the sinoulder'd log, " F.p. 14 

at home, that d him hence. Walk, tothe M.io 
d her fi.es with slaughter . . Princess, Pro. 113 
(/his cheek in lines ; 11 i. 115 

Right on this we d and caught, . 11 iv. 170 
(/us, last, to quite a solemn close — 11 Con. 17 
of the ruin'd woodlands d thro' the air. Maud,l.\. 12 
and she </ them thro' the waste. . Enid . . 949 
and she d them thro' the wood. . 11 . 1034 

i/the dust against her veilless eyes : 11 . 1378 

d him into wastes and solitudes . Elaine . 252 

i/her under moonless heavens . En. Arden . 543 
The horse he (/, the boat he sold, 11 .610 

haras.s'd him, and d him forth, . 11 . 721 

(/ The footstool from before him, . Aytmer'sF. 326 
D in upon the student once or twice, 11 . 462 

the boundless cast we (/, . The Voyage 38 
whence were those that d the sail 11 . 86 

goodly sheep In haste they (/ . Spec. of Iliad 5 
1/ the knife into his side: . . Lucretius . 271 

drown. 
muffled motions blindly d .InMcm. xlviii. 13 

(/His heart in the gross mud-honey Maud, I. xvi. 4 
burst and (/ with deluging storms . 11 II. i. 42 

Might (/all life in the eye,— 11 ii. 61 

drowned, 

I (/the whoopings of the owl . St S. Stylites 32 

(/ within the whirling brook : . Princess, Pro. 47 

glens arc d in azure gloom . . 11 iv. 504 

(/ In silken fluctuation ... 11 vi. 334 

Love clasp Grief lest both be d, . In Mem. i. . 9 

(/ in passing thro' the ford, . . 11 vi. 39 

(/in yonder living blue . 11 cxiv. 7 

all spleenful folly was ,/, . . Maud, I. iii. 

Would she had d me in it, . . Elaine 1402 

dro-.onii:^. 
I brim with sorrow d song. . . InMcm. xix. 12 

drowte. 

Let not your prudence, dearest, (/ Princess, ii. 318 

dro. 
burst Their d; and either started . Enid . 1121 



CONCORDANCE TO 



drug (s. ) POEM. LINE. 

' What d can make A wither'd palsy Two Voices 56 

drug ( verb. ) 
D thy memories, lest thou learn it, Locksley H. 77 
-D down the blindfold sense . . In Mem. Ixx. 7 

Druid. 

Each was like a D rock ; . . Princess, iv. 261 
altar of the D and Druidess, . Boadicea . 2 

Druidess. 
altar of the Druid and D, . . Boadicea . 2 

drum. 
murmurs of the d and fife . . Talking O. 215 
voice is heard thro 5 rolling d 's, . Princess, iv. 554 
clash' d their arms ; the d Beat; . 11 v. 240 

Now, to the roll of muffled d's, . Ode on Well. 87 
Lady, let the rolling d's ' Lady, let the,' etc. 1 

drunk, 

d delight of battle with my peers, Ulysses . 16 

sweeter to be d with loss, . . In Mem. i. . 11 

D even when he woo'd ; . . Enid . . 442 

drunkard, 
d's football, laughing-stocks of Tune, Princess, iv. 496 
Shaking a little like a d's hand, . En. Arden . 462 

drunken. 
Before I well have d, scarce can eat : Enid 1510 

dry (adj.) 
bearded grass Island dewless . Miller's D. 246 
tongue Cold February loved, is d The Blackbird 14 

Keep d their light from tears I ' Of old sat Free- 

r to ( dom, etc. 20 

moist and d, devising" ' Love thott thy land,' etc. 38 
sweeping thro' me left me d, . Locksley H. 131 

near me when my faith is d, . In Mew., xlix. 9 

with long use her tears are d. . 11 lxxvii. 20 
underfoot the herb was d . . w xciv. 2 
Full cold my greeting was and d The Letters 13 
I found, tho' crush'd to hard and </, The Daisy . 97 
chambers; all were fair and d; . Elai7ie . 406 
pious talk, when most his heart was d. SeaDreamsi8z 

dry (verb.) 
ThesapoV/Vsup: the plant declines Two Voices 268 

Dryad-like. 
D-l, shall wear Alternate leaf 

dry-ioiigued, 
d-t laurels' pattering talk 

Dubric. 
the hands of D, the high saint, 
talk'd with D, the high saint, 
duct. 
Before the little d's began . 

due (adj.) 
question unto whom 'twere d: 
Up in one night and d to sudden 
d To languid limbs and sickness : 

due (s.) 
little d's of wheat, and wine and oil; Lotos-E's. 
with a dearness not his d. . . Locksley II. 
So many years from his d' . . Lady Clare 32 
what every woman counts her d, . Princess, iii. 228 
as frankly theirs As d's of Nature. it v. 196 

miss theiryearly ^Before theirtime? InMcm.xxKx. 15 
render human love his d's; . . ti xxxvii. 16 
else were fruitless of their d, . 11 xliv. 14 

Who but claims her as his d? . Maud, I. xx. 11 
give the Fiend himself his d } To F. D. Maurice 6 

dug. 

iron d from central gloom, . . In Mem.cxyii. 21 
falling prone he d His fingers . En. Arden . 780 

Duglas. 
wild battles by the shore Of D ; . Elaine . 290 

duke. 

Bury the Great D . . . . Ode on Well. 1-3 

Truth-lover was our English D; . u . 189 

King, d, earl, Count, baron— . Elaine . 463 



Talking O. 



Maudfl.xviii. 8 



E?iid 



1713 



Two Voices 



3 2 5 



CEnone . 80 

Princess, iv. 293 

" vi. 355 



167 



dull (adj.) 
the d Saw no divinity in grass, 
your ears are so d; 
How d it is to pause, 
d and self-involved, Tall and erect, 

dull (verb.) 
d Those spirit-thrilling eyes . 
weeping d's the inward pain.' 

dull'd. 
d the murmur on thy lip, 

duller. 
something d than at first, 

dumb. 

far-off stream is d, 
in a little while our lips are d. 
The streets are d with snow, 
lands where not a leaf was d; 
lo, thy deepest lays are d 
D is that tower which spake 
Then I cannot be wholly d ; . 
and the dead Steer'd by the d 
Winds are loud and you are d : 



POEM. LINE. 

A Character 7 
Poet's Mind 35 
Ulysses . 22 
Ay liner's F. 118 

Ode to Mem. 38 
To J. S. . 40 



dungeon. 

Of battle, bold adventure, d, 

duomo. 

Of tower or d, sunny-sweet, . 

Dundagil. 
dark D by the Cornish sea ; . 

dunghill. 
Upon an ampler d trod, 

dtifie. 
Christ the bait to trap his d . 

dusk (s.) 
thro' the thicken'd cedar in the d. 
troop of snowy doves athwart the , 
in the d of thee, the clock 
I sleep till d is dipt in gray : 
flat lawn with d and bright ; . 
haunt the d, with ermine capes, 
doubtful d revealed The knolls 

dusk (verb.) 
Little breezes t/and shiver . 

dusky-rafter 'd. 
The d-r many-cobweb'd Hall. 

dust. 
thick as d In vacant chambers, 
Two handfuls of white d } 
his mute d I honour 
Lie still, dry d, secure of change, 
parch'd with d ; Or, clotted into . 
pillar'd d of sounding sycamores, 
the ^and drouth Of city life ! 
the d and drouth of London life . 
carve a shrine about my d, . 
With anthers and with d: 
dead, become Mere highway d ? 
right ear, that is fill'd with d, 
soil'd with noble d, he hears 
A d of systems and of creeds. 
Is a clot of warmer d, . 
Are but d that rises up, 
And vex the unhappy d l Come 
fretted all to ^and bitterness.' 
will not leave us in the d: . 
Ye never knew the sacred d: 
d and ashes all that is ; 
nor is there hope in rf:' 
The d of continents to be ; . 
Time, a maniac scattering d, 
grope, And gather rfand chaff, 
Be blown about the desert d, 
men and minds, the d of change, 
To stir a little d of praise. 
dropt the d on tearless eyes ; 
d and din and steam of town : 



. InMem.xxii. 16 

. Will Water. 157 

. The Owl, i. 3 
. Lotos-E's. . 89 
. Sir Galahad 52 
. InMeju.xxni. 10 
11 Ixx v. 7 
n Con. 106 
. Maud, II. v. 100 
. Elaine 1148 

„ The Window 124 

. Aylmer's F. 98 

. TJie Daisy . 46 

. Guinevere . 292 

. Will Water. 125 

. Sea Dreams 187 

Gardener 'sD. 162 

' Princess^ iv. 150 

In Mem. ii. 7 

n lxvi. 12 

iilxxxviii, 2 

ir xciv. n 

" • 50 



L.ofShalott,l.T.z 



. Enid . 



362 



To the Queen 


18 


Eotos-Es. , 


"3 


To J. S. . 


20 


M 


76 


M. d' Arthur 


218 


AudleyCt. . 


IS 


Ed. Morris 


3 


y> 


143 


. St S.Stylites 


192 


. Talking 0. 


184 


Love and Dutyix 


Two Voices 


116 


11 


152 


11 


207 


Vision of Sin 


ir? 


» r 33. 


169 


not, when, etc 


4 


Princess, vi. 


247 


In- Mem. Pro. 


9 


It XXI. 


22 


II XXXIV. 


4 


II XXXV. 


4 


II 


12 


ii xlix. 


7 


if liv. 


18 


11 lv. 


J 9 


11 Ixx. 


10 


ti lxxiv. 


12 


11 Ixxix. 


4 


11 lxxxviii 


S 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



"3 



POEM. LINE. 

Our father's d is left alone . . In Mem. civ. 5 
The life re-orient out of d, . . 11 cxv. 6 

we may lift from out of d . . 11 cxxx. 5 

who knows? we are ashes and d. . Maud, I. i. 32 
fair banquet with the d of death ? 11 xviii. 56 

My </ would hear her and beat, . » xxii. 71 
sting each other here in the d; . n II. i. 47 
my heart is a handful of d, . . 11 v. 3 

public wrong be crumbled into d, Ode on Well. 167 
Ashes to ashes, d to d; " . 270 

turning round she saw D, . . Enid . 1298 

finger up, and pointed to the d. . n . 1302 

inst her veilless eyes : . . >i . 1378 

a murderous d into her drink Vivien . 460 

in the d of half-forgotten kings, . Elaine 1328 

knew the Prince tho* marr'd with d, Guinevere . 37 
D are our frames ; and, gilded d, . Aylmer's E. 1 
a dozen years Of d and deskwork: Sea Dreams 78 
if the wages of Virtue be d, . . Wages . 6 

dusty-dry. 
Where all but yestcr-cve was d-d . Lucretius . 32 



dusty-ivliite. 



Mariana in theS. 54 



The river-bed was d-w 

Dutch. 
sometimes a D love For tulips ; 

duty. 
a man may fail in d twice, . 
1 my it, and by you ! . 
of Love — 

. >mmon duties 
duties of her rank: 
1, when love and d clash 1 . 
My brother! it was d spoke, 

\, her d was to speak, 
d d, clear of consequences. . 
thro' all Its range at duties . 
eir voices more than d, 

I imething '.fa . 
As it were a d done to the tomb, 
sought but I>'s iron crown 

'lory 

iled 

path Old be the way to glory: 

you, "ii your d as a wif< 

it {■> have loved the highest Guinevere 

one who does his d by his own, . En. Arden 

m hereto herself and us Aylmer's IF 



. Gardener' sD. 188 

. M.tTArthur 129 

. Dora . . 95 

. LoveandDuty 46 

, Ulysses . 40 

. L. of Burleigh 72 

. Princess, ii. 273 

11 . 288 

11 iii. 135 

11 .136 

11 _ . IOI 

11 iv. 491 

11 Con. 54 

Maud. I. xix. 49 

Ode on Well. 112 

11 202-10 



Enid 



! my d by u n 

1 ,'ioire 

ing laiTa in (/to him, 



224 
865 
650 
330 
3°4 



A'. Farmer 12,24 
11 . 6., 

Lucretius . 274 



dwarf '{%.) 
"lira .... Princess, iii. 262 
[Tie d's of presage : . " iv. 427 
it, lady, audi/,- . . . .£«/(/ . . 187 

./lagg'd latest 188 

:t of the it ', . it . . 193 

iharply to the (/, and ask'd it 11 . 204 

us under-shapen thing, n . . 412 

r, thy lady, and thy d, 11 . . 581 

dwarf [verb. ) 
d's the petty love of one to one. . Vivien . 342 

dwarf d. 

• ink Together, d or godlike, Princess, vii. 2.(4 
I a growth of cold and night, ln.M em. lx. 7 

flike. 
among the rest A d-l Cato cowcr'd. Princess, vii. m 

#/:<-,•//. 
Here no longer rf; Deserted II '. 18 



light upon the letter </'*, 

■ r (/.' . 

■ ye to </, 

whom I </.' . 

: df the night. 
would d One earnest, 



Miller sD.. 1% 
• • . 220 

Pal. of Art 2 
11 . 196 

I.ntosEs . 109 

'/'/„• Blackbird 4 

Tvy.j. . 52 

Love and Duty 36 



POEM. LINE. 

d's A perfect form in perfect rest. Day-Dm. . 99 

Where the wealthy nobles*/.' . L. of Burleigh 24 

D with these, and lose Convention Princess, 

more of reverence in us d ; . 

the vigour, bold to d On doubts 

d's not in the light alone, 

d's on him with faithful eyes, 

in my spirit will Id,. 

dark a mind within me d's. . 

wastes where footless fancies d 

in me there d's No greatness, 

when we d upon a word we know 

not d on that defeat of fame. 

d with you ; Wear black and white, 

d in presence of immortal youth, . Tithonus 

there — there — they d no more. . Boddicea 

dwelleth. 
The clear-voiced mavis d, 



n Princess, 11. 


71 


In Mem. Pro. 


26 


II XCLV. 


29 


II xcv. 


20 


II XCVI. 


35 


H CXXI1. 


9 


. Maud, I. xv. 


1 


11 xvni. 


69 


. Elaine 


448 


r 11 


1021 


. Guinevere . 


621 


te, 11 


668 



63 



Claribel 



dwelling (part.) 
D amid these yellowing A Spirit haunts,' etc. 2 
d on his boundless love, . . Enid . . 63 

Her fancy d in this dusky hall : 11 . 802 

dwelling (s.) 
Unto the d she must sway. . . Ode to Mem. 79 
How mend the d's, of the poor: To E. D. Maurice 38 
Philip's d fronted on the street, . En. Arden . 732 

dwelt. 
the full day d on her brows, 
from that Eden where she d. 
not be don by the common day, 
when I d u[xni your old affiance ; 
d an iron nature in the grain : . n vi 

mellowing, d Full on the child ; . 11 

doubtful smile d like a clouded moon 11 
the dew D in her eyes, ... 11 vii 

sec ihe rooms in which he d. In Mem. lxxxvi 
they (/with eye on eye, . . 11 xevi 

Methought I d within a hall, . n cii, 
they (/languidly On Lancelot, .Elaine 
r/among the woods By the great river i\ 
I, which (/at Camelot : . u 

larger thro' his leanness, d upon her, 11 
So (/the father on her face . . 11 

when we (/among the woods, . n 

D with them, till in time their . Guinevere . 
da. moment on his kindly face, . En. Arden 
as she d upon his latest words, . n 
hand (/lingeringly on the latch, . 11 

I) with eternal summer, ill-content. 11 
brightest, when they don hers, . Aylmer's E. 
There they d and there they rioted ; Boddicea . 

dwindle. 
Thou slialt wax and he shall (/, 



Gardener' sD . 135 

. 187 

11 . 266 

Princess, iii. 123 

11 vi. 34 

'74 

253 

Z2I 
16 

9 

5 

85 

277 

799 

831 

1024 

1030 

684 

3=3 

45i 

515 

563 

69 

63 



Boddicea 



The Epic 



Enid 



dwindled. 
d down to some odd games . 

dyeing. 
spirted upon the scarf, I) it ; 

dyke. 

Adown the crystal d's at Camelot Enid 

dying. 
I would be d eve-more, 
1 'in, (/clasped in his embrace 
say he's (/all for love . 
Then (/of a mortal stroke, . 
Ellen Adair was (/ for me. 
foretold, D. that none of all our . 
He, (/lately, left her, as I hear 
answer, echoes, (/, (/, (/. (rep.) 
(/, there at least may die. 

The year is d in the night ; . 

/' abroad and it seenu apart 
When he lay d there, . 

1 . some one (/or dead, 
1 ,/di.wiiastl .. 
as they lay (/, Did they smile 00 him. 

II 



40 



209 



1319 



E/ci'inore 


'43 


Fatima 


42 


May Queen,\ 


21 


Two Voices 


'S4 


Ed. Gray . 


>6 


Princess, i. . 


8 


11 


77 


11 111. 


T>3 


In Mem. viii. 


»4 


11 cv. 


3 


Ma ltd, I. xi\-. 


29 


„ II. ii. 


(7 


■1 IV. 


48 


Elaine 


■TP 


The Captain 


SS 



H4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



eager. 
arose E to bring them down, 

eager-he a rted. 
E-h as a boy when first he . 

Eagle. 
Half-buried in the E's down, 
Shall e's not be e's? wrens be wrens? 
wonder of the e were the less, 
he not less the e. . 
Unclasp'd the wedded^ of her belt, 
An e clang an e to the sphere, 
and Hope, a poising e, burns 
by axe and e sat, With all their . 
wild Lean-headed E's yelp alone . 
e's wing, or insect's eye ; 
Till o'er the hills her e's flew 
Again their ravening e rose . 
an E rising or, the Sun In dexter 
ever-ravening e's beak and talon . 
Tho' the Roman e shadow thee . 

eaglet. 
Foster' d the callow e — . 



POEM. LINE. 

, En. Arden . 873 

. Locks ley H. 112 

Pal. of Art 122 

Golden Year 37 

» • 39 

40 

43 
90 

64 
if vii. 113 

ir . 196 

fnMem.cxxui. 6 
Ode on Well. 112 
n . 119 

Vivien . 325 

Bocidicea. . 1 1 
" • 39 



Godiva 
Princess, iii. 



(E?i07ie 



208 



round mine e's the livelong bleat . Ode to Me?n. 65 

your e's are so dull ; Poet's Mind 35 

at first to the e The warble . . Dying Swan 23 

With dinning sound my e's are rife, Eleanore . 135 

jewel That trembles at her el . Miller's D. . 172 

Half-whisper'd in his e, . . CEnone . 182 

Rings ever in her e's of armed men. ir . . 261 

hollowing one hand against his e, . Pal. of Art 109 

Herod, when the shout was in his es, rr . 219 

music in his e's his beating heart . Lotos-E's. . 36 

under-tone Thrill'd thro' mine e's . D.ofF. Wont. 82 

corn-bin open, prick'd my e's; . The Epic . 45 

murmuring at his e 'Quick, Quick! M. d' Arthur 179 

Rings in mine e's. The steer forgot Gardener' sD. 84 

e's could hear Her lightest breaths ; Ed. Morris 64 

(And hear me with thine e's,) . Talking O. . 82 

sense is hard To alien e's, . . Love and Duty '51 

in the ringing of thine e's; . . Locksley H. 84 

fillip'd at the diamond in her e; . 

right e, that is fill'd with dust, 

country's war-song thrill his e's: . 

A second voice was at mine e, 

whisper'd voices at his e. 

In her e he whispers.gafly, . 

twinn'd as horse's e and eye. 

very e's were hot To hear them : . 

dame That whisper'd 'Asses' e's' . 

To dying e's, when unto dying eyes 

we Should cram our e's with wool 

at mine e Bubbled the nightingale 

Each hissing in his neighbour's e; 

tale of love In the old king's e's . 

each e was prick'd to attend . 

should turn mine e's and hear 

Not all ungrateful to thine e. 

in these e's, till hearing dies, 

on mine e this message falls, 

A willing e We lent him. 

heart and e were fed To hear him, 

words of life Breath'd in her e. 

centre-bits Grind on the wakeful e Maud, I, 

{Look at it) pricking a cockney e 

Whose e is cramm'd with his cotton 

the evil tongue and the evil e, 

win her With his chirrup at her e. 

in my heart and my e's till I die 

An old song vexes my e ; 

Twinkled the innumerable e 

March wails in the people's e's: 

sow'd a slander in the common e, 

could speak whom his own e had 

prick'd their light e's, and felt 

e's to hear you even in his dreams.' tr . 127S 

heavily-galloping hoof Smote on her e, tr . 1297 



Godiva 


25 


Two Voices 


116 


n 


153 


" 


427 


Dav-Dm. . 


124 


L.ofBnrleigli i 


Princess, i. . 


56 


ir 


133 


it 11. 


Qfci 


5 II IV. 


33 


II 


47 


II 


247 


II V. 


14 


II 


231 


11 VI. 


263 


InMem.xxxv. S 


II XXXVlll 


12 


ii Ivi. 


9 


11 Ixxxiv. 


18 


11 lxxxvi. 


3° 


11 lxxxviii. 


22 


ii Con. 


S3 


Maud, Li. 


42 


II X. 


22 


1 11 


4 2 


ir 


5 1 


II XX. 


3° 


11 II. i. 


35 


ti 11. 


47 


The Brook . 


134 


Ode on Well. 


267 


Enid . 


450 


ti 


962 


11 


1042 



POEM. LINE. 

hiss'd each at other's e What . E?iid . 1482 

mine own e's heard you yester-morn — tr . 1588 

in the King's own e Speak . ir . 1656 

glorious roundel echoing in our e's, Vivien . 276 

All e's were prick'd at once, . . Elaijie . 720 

father's latest word humm'd inhere, 11 . 776 

till the e Wearies to hear it, . . 11 . 893 

the world, All e and eye, if . 937 

stupid heart To interpret e and eye, it . 938 

still in green, and e and eye, . Guinevere . 25 

vex an e too sad to listen to me . ir . 313 
Worried his passive e with petty . En. Arden . 349 

whisper on her e She knew not what 11 . 511 

likewise, in the ringing of his e's, tr . 614 
all her vital spirits into each e . Aylmer'sE. 201 

foam' d away her heart at Averill's e: ti . 342 



His message ringing in thine e's, 
mysterious way Thro' the seal'd e 
True Devils with no e, . 
lend an e to Plato where he says, 
ear (of corn.) 
all its e's before the roaring East ; 
pluck'd the ripen'd e's, . 
now is love mature in e.' 



. 666 

. 696 

Sea Dreams 252 

Lucretius . 147 



Princess, i. 234 

n . 247 

hi Mem. lxxx. 4 



Earl. 
O the E was fair to see ! (rep.) . The Sisters 6 
The daughter of a hundred E's L. C. V. de Vere 7 

grim E, who ruled In Coventry : Godiva . 12 

eagles ofher belt, The grim E's gift ; 11 -44 
old E's daughter died at my breast Lady Clare 25 

bandit iV, and caitiff knights, . Enid . . 35 

musing sat the hoary-headed E, . it . . 295 

sigh'd and smiled the hoary-headed E, 11 . . 307 

none spake word except the hoary E : 11 . . 369 

Prince and E Yet spoke together, ir . . 384 

suddenly addrest the hoary E : . 11 . . 402 

Fair Host and E, I pray your 11 403 

So spake the kindly-hearted E, . it . 514 

£, entreat her by my love, . 11 . 760 

victual for these mowers of our E; it . 1074 

into no E's palace will I go . . tr . 1084 

bow'd the all-amorous E, 11 1209 

heard the wild E at the door, . ir . 1230 

the waste earldom of another E, . ti . 1287 

all the boon companions of the E, tr . 1326 

on a mission to the bandit E; . tr . 1376 

their own E, and their own souls, it . 1425 

huge E cried out upon her talk, . it . 1499 

strode the brute E up and down . ir . 1560 

knew this E, when I myself . it . 1642 

huge E lay slain within his hall . tr . 1654 

King, duke, e, Count, baron — . Elaine . 463 

earldom. 

From mine own ^foully ousted me; Enid . . 459 

give back their e to thy kin. it 585 

prince who won our e back, ir 619 

have our e back again. . . it . 701 

To the waste e of another earl, . tr . T287 

share my e with me, girl, it 1474 

earlier. 
'Alone' I said 'from e than I know, Princess, vii. 292 

earliest. 
they are the e of the year.) . . Ode to Mem. 27 

ea rly -silvering. 
over Enoch's e-s head . . . En. Arden . 623 

earn. 
is well the thrifty months, ' Love thou thy land, 'etc. 95 
lease Of life, shalt e no more ; . Will Water. 244 
metaphysics ! read and e our prize, Princess, iii. 283 
popular name such manhood e's, . Vivien . 636 

earned, 
e himself the name of sparrow-hawk. Enid . 492 
e a scanty living for himself: . En. Arde?i . S19 

earnest. 
words were half in e, half in jest), Gardener's D. 23 
take it— e wed with sport, . . Day-Din. . 279 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



US 



POEM. LINE. 

jest and e working side by side, . Princess, iv. 541 
all, they said, as e as the close ? . » Con. 21 

earnest (pledge.) 
e of the things that they shall do : Lccksley H. 11S 
e that he loves her yet, . . . In Mem. xcvi. 15 
e in it of far springs to be. . Vivien . 407 

earning. 
save all e's to the uttermost, . En. Arden . 86 

earth. 
star The black e with brilliance . Ode to Mem. 20 
dcem'd no mist of e could dull . o .38 

Over the dark dewy e forlorn, . 11 .69 

Scarce of e nor all divine, . . Adeline . 3 
said the e was beautiful. . . A Character 12 
Making e wonder, . . . The Poet . 52 

shrink to the e if you came in. . Poefs Mind 37 

.■ as buildcd of the e, . . Deserted H. 15 
choicest wealth of all the e, . . Eleanore . 19 

I not found a happy e ? . Miller's D. 25 
Hear meO£ CEtione 35, 253 

happy e, how canst thou bear ti 233 
enough unhappy on this c, . . " . . 235 
E and air seem only burning fire. u . . 264 
clay ta'en from the common e, To — IVithPal. of A rtij 
Lord of the visible e, . . . Pal. of Art 179 
the riddle of the painful e . 11 213 
with the dull e's mouldering sod, . 11 . 261 
never born into the e. . . . To f. S. . 32 

ever from the e, . . M. d' Arthur 90 

round e is every way Kound . " . 254 

1 - as air beneath me, . . Gardener's D. 207 
Unfit for *, unfit for heaven, . SlS. Stylites 3 

1, and E, and lime are choked. " . 102 

dark i u I'd in her ellipse ; Golden Yearn, 

■ loved * and heaven ; Ulysses . 67 

the kindly * shall slumber, . . Locksley H. 130 

dial tin: t should stand at gaze . 11 . 180 

churl, compact of thankless *, . Godiva . 66 

I lived the riddle of the e. . Two Voices 170 

that last nothing under */' . . n . 333 

we arc Ancients of the f, . . Day-Ihu. . 231 

li in man and maid ; . . Will Water. 65 

ide > of light and sh 11 .67 

ire tlie flower of the e f' . Lady Clare 68 

1 * her body, drest . . L.of Burleigh q& 

utwarayeta 

I like Heaven and E Princess, i. 220 

11 ii. 23 

E Should bear 11 . 162 

ire miserable . n iii. 242 

from the dewy shoulders of the E, <» v. 41 

sweet influences Of* and heaven? " . 184 

• "fall : 11 . 436 

Part roll'd on the * and rose again » . 486 

ir that A' Reels, 11 . 518 

< to the stars, . 11 vii. 167 

h e is laid, . fuMem. xv'm. 2 

had been the Paradise . 11 xxiv. 6 

A rainy cloud possess'd the *, . 11 xxx. 3 

il the core, . » xxxiv. 3 

by new to * and sky, . " xliv. 1 

thee, . ii lxxvii. 3 

May breed . 11 lxxxi. 3 

of virtue out of*: ,11 .10 

inder on a darken'd *, . 11 Ixxxiv. 31 

To in I *, . . 11 xcviii. 14 

A lever to uplift the e . . .1 cxii. 15 

lature's * andlime ; . n cxvii. 4 

ive tread 11 . 8 

:i ! 11 exxii. 2 

a.- -• lightens t-> t! .. exxvi. 15 

immand It I am! I'.'s, n ( 

; ler of E, . Maud, I. iv. 31 

'bill . 11 x. 46 

lump lis estate . . 11 xvi. 1 

nearer to tin: glow . » xviii. 7S 

thy bed ; . .ii xxii. 70 

■ v, ii 1 1, i. 8 

'Cold altar, Heaven and/shall meet The Letters 7 



POEM. LINE. 

e yawns : the mortal disappears ; . Ode on Well. 269 

gloom that saddens Heaven and £, The Daisy . 102 

better were I laid in the dark e, . Enid . . 97 

track this vermin to their e's: .11.. 217 

' I have track'd him to his e.' 11 . 253 
why e has e enough To hide him. 11 . 1403 
in the wither'd leaf And makes it e, 11 . 1482 

Merlin, may this e, if ever I . Vivien . 195 
hard e cleave to the Nadir hell . 11 199 
men at most differ as Heaven and *, 11 . . 663 

splinters oi the wood The dark e 787 

loves me must have a touch of e ; . Elaine . 134 

hard e shake, and a low thunder 11 450 

Cling to the dead e, and the land . Guinevere . 8 

heavens upbreaking thro' the e, . 11 . 388 

dug His fingers into the wet e, . En. Arden . 781 

this, a milky-way on e, . . . Aylmer's F. 160 

since our bad e became one sea . 11 . 635 

e Lightens from her own central Hell 11 . 760 

All over earthy, like a piece of e, . Sea Dreams 97 

In days far-off, on that dark e, . Tithonus . 48 

1 e in e forget these empty courts, 11 . 75 

I cast to e a seed The Flower 2 

To a sweet little Eden on e . . Tlie Islet . 14 

breathe it into e and close it up . Coquette, iii. 12 

bitten into the heart of the e . . Tlie Window 60 

earth Her. 
lonelier, darker, e for my loss. . Aylmer's F. 750 

earthly. 
For she is e of the mind, . . InMem.cx'm. 21 

earthquake. 

Blight and famine, plague and e, . Lotos-Es. . 160 

like a bell Toll'd by an e . . Princess, vi. 312 

flood, fire, e, thunder, wrought . Aylmer's F. 639 

out of sight, and sink Past* — . Lucretius . 153 

Shatter'u into one e in one day . 11 . 247 

earthy. 
All over e, like a piece of earth, . Sea Dreams 97 

east. 

bound fast in one with golden e ; . Circumstance $ 
Alice, you were ill at */ . . Miller's D. . 146 
Wherein at e for aye to dwell. . Pal. of Art 2 
dark death, or dreamful e. . . Lotos-E's. . 98 
You ask me, why, tho' ill at<-, ' Youaskntewhy,' etc. 1 
lest we rust in *. . . ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 42 
if man rot in dreamless e, . . Two Voices 280 
garrulous 1? and oily courtesies . Princess, i. . 162 
Wc break our laws with *, . . u vi. 303 

your Highness breaks with <• The law 11 . 305 

I would set their pains at e. . . IiiMem.lxii. 8 
Drank till he jested with rill <•, . Enid . 1139 

let his wisdom go For e of heart, . Vivien . 742 

surely I can silence with all *, . Elaine . no 
they lost themselves Yet with all e, 11 . . 441 
found no e in turning or in rest ; . 11 . 897 

with how great * Nature can smile, Lucretius . 174 

east. 
slowly rounded to the e . Mariana in the S. 79 
courts I made, /;, West and South Pal. of Art 21 
fresh beam of the springing e; . M. a' Arthur 214 
dark /•.', Unseen, is brightening . Gardeucr'sD. 71 
greet their fairer sisters of the E. . n . 184 

freshness in the dawning *. . . Two Voices 405 
all its cars before the roaring F. ; . Princess, i. . 234 
Nor stunted squaws of West or Ej n ii. 64 
the darkness from their nadve E. 11 iii. 6 

'AlasyourHighnessbreathesfuil^' <i . 215 

1 'I ill'- /.', that play'd. . 11 v. 241} 

Father, touch the*, and light . In Mem. xxx. 31 
windless flame Up the deep E, . n lxxi. 14 

P and West, without a breath . 11 xciv. 62 

What lightens in the lucid e . . u civ. 24 

Fiercely flies The blast of North and F, •• oi. 7 

Blush fr nil West to /•;. rep.) Maud, I. xvii. at 

(hat streams to thy delicious A', . 1. xviii. 16 

1 to the £ And he for Italy— . The Brook . 1 
The bitter *, the misty summer, . The Daisy . 1:3 



n6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

pale and bloodless e began To quicken Enid . 534 
livedakingin the most Eastern E, Vivien . 405 
her chamber up a tower to the e . Elaine . 3 

blaze upon the waters to the e; . En. Arden . 595 
in the west, And rosed in the e : . Sea Dreams 40 
ever silent spaces of the E, . . Tithonus . 9 
hold me not for ever in thine E : . 11 .64 

Across the boundless e we drove, . The Voyage 38 
Far in the E Boadicea, standing . Boddicea . 3 
King of the E altho' he seem, . Lucretius . 133 
Flown to the e or the west, . . Tlie Window 41 

east-wind. 
In the stormy e-w straining, . L.ofS/ialott,iv.i 



Of my long life have made it e to me. Vivien . 530 
For it's e to find a rhyme. . Tlie Window 149-55 

eat. 
princes over-bold Have e our substance, Lotos-E's. 121 
thou may'st warble, ?and dwell: . Tlie Blackbird 4 
sat and e And tailed old matters . A udley Ct. . 27 
e wholesome food, And wear warm St S. Stylites 106 
I will not e my heart alone, . . In Mem. cvii. 3 
thousandpips^upyoursparrow-hawk ! Enid . 274 
I will enter, I will? ... 11 . 305 

e in Arthur's hall at Camelot. . 11 , 432 

let her e ; the damsel is so faint.' . 11 1055 

e also, tho' the fare is coarse, . 11 1057 

on the sudden he said, l E! . tr 1462 

mad to see you weep. El. . it 1465 

E and be glad, for I account you mine.' 11 *495 

thrust the dish before her, crying, ' £.' 11 1503 

no,' said Enid, vext, ' I will not e, it 1504 

upon the bier arise, And e with me.* it 1506 

well have drunken, scarce can e : . 11 1510 

Not e nor drink ? And wherefore ti 1522 

meant to e her up in that wild wood Vivien . 109 

e's And uses, careless of the rest : ?r . 312 

After the king, who ?in Arthur's halls. Elaine . 184 

eaten. 

after all had e, then Geraint, . Enid . . 397 

' Boy,' said he, ' I have e all, . ir . 1066 

Earl Doorm had e all he would, . tr . 1457 

eating. 

E the Lotos day by day, . . Lotos-E's. _ . 105 
ulcer, e thro' my skin, . . . St S. Stylites 66 
e not, Except the spare chance-gift 11 . 76 

boys Who love to vex him e, . Enid . 1409 

e hoary grain and pulse . Spec, of Iliad 22, n. 

eavedrops. 
Then I rise, the e fall, . . . Maud, II. iv. 62 

eaves. 

eyelids dropp'd their silken e. . TalkingO. . 209 

fall upon her gilded e . . . Princess, iv. 76 

closing e of wearied eyes . In Mem. lxvi. 11 

murmurest in the foliaged e . . tt xcviii. 9 

Wakes daggers at the sharpen'd e, it cvi. 8 

almost to the martin-haunted e . Aylmer's F. 163 

ebb (s.l 
left the dying e that faintly lipp'd . Audley Ct. . 11 
e and flow conditioning theirmarch, Golden Year 30 
could rest, a rock in e's and flows, Enid . . 812 

ebb (verb.) 
According to my humour? and flow D. ofF. Worn. 134 
When the tide e's in sunshine, . Princess, vi. 146 

ebb'd. 
the wassail-bowl Then half-way e : Tlie Epic . 6 
mine have e away for evermore, . Vivien . 289 

He flow'd and e uncertain, . . Aylmer's F. 218 

ebbing. 
felt them slowly e, name and fame.' Vivien . 287 

ebony. 
Tress'd with redolent e, . . Arabian iVV.138 

there at tables of e lay, . . Boadicea . 61 



POEM. LI 

The Owl, ii. 
Miller's D. . 
Lotos-E's. . 
Margaret . 
The Epic . 
Golden Year 



4 
66 
139 
29 
39 
75 



echo (s. ) 
So took e with delight, : 

An e from a measur'd strain, 
To hear the dewy e's calling 
Lull'd e's of laborious day. . 
faint Homeric e's, nothing-worth, 
the great e flap And buffet . 
Like hints and e's of the world 
E answer' d in her sleep 
An e like a ghostly woodpecker, 
set the wild e's flying, (rep.) . 
Blow, bugle ; answer, e's, (rep.) 
A step Of lightest e, 
a wild horn in a land Of e's, 
now and then an e started up, 
A hollow e of my own, — 
Like e's in sepulchral halls, . 
e's out of weaker times, 
E there, whatever is asked her, 
Is at an e of something Read 
million horrible bellowing e's broke 
And the woodland e rings ; 
proof and echo of all human fame. 
Queen, In words whose e lasts, 
Like e's from beyond a hollow, 

crashing with long e's thro' the land ti . 338 

hears E's in his empty l Home they brought him,' 'etc. 4 

echo (verb.) 
Hear a song that e's cheerly . 
With sounds that e still. 
' Hear how the bushes e ! 
The haunts of memory e not. 
The last wheel e's away. 
E round his bones for evermore 
wave that e's round the world ; 
made his pleasure e, hand to hand, Aylmer's F. 257 

echoed. 

further inland voices e — ' come M. d'A rthur,Ep. 27 
while our cloisters e frosty feet, Princess, Pro. 
and the forest e ' fool.' . . . Vivien 
change itself and e in her heart, . Elaine 

eclioing. 
E all night to that sonorous flow Pel., of Art 
Illyrian woodlands, e falls Of water To E. L. . 
heel against the pavement e, . Enid . 

glorious roundel e in our ears, . Vivien 
the Father answer' d, e 'highest?' Elaine 
ghostly footfall e on the stair. . Guinevere . 
e me you cry ' Our house is left . Aylmer's F. 736 

echo-like. 
Then e-l our voices rang ; . .In Mem. xxx. 13 

eclipse. 

Gaiety without e Wearieth me . Lilian . . 20 

the sun, a crescent of e, . . Vision of Sin 10 

shadow of His loss drew like e, . Ded. of Idylls 13 

ecliptic. 
Sealed by the close e, . 

eddied, 
e into suns, that wheeling cast 
eddy (s.) 
eddies of its wayward brother : .Isabel. . 33 
There the river e whirls, . L.ofShalott,ii. 15 

In crystal eddies glance and poise, Miller's D. 52 
I cannot keep My heart an e . Princess, vi. 302 
fancy's tenderest e wreathe, . In Mem.yXvm. 6 

No doubt vast eddies in the flood it exxvii. 5 

eddy (verb.) 
those that e round and round? . In Mem. lii. 12 

eddying, 
e of her garments caught from thee Ode to Mem. 31 

Eden. 
that £ where she dwelt. . . Gardener 'sD '.187 
Summer isles of £ lying . . LocksleyH. 164 
Saw distant gates of E gleam, . Two Voices 212 
every bird of £ burst In carol, . Day-Dm. . 255 
comes the statelier £ back to men : Princess, vii. 277 



Day-Dm. . i-j 
Princess, Pro. 66 

it . 211 

it iii. 352 

<< . ■ 353 

11 iv. 196 

tt v. 476 

11 yi. 349 

In Mem. iii. it 

tr lvii. 2 

it Con. 22 

Maud, I. i. 4 

tt vii. 9 

II. i. 24 

iv. 38 

Ode on Well. 145 

Enid . . 782 

Aylmer's F. 298 



L. qfShalott,\. 30 
. D. ofF. Worn. 8 
. Gardener's D. 97 
. Two Voices 369 
. Maud, I. xxii. 26 
. Ode on Well. 
Enid . . 420 



823 
778 

27 

1 

1120 

276 

1072 

5°3 



. Aylmer's F. 193 
. Princess, ii. 103 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



117 



POEM. LINE. 

Rings E thro' the budded quicks, In MemAxxwii. 2 
moon Of £ on its bridal bower : . 11 Con. 28 
dawn of£ bright over earth and sky, Maud, II. i. 8 
kept the heart of £ green . . Enid . 1618 

Set in this E of all plenteousness, En. Arden . 562 
sweet little E on earth that I know, The Islet . 14 
brooks of E mazily murmuring, . Milton . 10 

edge. 
fading e's of box beneath, ' A spirit haunts, etc. 19 
Stream'd onward, lost their e's, . D.ofF.Wom. 50 
three times slipping from the outer e. The Epic . 11 
here and there on lattice e's lay . Princess, ii. 15 
That axelike e unturnable, . . " . 186 

growing longest by the meadow's e, Enid . 1106 

prone e of the wood began . En. Arden 67,370 

edged. 
E with sharp laughter, 'Clear-headed friend,' etc. 2 
a letter e with death Beside him, . Aylmer's F. 595 

edge-tools. 
ill jesting with e-t ! Princess, ii. 1S4 

Edith. 

his E, whom he loved As heiress . Aylmer's F. 23 

in his walks with E, claim . . 11 .61 

shook the heart of E hearing him. n .63 

E. whose pensive beauty, perfect 11 . 70 

rull'd His hoop to pleasure E, . o . 85 

make-believes For E and himself : n . 96 

labourers' homes A frequent haunt of E, 11 . 148 

its own charm ; and £ s everywhere ; " . 165 

£ ever visitant with him, 11 . 166 

He but less loved than E, . . « . 167 

E's eager fancy hurried with him . 11 . 208 

everyone And most on E: 11 . 215 

E whom his pleasure was to please, 11 . 232 

that same night ; l'ale . " . 279 

its worth Was being E's. 11 . 379 

would go, Labour for his own E, 11 . 420 

remembering His former talks with E, » . 457 

shriek 'yes love, yes E, yes,' . it . 582 

which himself Gave E, . " . 597 

m E' was engraven on the blade. " . 598 

a E among the hamlets round, 11 .615 

educated. 

all his pretty young ones e, . . En. Arden . 146 

Edmund. 
brook,' says E in his rhyme, . The Brook . 21 
week Before I parted with poor E ; 11 .78 

My dearest brother, E, sleeps, . 11 . 187 

Edward (see Bull, Head, Gray.) 

Edwin 'see Morris.) 
Friend E, do not think yourself . Ed. Morris 77 

I and E laugh'd .... 11 .93 

So left the place, left E, 11 . 137 

Edyrn. 

answer, groaning, ' E, son of Nudd ! .£«<'</ . . 576 

'Then N'udd,' replied 11 . 579 

when E sack'd their house, . . 11 . . 634 

a cry That E's men were on them 11 . . 639 

len had caught them 11 . ■ 642 

fNudd . . . 1629 

one from E. Every now and then, n . 1667 

When E rcin'd his charger . . 11 . 1668 

port with E, whom he held n . 1729 

with others: have you look'd At Et . 1744 

it, weeding all his heart 11 . 1754 

( E wrought upon himself ir . 1760 

'eer'd ''heard.) 

V un a bummin' awaay luikc . N. Farmer 18 

I often '1 mi mysen ; " -30 

I V un aboot an' aboot, . . 11 . 31 

effect (s.) 
thine e so lives in me . In Mem..\x\v. 10 

verb.) 
be herself? But little ; . . Princess, iii. 247 



effeminacy. POEM. line. 
his force Is melted into mere e ? . Enid . . 107 
purple couches in their tender e . Boddicea . 62 

effeminate. 
' E as I am, I will not tight my way Enid . . 869 

Effie. 
Little £ shall go with me . May Queen, i. 25 

Don't let £ come to see me . . 11 ii. 43 

And E on the other side . . 11 iii. 24 

I thought of you and £ dear ; . 11 .29 

But, £, you must comfort her . 11 -44 

little while till you and £ come — . it . 58 

eft. 
A monstrous e was of old the Lord Maud, I. iv. 31 

egalities. 
That cursed France with her e ! . Aylmer's F. 265 

Egbert. 
doing nothing Since E— why, . Aylmer's F. 3S4 

egg- 

The goose let fall a golden e . The Goose . n 

stole his fruit, His hens, his e's; Walk. totheM.-jj 
Roof-haunting martins warm their e's : Day-Dm. 37 
The Cock was of a larger e . . Will Water. 121 
lay their e's, and sting and sing, . In Mem. xlix. 11 
evil fancies clung Like serpent e's En. Arden . All 
in the plain e's of the nightingale . Aylmer's F. 103 

egg-shell. 
Nor cared a broken e-s for her lord. Enid . 1213 

eglantine. 
Vine, vine and e, (rep.) . . T/te Window 21 

eglatere. 
woodbine and e Drip sweeter dews A Dirge . 23 

Egypt. 
O my life In E ! . . . . D. 0fF.W0m.z47 
time When we made bricks in E. . Princess, iv. 110 

Egyptian. 
To whom the E : ' O, you tamely D. ofF. Wont. 258 

Egypt-plague. 
our arms fail'd — this £-p of men ! Princess, v. 417 

eight. 
cutting e's that day upon the pond, The Epic . 10 
£ that were left to make a purer world Aylmer's £.638 

Elaine. 

A the fair, £theloveable, £, the lily Elaine . 1 

behind them stept the lily maid E, 11 . . 177 

E, and heard her name so tost it 233 

£, Won by the mellow voice . 11 . . 242 

parted with his own to fair E; tt . 380 

cast his eyes on fair E: tt 637 

' Torre and £ ! why here? . . 11 . . 792 

rose £ and glided thro' the fields, 11 . . 839 

call her friend and sister, sweet E, 11 . . 861 

had been wedded earlier, sweet E: it . . 931 

on her face and thought ' Is this £ V 11 . 1025 

elbow. 
In every c and turn, . . . Ode to Mem. 62 
in broider"d down we sank our e's : Princess, iv. 15 

elbow-chair. 
She shifted in her e-c, . . The Goose . 27 

elbow-deep, 
e-d in sawdust, slept . . . Will Water. 99 

Elder. 

led The holy Its with the gift . M.d' 'Arthur ^233 
Thine e's and thy betters. . . Will Water. 192 
passion of youth J trd reatnessinitsf, Elaine m$ 
with jubilant cries Broke from their e's, En. Arden 37s 

elder-thicket. 

white-flower'd e-t from the field . Godiva . 63 

eldest-lorn. 

Whatever e-b of rank or wealth . Aylmer's F. 484 

And Willy, my r-£, is gone, . Grandmother 1 

Willy, my beauty, my e-b . . 11 9, 101 

Willy, my e-b, at nigh tlirccscorc 11 . 87 



n8 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Eleanor. poem. line. 

Those dragon eyes of anger'di? . D. of F. Worn. 255 

Eleanore. 

To deck thy cradle, E. . . Eleanore . 21 

Serene, imperial E 11 81, 121 

In thy large eyes, imperial E. . 11 . 97 

elected. 

by common voice, E umpire, . (Enone . 83 



elegies And quoted odes, 



elegy. 



Princess, ii. 354 



element. 

The eV were kindlier mix'd.' . Two Voices 228 

in their own clear e, they moved. . Princess, vii. 13 

Large e's in order brought, . . In Mem. cxi. 13 

One God, one law, one e, . . 11 Con. 142 

I am not made of so slight Js. . Gtrinevere . 506 

soul to soul Strike thro' a finer e . Ay liner's F. 579 

elf. 
the little elves of chasm and cleft . Guinevere . 246 

elf god. 

' I saw the little e-g eyeless once . Vivien . 98 

Elf/and. 
The horns of E faintly blowing ! . Princess, Hi. 357 

Elizabeth. 
The spacious times of great E . D. of F. Wont. 7 
there is Aunt E And sister Lilia Princess, Pro. 51 
here we lit on Aunt E, 11 .96 

in arts of government E and others ; ti ii. 146 

elk. 
the monstrous horns of e and deer, Princess, Pro. 23 

Ellen (see Aubrey.) 
Sleep, E, folded in thy sister's arm, (rep. )A udley Ct. 62 

Ellen Adair. 

E A she loved me well, . . Ed. Gray . 9 

E A was dying for me. . 11 .16 

Here lies the body of E A ; . ir .27 

Till E A come back to me. . . 11 .32 

Elle vous suit. 
sent a note, the seal an E v s, . Ed. Morris . 105 

ellipse. 
Earth follows wheel'd in her e; . Golden Year 24 

elm. 
The seven e's, the poplars four . Ode to Mem. 56 
The mellow ouzel fluted in the e; Gardener's!). 93 
fruits and cream Served in the weeping e ; »i . 191 
Old e's came breaking from the vine, Amphion 45 
friends, none closer, e and vine : . Princess, ii. 316 
from the lily as far As oak from e : 11 v. 175 

moan of doves in immemorial e's, 11 vii. 206 

approachingrookeryswerveFromthe^.n Con. 97 
Rock'd the full-foliaged e's, . . In Mem. xciv. 58 
Aroused the black republic on his <?' s, Aylmer's F. 529 

elm-tree. 
'ill caw from the windy tall e-t, . May Queen,\\. 17 
The topmost e-t gather'd green SirL.andQ.G. 8 

elmtree-bole. 
Enormous e-b's did stoop and lean D. ofF. Worn. 57 

eloquence. 
A full-cell'd honeycomb of e . Ed. Morris 26 

golden e And amorous adulation . Elaine . 646 

eloquent. 

the form alone is e ! . . . Coquette, ii. 1 

Elysian. 

others in E valleys dwell, . . Lotos-Es. _ . 169 

lovelier not the E lawns, . . Princess, iii. 324 

emancipation. 

on whom The secular e turns . Princess, ii. 269 

embalm, 

e In dying songs a dead regret, . In Mem. Con. 13 

embassy. 
touches are but embassies of love, Gardener's Z>. 18 



embattail. poem. line. 

To e and to wall about thy cause To J. M. K. 8 

embellish. 
revenue Wherewith to e state, . CEnone . in 

emblem. 
Graven with e's of the time, . Arabian A" s. 108 

Like e's of infinity, . . . Ode to Mem. 103 
Caryatids, lifted up A weight of e, Princess, iv. 184 

emblematic. 
Amazon As e of a nobler age ; . Princess, ii. in 

embodied. 
truth e in a tale .... In Mem.xxxvi. j 

emboss'd. 
bronze valves, e with Tomyris . Princess, v. 355 

embower. 
However deep you might e the nest, Princess, Pro. 147 

embrace (s.) 

Die, dying clasp'd in his e. . . Fatima . 42 

the last e's of our wives . . Lotos-Es. . 115 

betwixt thy dear e and mine, LoveandDuty 48 

silent in a last e Locksley H. 58 

face He kiss'd, taking his last e, . Two Voices 254 

slipt away from my e's . . . Will Water. 182 

Twisted hard in fierce e's, . . Vision of Sin 40 

parting with a long e . . InMem.xxxix. 11 

life that earth's e May breed . ti lxxxi. 3 

yet remembers his e . .11 Ixxxiv. 111 

A little while from his e, . -it cxyi. 3 

We stood tranced in long e's . Maud, II. iv. 8 

first e had died Between them, . Lucretius . 3 

embrace (verb.) 
heart Went forth to e him . . OUnone . 62 
E our aims ; work out your freedom. Princess, ii. 75 
e me, come, Quick while I melt ; . 11 vi. 267 

we e you yet once more . . tr . 276 

By faith, and faith alone, e . .In Mem. Pro. 3 
E her as my natural good . . 11 iii. 14 

I e the purpose of God, . . Maud,\\\.\\. 59 

will e me in the world-to-be : . En. Arden . 894 

embraced. 

I could not be e Talking O. . 140 

E his Eve in happy hour, . . Day-Dm. _ . 254 
dream thy cause e in mine . . Princess, vi. 183 
£ her with all welcome as a friend, Enid . . 834 
Queen once more e her friend . ti . 1795 

half e the basket cradle-head . Sea Dreams 277 

embracing. 
while we stood like fools E, . . Ed. Morris 119 
E cloud, Ixion-like ; . . . Two Voices 195 
when he saw the Queen, e ask'd, . Elaine . 569 

emerald. 

lights, rose, amber, e, blue, . . Pal. of Art . 169 

beneath an e plane Sits Diotima, . Princess, iii. 284 

bickers into red and e, . . . 11 v. 253 

flakes Of crimson or in e rain. . InMem. xcvii. 32 

A million e's break from the . . Maud, I. iv. 1 

A livelier e twinkles in the grass, . 11 xviii. 51 

our Lady's Head, Carved of one e, Elaine . 295 

Theie they drank in cups of e, . Boddicea . 61 

emerald-colour'd. 
watch the e-c water falling . . Lotos-E's. . 141 

emerged. 
E, I came upon the great Pavilion ArabianN's. 113 

Emilia. 
Sleep, Ellen, folded in E's arm ; . Audley Ct. . 64 

emissary. 
Came at the moment Leolin's e, . Aylmer's F. 518 

Evnna (see Moreland.) 

emotion. 

Hide me from my deep e, . . Locksley H. 108 

Some vague e of delight . . Two Voices 361 

play The Spartan Mother with e, . Princess, ii. 263 



TEAWVSOAPS WORK'S. 



119 



empanoplied. POEM. line. 

E and plumed We enter'd in, . Princess, v. 472 

emperor. 
E, Ottoman, which shall win : ToF. D.Maurice 32 

emperor-idiot. 

liars worship a gluttonous e-i. . Botidicea . 19 

emperor-moth. 

I'.ut move as rich as E-m's, . . Princess,Pro.m 

empire. 
the care That yokes with e, . .To the Queen 10 

ere he found £ fur life? . . Gardener' sD. 20 

to law, System and e? . . . LoveandDuty 8 

'Three ladies of the Northern e . Princess, i. . 235 

Persian, Grecian, Roman lines Of e, ti ii. 115 

With an e's lamentation, . . Ode on Well. 2 

like a household god Promising e ; On a Mourner 31 



. InMcm. Ixxxvii. 5 
ToF. D. Maurice 1 



employ. 
fierce extremes e Thy spirits 
Come, when no graver cares e, 
employed. 
So gentle, so e, should close in love, Princess, vii. 52 

emptied. 

* of all joy, Leaving the dance . D.ofF. Worn, sis 

all The chambers e of delight : . In Mem. viii. 8 

affluent Fortune e all her horn. . Ode on Well. 197 

emptiness. 
From e and the waste wide . . Two Voices 119 
The sins of e, gossip and spite . Princess, ii. 78 

empty. 
Two years his chair is seen E . To J. S. . 23 
I jr place is e . . .In Mem. xiii. 4 
when he found all e, was amazed ; Enid . 1065 

empyrean. 
deep-domed e Rings to the roar . Milton . 7 

encarnalize. 
with shameful jest, E their spirits : Princess, iii. 298 

enchanted. 
' lie is e, cannot speak— and she, Elaine 1247 

enchanter. 
Upon the great £ of the Time, . Vivien . 65 

enchantress. 
A great e you may be ; . . L.C. V. de Vere 30 

encircle. 
E's all the heart, and fecdeth . Margaret . 16 

enclosing. 
hollow shades * hearts of flame, . Pal. 0/ Art 241 
every marge e in the midst . . Vivien . 520 

encompass. 
The love of all Thy sons e Thee, . Ded. of Idylls 50 

encompassed. 
sleep E by his faithful guard, . In Mem. exxv. 8 

encounter. 
A little in the late e strain'd, . Enid . 1007 

end [s.) 

cruel love, whose e is scorn . Mariana in t/uS. 70 

Is this the 1 to be left alone, . n .71 

in all action is the s of all : . . GSnone . 120 

'of life; ah, why . Lotos-Es. . 86 

all thine own, Until the e of time' D.ofF. Worn. 84 

. To J. S. . 73 

■'s "Love thou thy land,' etc. 6 

My .• draws nigh : 'tis time that I M.d' Arthur 163 

Mien, my words have * . Gardener" sD. 345 

h ipe my e drwin St S. Stylii 
• on the column till the*; 11 . 160 

' Surely the tl . ■■ . 198 

'V life, and apathetic r. . Loz'eaudDutyiS 

11 . 26 

1. but the .• had I'ume . .. .74 

''"" " an/, . Ulysses . 22 

something ere the e, Some work .11 .51 



POEM. LINE. 

A labour working to an e. . . Two Voices 297 
e and the beginning vex His reason; 11 , 298 

1 I see the*:, and know the good' . 11 . 432 

hook it to some useful e. . . Day-Dm. . 212 
Enough if at the e of all . . Amphion . 103 
For them I battle till the e . . Sir Galahad 15 
moves to gracious e's * You might have won,' etc. 6 
bees and breeze from e to e. . . Princess, Pro. 88 
from e to e With beauties every . ti ii. 413 

if our e were less achievable . 11 iii. 266 

iron laws, in the e Found golden . 11 iv. 57 

great is song Used to great e's: . 11 . 120 

grand fight to kill and make an e: it . 568 

you failing, I abide What e soever : 11 v. 396 

at the further e Was Ida by the throne 11 vi. 336 
For worship without e; nor e of mine, n vii. 154 
Yoked in all exercise of noble e, . 11 . 340 

() what to her shall be the e ? . In Mem. vi. 41 
' Is this the e? Is this the*? . 11 xii. 16 

move thee on to noble e' s. . . tt lxiv. 12 

Are sharpen'd to a needle's e; . 11 lxxv. 4 

What e is here to my complaint? . tr lxxx. 6 

Now looking to some settled e, . 11 lx.xxiv. 97 

I climb the hill : from e to c . . it xcix. 1 

ampler day For ever nobler e's . 11 cxvii. 7 

toil codperant to an e. . . . 11 exxvii. 24 

itself to the long-wish'd-for e . Maud, I. xviii. 5 

never an e to the stream of passing 11 11. v. n 
at either e whereof There swung an Enid . . 169 

to what e, except a jealous one, Vivien . 388 
and to this e Had made the pretext Elaine . 580 
sweet is death who puts an e to pain; 11 . 1002 
An e to this ! A strange one I .11. 1216 
Serving his traitorous e; . . Guinevere . 20 

1 the e is come And I am shamed . 11 . 109 
Down at the far e of an avenue . En. Arden . 353 
lonely doom Came suddenly to an e. 11 . 628 
rioted his life out, and made an e. Arbiter's F. 391 
every labyrinth till he saw An e, . 11 . 480 
wanted at his e The dark retinue . 11 . 841 
a flower or two, and there an e — . Lucretius . 226 
Gone till the e of the year, . . The Window 36 
Over the world to the e of it. . 11 . 200 

end (verb.) 

to begin implies to e ; . . . Two Voices 339 

the strange betrothment was to e: Princess, v. 463 

will I hide thee, till my life shall e, Guinevere . 113 

could not e me, left me maim'd . Tithonus . 20 

Whether I mean thisday to* myself, Lucretius . 146 

manlike e myself ?— our privilege — 11 . 229 

endear. 
falling out That all the more e's . Princess, i. 252 

ended. 
Here e Hall, and our last light, M. d' Arthur, Ep. 1 
Thus far he flow'd, and c; . . Golden Year 52 
When, ere his song was e, . . Amphion . 50 
She e here, and beckon'd us : . Princess, ii. 165 
e with such passion that the tear, . 11 iv. 41 

when the jousts were e yesterday, Enid . . 692 
e with apology so sweet . . 11 . 1243 

this was <■, and his careful hand — En. Arden . 176 
E he had not, but she brook'd . Aylmer's F. 798 
when the wordy storm Had e, . Sea Dreams 32 

ending. 
She, e, waved her hands ; . . Princess, iv. 5 01 
e in a ruin — nothing left, . . Vivien . 732 

endow. 

E you with broad land and territory Elaine . 953 

endurance. 
until e grow Sinew'd with action, . OSuone . 161 

endure. 

A courage to e antl to obey ; . hahel . . 25 

All force in bonds that might /, . Pal. of Art 154 

e's not sordid en. Is. ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 6 

dies nut, hut e's with pain. . . luMem. xviii. 17 

scarce e to draw the breath, . . 11 xx. is 

Whose loves in higher love e; 11 .xxxii. 14 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

living will that shalt e . InMem. cxxx. i 
Let the sweet heavens e, . - Maud, I. xi. 8 
As long as my life e's . . it xix. 86 
while the races of mankind e, . OdeonWell, 219 
not, O woman' s-heart, but still e ; Ded. of Idylls 43 
Break not, for thou art Royal, but^-, 11 . 44 
E's not that her guest should serve Enid . . 379 
can e it all most patiently.' . .11. . 473 
thought to dc while he might yet e, Elaine . 494 

1 will nevermore e To sit . . Sailor Boy . 15 
heart to e for the life of the worm . Wages . 7 

endured. 

Have all in all e as much, . . StS. Stylites 128 

yet e to meet her opening eyes, . Princess, iv. 177 
they knew her : they e, . . . 302 

surely have e Strange chances . Enid . 1657 

'ene?nies (anemones.) 
Doon i' the woild 'e . . . N. Farmer . 34 

enemy, 
enemies have fall'n, have fall'n : (rep. ) Princess, vi. 1 7 
if an e's fleet came yonder , . Maud, I. i. . 49 
arms, arms, arms to fight my e ? . Enid . . 282 
down his ^roll'd, And there lay still; if . 1009 

roll'd his e down, And saved him : Elaine . 26 

knights Are half of them our enemies, 11 . . 100 
a dream Of dragging down his e . it . 810 

said, 'mine enemies Pursue me, . Guinevere . 138 
Ev'n in the presence of an es fleet, h . 277 

moan of an e massacred, . . Boddicea . 25 
tho' the gathering e narrow thee, . 11 -39 

pulses at the clamouring of her e , it .82 



POEM. LINE. 

Pal. of Art 113 



energy. 
spurr'd at heart with fieriest e 
By its own e fulfill'd itself 
full-grown energies of heaven. 
With agonies, with energies, 

enfold. 
large grief which these e 
So dear a life your arms e 

enfolded. 
Two mutually e; Love, the third, 
in her veil e, manchet bread. 

engarlanded. 
E and diaper'd With inwrought . 



To J. M. K. 7 

Gardener 1 sD . 233 

In Mem.xxx'ix.20 

11 cxii. 18 

In Mem. v. 11 
The Daisy . 93 

Gardener sD. 210 
Enid . . 389 

Arabian N's. 148 

e?igine. 
Which only to one e bound . . Two Voices 347 

engirt. 
E with many a florid maiden-cheek, Pri?icess s iii. 332 

England. 
more than E honours that, . . Talking O. . 295 
From E to Van Diemen. . . Amfihion . 84 
freedom in her regal seat Of E; . InMem. cviii. 15 
thanks to the Giver, E, for thy son. Ode on Well. 45 
For this is E's greatest son, . it . 95 

E pouring on her foes. ... it 117 

keep our noble E whole, . ir 161 

Truth-teller was our E's Alfred . n . 188 

It told of E then to me, . . The Daisy . 89 

how should E dreaming of /«j sons Ded. of 'Idylls 30 
dewymeadowymorning-breath OfE, En. Arde?i 662 
God-gifted organ-voice of E, . Milto?i . 3 

English. 
first reveal'd themselves to £ air, Elednore . 2 
one, an E home — gray twilight . Pal. of Art 85 
£ natures, freemen, friends, 'Love thou thy land* etc] 
sweet as £ air could make her, . Princess, Pro. 154 
Where he in E earth is laid, . InMem. xviii. 2 

like sunny gems on an £ green, . Maud, I. v. 14 
I see her there, Bright E lily, . 11 xix. 55 
if you knew her in her E days . The Brook . 224 
Nor ever lost an E gun ; . . Ode on Well. 97 
Truth-lover was our E Duke ; . 11 . 189 

Gallant sons of £ freemen, . . The Captain 7 

Englishman. 
A great broad-shoulder'd genial 2?, Princess, Con. 85 
The last great E is low. . . Ode on Well. 18 



engrailed. 
hills with peaky tops e, . 

engrained. 
with vary-colourM shells Wandered e. ArabianN's. 58 

engraven. 
' From Edith' was e on the blade Aylmer'sF. 598 

Enid. 
E, Yniol's only child, . . . En 
E, but to please her husband's eye 
E loved the Queen, and with true 
Allowing it, the Prince and E rode, 
Told E, and they sadden'd her 
E woke and sat beside the couch, 
' If £ errs, let £ learn her fault.' 
The voice of E, Yniol's daughter, 
sweet voice of E moved Geraint, 
song that £ sang was one Of Fortune 
Moved the fair £, all in faded silk 
the Prince, as £ past him, fain To 
E took his charger to the stall ; 
£ brought sweet cakes 
£ at her lowly handmaid-work, 
the night Before my E's birthday, 
looking round he saw not £ there, 
Across the face of £ hearing her ; 
broken down, for £ sees my fall ! ' 
E, for she lay With her fair head 
£ fell in longing for a dress . 
£ started waking, with her heart 
E look'd, but all confused at first 
£ listen' d brightening as she lay ; 
good mother making £ gay . 
E all abash'd she knew not why, 
make your £ burst Sunlike from 
how should £ find A nobler friend? 
E ever kept the faded silk, . 
not a word ! ' and E was aghast ; 
last sight that E had of home 
E leading down the tracks . 
E was aware of three tall knights 
Then E ponder'd in her heart, 
E waited pale and sorrowful, 
E, keeping watch, behold In the first 
E stood aside to wait the event, 
Had ruth again on £ looking pale : 
E took a little delicately, 
glance At £, where she droopt : . 
Found £ with the corner of his eye, 
E, the pilot star of my lone life, . 
E my early and my only love, 
£ the loss of whom has turn'd me 
£, you and he, I see it with joy — 
E fear'd his eyes, Moist as they were. 
£ never loved a msfn but him, 
£ left alone with Prince Geraint . 
E had no heart To wake him, 
Went E with her sullen follower on 
£ heard the clashing of his fall, . 
for long hours sat £ by her lord, . 
£ shrank far back into herself 
£ answer'd, harder to be moved . 
£, in her utter helplessness, 
'The voice of £,' said the knight; 
fear not, £, I should fall upon him 
ism their going had two fears, 
£ easily believed, Like simple noble 
past to E's tent ; and thither came 
E tended on him there : 
E, whom her ladies loved to call E the 
grateful people named E the Good, 
cry of children, E's and Geraints 
betwixt her best E, and lissome Vivien, 

enjoy. 
saints E themselves in heaven, . StS. Stylites 104 

7 



1455 
1542 
1567 
1628 
1635 
1665 
1722 
1770 
1772 
1810 
1812 
1813 
Guinevere 29 



enjoyed. 
all times I have e Greatly, . . Ulysses 

enjoying. 
E each the other's good : . .In Mem. xlvi. 10 



TZX.YYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



121 



enjoyment. toem. line. 
There mcthinks would be e . . Locksley H. 165 

enlighten. 

Strengthen me, e me ! . . Ode to M em. 5, 43, 122 

Enna. 
Like Proserpine in £, gathering . Ed. Morris . 112 

Enoch (see Arden.) 
£ was host one day, . . . En. Arden . 25 

E would hold possession for a week : 11 .27 

E stronger-made Was master : . it -3° 

E spoke his love, But Philip . " .40 

E set A purpose evermore before his 11 . 44 

Than E. Likewise had he served n . 52 

E and Annie, sitting hand-in-hand, ir . 69 

E was abroad on wrathful seas, . tr . 91 

Es white horse, and Es ocean-spoil 11 . 93 

Friday fare was Es ministering . 11 . 100 

thither used J? at times logo . 11 . 104 

master of that ship E had served in 11 . 120 

Would E have the place ? . . ir . 125 

£ all at once assented to it, 11 . 126 

E lay long-pondering on his plans ; 11 . 133 

£ in his heart determined all . 11 . 148 

E took, and handled all his limbs ir . 153 

first since Es golden ring had girt 11 . 157 

£ parted with his old sea-friend, . 11 . 168 

all day long till Es last at home, . 11 . 172 

£ faced this morning of farewell . 11 . 182 

£ as a brave God-fearing man . ir . 185 

O E, you are wise ; And yet . tr . 210 

£ rose, Cast his strong arms . 11 . 226 

when the day, that £ mentioned, came 11 . 238 

foreboding 'What would E say? . 11 . 252 

(Since E left he had not look'd . 11 . 272 

of what he wish'd, E, your husband : 11 . 291 

if you will, when £ comes again . 11 . 308 

£ lives ; that is borne in on me : . 11 . 318 

Philip gained As £ lost : for £ seem'd n . 352 

£ left his hearth and native land, . 11 . 357 

no news of £ came. . . . 11 . 358 

be ever loved As E was ? . . 11 . 424 

' to be loved A little after E.' . 11 . 426 

If A comes — but E will not come — " . 428 

for a sign ' my E is he gone?' . 11 . 487 

£sittingona height, Under apalmtrce, ir . 496 

where was E ! prosperously sail'd 11 . 523 

E traded for himself, and bought n . 534 

loss of all Hut £ and two others. . u . 551 

Es comrade, careless of himself, . 11 . 569 

over Es early-silvering head . n . 623 

E spoke no word to anyone, . 11 . 668 

There /; rested silent many days . 11 . 700 

> brown, so bow'd, So broken — u . 704 

t away and lost' 11 . 714 

£ yearn'd to see her face again ; . 11 . 718 

£ shunn'd the middle walk 11 . 739 

have worse or better, E saw. . 11 . 742 

£ set himself, Scorning an alms, . tr . 812 

meet the day When E had return'd, 11 . 824 

weakness cheerfully . ■■ . 828 

/•' thinking 'after I am gone . 11 . 835 

'.yes upon her, . 11 . 845 

£ hang A moment on her words . 11 . 873 

..i.er'd motionless and pale, 11 . 907 

enrich. 
£ the markets of the golden year. Golden Year 46 

he blood of the world.' Princess, ii. 164 
e the threshold of the night . . In Mem. xxix. 6 

enringed. 

E a billowing fountain . . . Princess, ii. 14 

enroll. 
.-« would <■ them with your own, Princess, i.236 

In many a figured leaf es . . In Mem. xlii. n 

ensample. 
drawing foul / from fair names, . Guinevere . 486 

ensign. 

drowsy folds of our great e shake, Princess, v. 8 



ensue. 
might e With this old soul . 
out of distance might e Desire 



POEM. LINE. 

. T-aio Voices 392 
. In Mem. cxvi. 6 



, Aylmer's F. 560 

Maud, I. vi. 23 

Aylmer's F. 272 

, Madeline . 40 

Pal. of Art 203 

Margaret . 24 



ensued. 
then e A Martin's summer . 

entangle. 
To e me when we met, . 

entangled. 
girl might be e ere she knew. 

entanglest. 
All my bounding heart e 

enter. 
some brainless devil e's in, . 
e not the toil of life. 
He breaks the hedge : he /.j there : Day-Dm. . 118 

NO MAN £ IN ON PAIN OF DEATH? PrillCCSS, ii. I 78 

laws are broken : let him e too.' . 11 vi. 297 

friend or foe, Shall e, if he will. . " . 317 

in a tale Shall e in at lowly doors. In Mem.xxxvi. 8 

She e's other realms of love ; . " xxxix. 12 

Descend, and touch, and e ; 

' £ likewise ye And go with us : ' 

e in at breast and brow, 

She e's, glowing like the moon 

Then Vniol, '£ therefore and partake Enid 

I will e, I will eat With all . 

Said Yniol ; ' £ quickly.' 

There will I e in among them all 

late I but we can e still. 

too late ! ye cannot e now. (rep.) 

on the latch, Fearing to e : . 

entered. 
another night in night 1 e, . 
as we e in the cool. 
Each e like a welcome guest 
e an old hostel, call'd mine host 
subscribed, We e on the boards : 
as we e in, There sat along the forms, 
With me, Sir, e in the bigger boy, 
I knock' d and, bidden, e ; . 
Beneath the satin dome and e in, 
e in, and there Among piled arms 
Empanoplied and plumed We e in. 
go with us : ' they e in. 
e, and were lost behind the walls. 
£, the wild lord of the place, Limours. 11 . 1126 

and, no one opening, £; . . En. Arden . 279 
What ail'd her then, that ere she e, 11 . 514 

e one Of those dark caves . . Sea Dreams 87 

entering. 
do well, Ladies, in e here, . . Princess, ii. 48 
£, the sudden light Dazed me half-blind : 11 v. n 
£ then, Right o'er a mount . . Enid . . 360 
e baiVd her door, Stript off the case, Elaine . 15 
e fill'd the house with sudden light. Aylmer's F. 682 
for on e He had cast the curtains 11 . 802 

entertained. 
talk and minstrel melody e. . 

entertainment. 
slender e of a house Once rich, 

entranced. 
£ with that place and time, . 

entreat. 
' Earl, e her by my love, 



tl 


xen 


• n 


II 


CI] 


• 5' 


,, 


CXXl 


11 


II 


Con 


2 7 


e Enid 
■> 




300 

3°5 
360 


Elaine 




1046 


Guinevere . 


167 


11 




168 


En. Arden 


5i6 


A radian N's 


• 18 


Gardener sD 


.113 


Two Voices 


411 


Princess 


• '• 


171 


11 
ns, 11 


u. 


60 
86 
382 


11 


111. 


114 


11 


IV. 


13 


11 


V. 


Si 

472 


In Mem 


Cll. 


S2 


Enid . 




252 



entreaty. 
manifold entreaties, many a tear, 

entry. 
Above an e : riding in, we call'd ; 
A column'd c shone and marble . 
in the Vestal e shriek'd The virgin 

entry-gates. 
from his walls and wing'd his e-g's Aylmer's F. 18 

entwine. 
Round my true heart thine xrmse ; 
E the cold baptismal font, . 



Elaine . 267 

Enid . . 301 
A rabian N's. 97 

Enid . . 760 

En. Arden . 160 

Princess, i. 222 

v. 354 

11 vi. 330 



Miller's D. 216 
In Mem. xxix. 10 



122 



CONCORDANCE TO 



envy (s.) 
that £ calls you Devil's son, 
far aloof From e, hate and pity, 
No lewdness, narrowing e, . 

envy (verb.) 
Her countrywomen ! she did not e 
I e not in any moods 
I e not the beast that takes . 

envying, 
e all that meet him there. 
Leolin, I almost sin in e you : 

enwind. 

Danube rolling fair £ her isles, 

enwound. 
circle of his arms E us both ; 
E him fold by fold, and made 

epic. 
*he burnt His e, his King Arthur, 
Princess, six feet high, Grand, e, . 
scraps of thundrous E lilted out . 

epicurean. 
like a stoic, or like A wiser e, 
majesties Of settled, sweet, E life. 

epitaph. 
cut this e above my bones ; . 

epittiet. 

your fine e Is accurate too, . 
pelted with outrageous es t . 

equal. 
woman were an e to the man. 
this proud watchword rest Of e ; , 
in true marriage lies Nor e, nor , 

equal {verb. ) 
what delights can e those 

eq ual-blowing. 
Eeneath a broad and e-b wind, 

equalled. 
came to me that e my desire. 

equal-poised. 
O friendship, e-p control, 

equinox. 

in head or chest Our changeful e t es l 



POEM LINE. 

Vivien 317-47 

Lucre 'tins . 77 

ii , 208 

Princess, iii. 25 
In Mem. xxvii. 1 



hiMem.lix. 8 
Ay liner's F. 360 

In Man. xcvii. 10 

Gardener* s D . 212 
Guinevere . 597 

The Epic . 28 

Princess, Pro. 219 

" "• 353 

Maud, I. iv. 21 

Lucretius . 215 

Princess, ii. 190 

Vivien . 382 

Ay Inzer's F. 286 

Princess, \. 130 
11 vii. 283 
11 . 285 

In Mem. xli. 9 

Gardener's D. 76 

Z>. (t/7 7 . Worn. 230 

In Mem.haadv. 33 

Will Water. 238 



.£" behind a desk of satin-wood, 
E and silent, striking with her 
e, but bending from his height 
from sorrow, soldierlike, E: . 
e, but in the middle aisle Reel'd, 
from the porch, tall, and e again 

Eros. 
a bevy of E'es, apple-cheek' d, 

err. 
e from honest Nature's rule ! 
O my princess ! true she e's, 
has a son And sees him e . 
nothing is that e's from law. 
* If Enid e's, let Enid learn . 

err'd. 
Aim'd at the helm, his lance e : 
if ancient prophecies Have e not, , Guinevere . 447 

error. 
intellect to part E from crime ; . Isabel . . 15 
Shall E in the round of time . Love and Duty 4 

if it were thine e or thy crime c Come not when,' etc 7 
some gross e lies In this report, . Princess, i. 68 
wears her e like a crown 
Deep as Hell I count his e. 
Dismal e ! fearful slaughter ! 



. Princess, ii. 90 

11 vi. 136 

. Ay Inzer's F. 119 

u . 729 

11 . 818 

. 825 

. The Islet . 11 

. LocksleyH. 61 
. Princess, iii. 91 

n . _ 244 

. In Mem. Ixxii. 8 
. Enid . . 132 



Enid 



1006 



The Captain 



Esau. 
a heart as rough as E's hand, 



Godiva 



escape. 

and tumbles and childish e's, 
From which was no e for evermore 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud, I. i. 69 
Vivien 59, 394 



escaped. 
From which I £ heart-free, . . Maud, ii. . n 
second Christmas came, e His keepers^/ ylmer'sF. 838 

escaping. 
Like the caged bird e suddenly, 



espalier. 
The e's and the standards all 

essay. 
dearly love thy first e, . 

essayed, 
e, by tende re st- touching terms 

essence. 

floated free, As naked e, 

O sacred e, other form, 

his e's turn'd the live air sick, 



En. Arden . 268 
The Blackbird 5 
Ode to Mem. 83 



Vivien 



747 



. Two Voices 374 
In A/em. lxxxiv. 35 
. Maud, I. xiii. 11 

estate (condition.) 

Whose life in low e began . . hi Mem. Ixiii. 3 

my crown'd e begun To pine . 11 lxxi. 5 



one so bright in dark e, 



Enid 



786 



estate (property.) 



now lord of the broad e . . Maud, I. i. . 19 

lump of earth has left his e . . 11 xvi. . 1 

estate (verb.) 
E them with large land . . Elaine . 1312 

esteem. 

talk kindlier : we e you for it — ■ . Princess, v. 203 

esteem' d. 
you e us not Too harsh . . Princess, iii. 182 

Esther. 
those of old That lighted on Queen E, Enid . 731 

estuary. 
smoulder'd on the refluent e ; . Boadicea . 28 

eternal. 
masters Time indeed, and is E, hi Mem. lxxxiv. 66 

eternity, 

in the light of great e . . LoveaiidDeaih 12 

dreadful time, dreadfuls, . . Pal. of Art 267 

He names the name E. . . Two Voices 291 

The sabbaths of E, . . . St Agnes' Eve 33 
Music's golden sea Setting toward e, Ode on Well. 253 

O skill'd to sing of Time or E, . Milton . 2 

etiquette. 
clamouring e to death, . 



. Princess, v. 16 

Europa. 
sweet E's mantle blew unclasp'd, . Pal. of Art 117 

Europe. 
Better fifty years of E . 
guard the eye, the soul Of E, 
the weight and fate of £ hung, 
lash all £ into blood ; . 

European. 
never floats an E flag, . 



. Locksley H. 184 

. Ode on Well. 161 

11 . 240 

To F. D Maurice 34 



Eu rope-shadowing. 
wheel'd on E-s wings. . 

Eustace. 
I and E from the city went . 
E might have sat for Hercules : 
E painted her, And said to me 
E turn'd, and smiling said . 
* £,' I said, 'This wonder keeps . 
solemn gibe did E banter me. 
Autumn brought an hour For £, . 

evangelist. 
seal'd The lips of that £. 

eve. 
At e the beetle boometh 
At e a dry cicala sung, 



Locksley H. 161 

Ode on Well. 120 

Gardener's D. 2 



11 . 96 

n . 118 

11 . 164 

if . 203 

hiMem.xxxl. 16 



. Claribel . 9 
Mariana in t/ieS.B$ 



fE.YNYSO.V'S IVORA'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

From fringes of the faded e, ' Move east-ward,' etc. 3 
thro' the land at e we went, . . Princess, i. 246 
at e and dawn With Ida, Ida, Ida, 11 iy. 412 

strangely falls our Christmas e. . In Mem. civ. 4 
No later than last e to Prince . Enid . . 603 
her bard, her silver star of**, . Vivien . 803 

on the winding waters, e and morn Elaine 1398 

for a breathing-while at e, . Aylmer's F. 449 

at home in my father's farm at e : . Grandmotlter 90 
N or anchor dropt at e or morn ; . Tlie Voyage 82 
when the zoning e has died . . On a Mourner i\ 

Eve. 
Adam first Embraced his E . . Day-Din. . 254 
Shadowing the snow-limb'd E . Maud, I. xviii. 28 

even. 

tears fell with the dews at e; . Mariana . 13 

the crag that fronts the E, . . Eleauore . 40 

Whisper in odorous heights of e. . Milton . 16 

even/all. 
thro' the laurels At the quiet e, . Afaud.ll.iv. 78 
brought him home at e: ' Home tliey brought,' etc. 2 



in stillest e's With what voice . Adeline . 30 
Many an e by the waters . . Locksley H. 37 
dropt with cona rustic town . Princess, i. . 168 
brow to brow like night and e mixt 11 vi. 115 

it was e : silent light Slept . . 11 vii. 105 

Never morning wore To e .In Mem. vi. 8 

from the gorgeous gloom Of e . » Ixxxv. 3 
It leads me forth at e, . . . Maud, II. iv. 17 
low-rifted glooms Of e, . Elaine . 997 
At e when the dull November day En. Arden . 722 
all of an e late I climb'd to the top Grandmotlier 37 

evening-lighted. 
From the e-l wood, . . . Margaret . to 

event. 

such refraction of e's As often rises In Mem. xci. 15 

one far-off divine e, 11 Con. 143 

tood aside to wait the e, . Enid . 1002 

remaining here wilt learn the e; . Guinevere . 572 

eventide. 
Either at mom or e. . . Mariana . 16 

at e, listening earnestly . . 'A spirit haunts? etc. 4 
on a golden autumn e, . . . En. Arden . 61 

Everard (see Hall.) 
clapt his hand On E's shoulder, . The Epic 
I remember' d Es college fame . 11 



evcr-brcaking. 
heard an e-b shore That tumbled 

ever-echoing. 
e-e avenues of song. 



46 

InMem.cxxm. n 
OdeonlVell. 79 



an ef arrow, 



ever-fancied. 



Enid 



1380 



CEnone 



234 



En. Arden . 736 
Spiteful Let. 23 

Ode on Well. ii() 



ever-floating. 
death, death, thou e-fc\ou&, 

evergreen. 
in it throve an ancient e, 
my heart, my heart is an e: . 

ever-loyal. 
Their e-l iron leader's fame, . 

■ murdered. 
t-m France, By shores that darken Aylmer's F. 766 

ever-ravening. 
t-r eagle's beak and talon . Doadicca . 1 1 

ever-shifting. 
e-s currents of the blood . .D0fF.lV0rn.133 

ever-tremulous. 
falling showers, And<--/aspcn-trccs, Elaine . 523 

evidence. 
That heat of inward e, . . . Two Voices 284 



evil. 
can we have To war with e ? . 
e came on William at the first. 
For that the e ones come here, 
all good things from e, . 
E haunts The birth, the bridal ; 
whatsoever e happen to me, . 
they do not flow From e done ; 
(Sure that all e would come out of 
let us too, let all e, sleep. 
Out of e e flourishes, 

evil-hearted. 
Beautiful Paris, c-h Paris, . 

evil-starred. 
fell my father e-s;— 



POEM. LINE. 

Lotos-E's. . 94 



Dora 



59 



. StS.Stylites 96 
. Love and Duty 38 
. In Mem. xc\ii. 13 
. Enid . . 471 
. Guinevere . 187 
it) En. Arden . 162 
. Sea Dreams 297 
. lioddicea . 83 

. QL 'none . 49 

. Locksley II. 155 



snowy shoulders, thick as herded e's, Princess, iv. 458 

example. 

make me an e to mankind, . . StS.Stylites 185 

let them take E, pattern : ir . 220 

your e pilot, told her all. . . Princess, m. 121 

Unused e from the grave . . InMemAxxix. 15 

Let his great e stand . . . Odeon Well. 220 

Excalibur. 

Thou therefore : take my brand E . M.d' Arthur 27 

take E, And fling him far . 11 .36 

drew he forth the brand E, . 11 .52 

Better to leave E conceal'd . it .62 

1 King Arthur's sword, E, 11 . 103 

hid E the second time, . . n .111 

if thou spare to fling E, . n 131 

flash'd and fell the brand E: . 11 . 142 

exceed. 
one whose rank e's her own. . InMem.Wx. 4 

excess. 
like one that sees his own e, 

excuse. 
for my (What looks so little graceful : Princess.iil.tf 
Made such e's as he might, . . Guinevere . 39 
With many a scarce-believable e. En. Arden . 466 

execration. 
with a suddens drove The footstool Aylmer's F. 328 

exempt. 
she herself was not e — . 



Aylmer's F. 400 



. Locksley II. 95 

exercise. 

men delight in, martial e ? . . Princess, iii. 200 

Yoked in all (-of noble end, . . " vii. 340 

The sad mechanic <-, . . In Mem. v. 7 

Charier of sleep, and wine, and e, Aylmer's F. 448 

exiled, 
e from eternal God, . . . Pal. of Art 263 

existence. 
deep heart of e beat for ever . Locksley II. 140 

exit. 
the landward c of the cave, . . Sea Dreams 94 

expanse. 
down the river's dim e — . L. ofShalott,\w. 10 
going O'er the lone e, . . . The Captain 26 

expect. 
kinge'f — was there no precontract? Princess, iii. 191 

expectant. 
E of that news which never came, En. Arden . 357 

expectation. 
eyes Of shining e fixt on mine. . Princess, \v. 135 
glows In e of a guest ; . . . In Mem. vi. 30 

expecting. 
E when a fountain should arise : . Visien of Sin 8 
/;' still his advent home : . . In Mem. vi. 21 

experience. 
full-grown will. Circled thro' .ill e's. CEnone . 1*3 
worth 1 he e of the wise rl IfofTSl 66 



124 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

all e is an arch .... Ulysses . 19 
a laden breast, Full of sad e, . Locksley H. 144 

tho' all e past became Consolidate Two Voices 365 
what Our own e preaches. . . Will Water. 176 
strange e's Unmeet for ladies. . Princess, iv. 140 
your plan, Divorced from my e, . 11 . 336 

pines in sad e worse than death, . ti vii. 296 

A lord of large e, . . . .In Mem. xli. 7 

experiment. 
setting round thy first e . . Ode to Mem. 81 
yonder, shrieks and strange e's . Princess, Pro. 228 

expert. 
howsoe'er e In fitting aptest words In Mem. lxxiv. 5 

explain. 
answer'd ' ever longing to e, . The Brook . 107 

explained. 
shame that cannot be e for shame Vivien . 548 

exploring. 
Science enough and e, . . . 1865-1866 . 6 

expormd. 
not of those that can e themselves. Vivien 



167 



Take Vivien for e ; 



exp07inder. 



Vivien 



express. 
How may full-sail'd verse e, . Eleanore . 44 

Who may e thee, Eleanore ? . if .68 

common mouth, So gross to e delight, Gardener 'sD. 55 
e All-comprehensive tenderness, In Mem. lxxxiv. 46 

exp ress'd — exp rest. 
yearnings that can never be e . D.ofF. Worn. 283 
no other thing e But long disquiet Two Voices 248 
Thro' light reproaches, half e, In Mem. lxxxiv. 13 



more e Than hid her, . 


. Vivien 


7 1 


expression. 
But beyond e fair . 
Drew in the e of an eye, 


. Adeline 

. In Mem. ex. 


5 
19 


expunge. 
tarn by tarn E the world : 


. Princess, vii. 


26 



exquisite. 
kisses press'd On lips less e than 



Gardener' sD.t$o 



extending. 
innocently e her white arms, . Elaine . 928 

extremes. 
The falsehood of e ! ' Of old sat Freedo?n,' etc. 24 
such e, I told her, well might harm Princess, iii. 128 
storming in e Stood for her cause, if v. 168 

fierce e employ Thy spirits . In Mem. \xxxvii. 5 
save it even in e, . . . . Guinevere . 6j 

extremity. 
reddening in e of delight, . . Enid . 1068 

extdt. 
Fade wholly, while the soul e' s, . In Mem. lxxii. 14 

exulted. 
The Priest e, And cried with joy, The Victim 38 

eye. 

Glancing with black-beaded e's . Lilian . 15 

E s not down-dropt nor over bright, Isabel . . 1 
Light-glooming over e's divine, . Madeline . 16 
Serene with argent-lidded e's . Arabian N's. 135 
his deep e laughter-stirr'd' if . 150 

spirit-thrilling e's so keen and . Ode to Mem. 
of the many tongues, the myriad e's! if 
Unto mine inner e, Divinest Memory! ir 
Large dowries doth the raptured e 



Thy rose-lips and full blue e's . Adeline 
those dew-lit e's of thine, it 

Beyond the bottom of his e. . .A Character 

a lack-lustre dead-blue e, . . 11 

Blew his own praises in his e's, . 11 

ritesandformsbeforehisburning^'.? The Poet 
globes Of her keen e's. 



In your e there is death, 



POEM. LINE. 

listen, listen, your e's shall glisten Sea Fairies 35 
about him roll'd his lustrous e's; . LoveandDeath 3 
Up from my heart unto my eyes . Oriana . 78 
large calm e's for the love of me. . The Mermaid 27 
her e's were darken'd wholly, I. qfShalott,\v. 31 
Her melancholy e's divine, . Mariana in the S. 19 



. Pal. of Art 



43 
76 
85 
87 

211 
215 
220 
222 

38 

3° 

31 

ss 

139 

155 

180 

186 

251 

42 

103 

170 

193 



To look into her e's and say, 

Thy dark e's open'd not, . . Eleanore 

The languors of thy love-deep e's . tf 

full and deep In thy large e's, . 11 

seems to come and go In thy large e's ti 

busy wrinkles round his e's ? . . Miller's D 

see his gray e's twinkle yet (rep. ) 11 

ere I saw your e's, my love, . . if 

there a vision caught my e ; . . tt 

when I raised my e's, above . . ti 

Such^'s.' I swear to you, . . ti 

E's with idle tears are wet. . . 11 

Look thro' mine e's with thine. . it 

those kind e's for ever dwell ! . 11 

not shed a many tears, Dear e's . 11 

Droops blinded with his shining e: Fatima 

My e's are full of tears, . . Osnone 

heart is breaking, and my e's are dim, if 

With down-dropt e's I sat alone : ti 

above, her full and earnest e . n 

mortal e's are frail to judge of fair, tr 

subtle smile in her mild e's, . . if 

beheld great Here's angry e's, . 11 

to vex me with his father's e's / 

My palace with unblinded e's, 

e's That said, We wait for thee. 

Flush'd in her temples and her e's, 

fair to sate my various e's ! . 

your sweet e's, your low replies : L.C. V. deVere 29 

languid light of your proud e's 

many a black black e, they say, 

tir'd eyelids upon tir'd e's ; . 

With half-shut e's ever to seem 

e's grown dim with gazing on the 

Charged both mine e's with tears 

star-like sorrows of immortal e's, 

black-bearded kings with wolfish e's ft 

with swarthy cheeks and bold black e's, 11 

tame and tutor with mine e . . 11 

dragon e's of anger'd Eleanor . 11 

lit your e's with tearful power, . Margaret 

e's Touch'd with a somewhat darker 1 1 

let your blue e's dawn Upon me . 11 

tho' his e's are waxing dim, . 

Close up his e's: tie up his chin : 

tho' mine own e's fill with dew, 

standing near Cast down her e's, 

open e's desire the truth. 'Of old sat Freedom' etc. 17 

nor veil his e's: . . Love thou thy land,' 'etc. 90 

long That both his e's were dazzled, M. d'A rthur 59 

pleased the e's of many men. 

widow'd of the power in his e 

the giddy pleasure of the e's. 

see I by thine e's that this is done. 

wide blue e's As in a picture. 

the e's of ladies and of kings. 

hide my forehead and my e's ? 

e's Darker than darkest pansies, . 

tier violet e's, and all her Hebe bloom, 11 . 136 

fill my_ e's with happy dew ; . . n . 193 

following her dark e's Felt earth . if . 206 

came Memory with sad e's, tf . 238 

whole hour your e's have been intent tf . 264 

Make thine heart ready with thine e's: tt . 268 

I will set him in my uncle's e . Dora . . 65 

make him pleasing in her uncle's e. tf . 82 

Dora cast her e's upon the ground, 11 . -87 

like a pear In growing, modest e's Walk.tothe M. 46 

e's Should see the raw mechanic's 11 . 66 

made thick These heavy horny e's. StS. Sty Hies 198 

ah ! with what delighted e's I turn Talking O. . 7 

I breathed upon her e's . . . 11 . 2ro 

To light her shaded e; ... it . 218 

Streaming e's and breaking hearts? Love and Duty 2 



" • 59 

May Queen, 1. 5 

Lotos-E's. . 51 

tt . 100 

tt . 132 

D. ofF. Worn. 13 

91 

in 

127 

138 

255 

3 

49 

tf . 67 

D. of the 0. Year 2 1 



To y. S. 



■ 9i 
. 122 
. 128 

■ 149 
. 169 
. 225 
. 228 

Gardener's D. 26 



Poet's Mind 16 staring e glazed o'er with sapless 



16 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



125 



HOEM. LINE. 

e's, love-languid thro' half-tears, Love and Duty 36 
utterance by the yearmng of an e, 11 . 61 

quiet e's unfaithful to the truth, . ti .91 

far a* human e could see ; . Locksley Ii '.15,119 

her e's on all my motions . ri .22 

dawning in the dark of hazel e's — 11 . 28 

What is this'; his e's are heavy : . ir .51 

e shall vex thee, looking ancient . ti .85 

left me with the jaundiced e; . n . 132 

E, to which all order festers, . 11 . 133 

No <- look down, she passing ; . Godiva . 40 
I Had cunning e's to see : . it .57 

his e's, before they had their will, 11 . .69 
e's are dim with glorious tears, . Two Voices 151 
He owns the fatal gift of e's, . 11 . 286 

Nor look with that too-earnest e — Day-Dm. . 18 
A fairy Prince, with joyful e's, . n . 107 

dark those hidden e's must be ! ' . n . 132 

ing laid in happy sleep !' . 11 . 181 

So much your e's my fancy take — 11 . 238 

kiss those e's awake ! . . ti . 240 

e's like thine, have waken'd hopes? 11 . 257 

this heart and e's, Arc touch'd . Sir Galahad 71 
tread The corners of thine e's: . Will Water. 236 
look'd into Lord Ronald's e's, . Lady Clare 79 
One praised her ancles, one her e's, Beggar Maid 11 
sat a company with heated e's, . Vision of Sin 7 
Hair, and e's. and limbs, and faces, 11 39 

Glimmer in thy rheumy e's. . . 11 1^4 

cannot praise the fire In your e — 11 184 

glass herself in dewy e's . 'Moveeastward'etc.-j 
her arm lifted, e's on fire — . . Princess, Pro. 41 
thro' gilt wires a crafty loving e, . i< . 170 

twinn d as horse's ear and e. . . 11 i. 56 

the blinding bandage from his e's: 11 . 240 

such e's were in her head, . . m ii. 23 

all her thoughts as fair within her e's, 11 . 305 

Abase those e's that ever loved . 11 . 405 

from his wits Pierced thro' with e's; n . 418 

glowing round her dewy e's . . 11 iii. 10 

her lynx e To fix and make me hotter, 11 . 30 

in her e's The green malignant light 11 . 115 

had limed ourselves With open e's, 11 . 127 

smote me with the light of e's . " . 170 

She spake With kindled e's: . . 11 . 316 

Rise in the heart, and gather to thee' s, 11 iv. 23 

mg e's The casement slowly 11 . 33 

Stared with great e's, and laugh'd n . 101 

her true e's blind for such a one . 11 . 116 

e's Of shining expectation . . 11 . 134 

yet endured to meet her opening e' s, 11 . 177 

an e like mine, A lidless watcher . it . 305 

Fear Stared in her e's, ... " . 358 

gems and gcmlike e's, And gold . " . 459 

crimson-rolling e Glares ruin, . 11 . 473 

ferule and the trespass-chiding e, « v. 36 

fluttering scarfs and ladies' e's, . ti . 498 

ne closer than his own right e, 11 . 520 

old lion, glaring with his whelpless e, 11 vi. 83 
id mother's hunger in her e. o . 130 

her t with slow dilation roll' d . " . 172 

with an e that swum in thanks: . 11 . 193 

tnrn'd askance a wintry »• : . . ti . 310 

The common men with rolling e's; 11 , 340 

I hollow cheek or faded e : « . 370 

new what e was on me, . 11 vii. 38 

the dew Dwelt in her e's, >i . 121 

I nn her Fixl my faint e's, 11 . 129 

with shut /l I lay Listening : . ti . 208 

! poring on thy pictur'd e's, •• . 319 

lift thine /* ; my doubts are dead, » . 327 

All night below the darken'd t's : . In Mem. iv. 14 

I .1 vanish'd e . . it viii. 21 

leisure for their tears ; . 11 xiii. 16 

;vcr look'd to human e's " xxiv. 7 

If that t which watches guilt . 11 xxvi. 5 

Oh. if indeed ll.;il ,- I : 11 9 

ig, tho' every e was dim, . " xxx .14 

Hi leni prayer, 11 xxxii. 1 

hat watch the wave 11 xxxvi. 1; 

Hake April of her tender t't ; . 11 xxxix. 8 



TOEM. LINE. 

See with clear e some hidden shame Princess, 1. 7 

With larger other e's than ours, . ti 15 

Such splendid purpose in his e's, . 11 Iv. 10 

ever look'd with human e's. . . 11 1 vi. 12 

if thou cast thine e's below, . . u lx. 5 

if an t" that's downward cast . 11 lxi. 1 

in the light of deeper e's . . 1 .11 

closing eaves of wearied e's . . 11 lxvi. 11 

I find a trouble in thine e, . . 11 Ixvii. 10 

turns a musing e On songs, , . 11 lxxvi. 2 

dropt the dust on tearless e's; . 11 lxxix. 4 

And over those ethereal e's . . 11 lxxxvi. 39 

brought an e for all he saw ; . 11 lxxxviii. 9 

dying e's Were closed with wail, . nlxxxix. 5 

woolly breasts and beaded e's; . o xciv. 12 

whose light-blue e's Are tender . 11 xcv. 2 

These two — they dwelt with e on e. 11 xcvi. 9 

gleams On Lethe in the e's of Death. 11 xcvii. 8 

each has pleased a kindred e, . 11 xcix. 17 

The critic clearness of an e, . . 11 cviii. 3 

Drew in the expression of an e, . it ex. 19 

I, who gaze with temperate e's . 11 cxi. 2 

I seem to cast a careless ^ . 11 .7 

bright the friendship of thine e; . 11 cxviii. 10 

eagle's wing, or insect's e ; . . 11 exxiii. 6 

did but look thro' dimmer e's ; . 11 exxiv. 6 

Sweet human hand and lips and e 11 exxviii. 6 

( In me she bends her blissful e's . 11 Con. 29 

village e's as yet unborn ; . . t< .59 

e to e, shall look On knowledge ; . n . 129 
e's were downcast, not to be seen] Maud, I. ii. 5 

An e well-practised in nature, . 11 iv. 38 

What if tho' her c seem'd full . ti vi. 40 

a moist mirage in desert e's, . 11 -53 

once, but once, she lifted her e's, . 11 viii. 5 

tongue be a thrall to my e, . 11 xvi. 32 

Innumerable, pitiless, passionless e's, 11 xviii. 38 

often 1 caught her with e's all wet, ti xix. 23 

every' e but mine will glance . 11 xx. 36 

In violets blue as your e's, . . ti xxii. 42 

he lay there with a fading e ? . 11 II. i. 29 

only moves with the moving e, . ti ii. 37 

Might drown all life in the e, — . it .61 

For the hand, the lips, the e's, . ti iv. 27 

My own dove with the tender c ?. it . 46 

but in a dream, upon e's so fair, . 11 III. vi. 16 

passionate heart and morbid 1, " . 32 
Her *\r a bashful azure, . . The Brook 72,206 
snatch'd her e's at once from mine, 11 . 101 
sweet content Re-risen in Katie's e's, it . 169 

1 saw with half-unconscious t . The Letters 15 
guard the e, the soul Of Europe . Ode on Well. 1C0 
Enid, but to please her husband's t, Enid . .11 
she gathcr'd from the people's e's : ti . .61 
darken'd from the high light in liistfV, 11 . . 100 
pierced to death before mine e's, 11 . 104 
with fixt e following the three. 11 • 237 

Let his e rove in following, , • 11 • . 399 

Gcraint with e's all bright replied, 11 . . 494 

lift an c nor speak a word, 11 528 

she cast her e's upon her dress, it 609 
Myself would work e dim, .11. . 628 

by the mother's careful band and <• 11 . . 738 

Prince had brought bis errant fs 11 . 1094 

Found Enid with the corner of his «, 11 . 1130 

came near, lifted adoring e's, ■ 11 . 1153 

not make them laughable in all e's, 11 . 1175 

his .■ moist ; but Enid fear'd his fs, » . 1199 

e's to find you out however far, . 11 . 1-77 

edarken'd and his helmet wagg'd : 11 . 1354 

drove the dust against her veillesstV: 11 . 1 37^ 

on a foray, rolling e's of prey, . ti . 2387 

half-frighted, with dilated ri ; .11 . 1445 

He rolrd his /s about the hall, _. " . 1458 

o'er her meek /* came a happy mist, 11 . 1017 

with your meek blue. ' II. 11 . 1689 

with your own true /* Beheld the 11 . it 1 

having look'd too much thro' alien/* 11 . 1740 

King went forth and cast his ds . 11 . 1780 

With reverent d ( ■ I'i'ien . 13 

neithert'jnortonguc—O stupid child ! 11 . 100 



126 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

gleam' d her e's behind her tears Enid . . 252 
those isle-nurtured e's Waged .11 . 420 

unwilling war With those fine e's : ir . 454 

to flirt a venom at her e's, n . 459 

let her e's Speak for her, glowing if . 465 

So lean his e's were monstrous ; . if . 474 

often o'er the sun's bright e Drew 11 . 483 

condensation, hard To mind and e ; 11 . 529 

snowy penthouse for his hollow e's, 11 . 657 

Without the will to lift their e's, . n . 685 

His e was calm, and suddenly she took if . 703 

He raised his e's and saw The tree n . 787 

e's and neck glittering went and came 
Lifted her e's, and they dwelt . Ela 
gleam' d a vague suspicion in his e's: 1 
held her e's upon the ground, . t 
Lifted her e's, and read his lineaments. 1 
noblest, when she lifted up her e's. t 
lifted up her e's And loved him, . 1 
e's Run thro' the peopled gallery . t 
cast his e's on fair Elaine : 
damsel, in the light of your blue e's: 
roll'd his e's Yet blank from sleep, 
His e's glisten'd : she fancied 
his large black e's, Yet larger thro* 
the world, All ear and e, 
stupid heart To interpret ear and e y 
a still good-morrow with her e's. . 
old servitor on deck, Winking his e's, 
saw with a sidelong e The shadow 
underneath his e's, and right across 
e's that ask'd ' What is it ? ' . 
men Shape to their fancy's e 
From the half-face to the full e t . 
their e's met and hers fell, 
answer'd with his e's upon the ground, 
doubt her fairness were to want an e, 
lifted up his e's And saw the barge 
couchant with his e's upon the . Gui. 
TModred still in green, all ear and e f 
smile, and gray persistent e : . 
hands in hands, and e to e, 
Makes wicked lightnings of her e's, 
hand Grasp'd, made her vail her e's : 
richer in his e's Who ransom'd us, 
Philip, his blue e's All flooded . En. 
A purpose evermore before his e's, 
gray e's and weather-beaten face . 
in their e's and faces read his doom ; 
not fix the ^lass to suit her e ; 
Perhaps her e was dim, 
fixt her swimming e's upon him, . 
e's Full of that lifelong hunger, 
His e's upon the stones, he reach'd 
Enoch rolling his gray e's upon her, 
once again he roll'd his e's upon her 
e's from under a pyramidal head . Ayh 
eager e's, that still Took joyful note 
cross-lightnings of four chance-met es 
Leolin ever watchful of her e 
conscious of the rageful i?That watch'd 
With a weird bright e, sweating and 
innocent e's Had such a star of 
hid the Holiest from the people's e's 
Then their e's vext her ; 
those fixt e's of painted ancestors . 
that her clear germander e Droopt Sea 
the night-light flickering in my es 
my e's Pursued him down the street, 
all his conscience and one e askew — 
the crafty crowsfoot round his e ; . 
florid, stern, as far as e could see, 
e's Glaring, and passionate looks, 
wistful e's on two fair images, 
dead?' 'The man your e pursued, 
turn'd, and I saw his e's all wet . Gra, 
thank God that I keep my e's . < 

Shines in those tremulous e's . Tith 
e's brighten slowly close to mine, . 
■with what other e's I used to watch- 
He saw not far : his e's were dim : TJie Voyage 



128 
232 
244 
256 
259 
428 

637 
657 
815 
818 
830 
937 
938 

1027 
1139 
1167 
1233 
1242 
1245 
1255 

I3°3 
1342 
I3 6 7 



25 

64 

99 

5i6 

655 

676 

3i 

45 

■ 7° 

■ 73 
. 240 

• 241 
. 3 22 
. 460 
. 685 
. 845 

• 9°4 
'er*s F. 20 

. 66 
. 129 
. 210 

• 336 
. S8S 
. 691 

• 772 
. 802 
. 832 

Dreams 4 
. 101 
. 160 
176-180 
. 183 
. 212 
. 228 
. 232 
. 262 
dmoilier 49 
. 106 

07UIS . 26 



Arden 



Iighten'd In the e's of each. . 
win all e's with all accomplishment 
here he glances on an e new-born, 
a jewel dear to a lover's el. 
Fine little heart and merry blue e. 
Tell my wish to her merry blue e, 
lighten into my e's and my heart, 

eye (verb.) 
careful robins e the delvers toil, . Enid . 774, 12: 

eyebrow. 

makes a hoary e for the gleam 
He dragg'd his e bushes down, 



POEM. line- 
The Captain 32 

Coquette, ii. 4 
L ucretius . 137 
T/ie Window 3 

. s 9 

II . IOI 

tf . 192 ' 



The Brook . 80 
Vivien . 656 

CEnone . 196 

Princess, v. 134 
Maud, I. iii. 3 



eyed. 
pard, E like the evening star 

eyelash. 
The lifting of whose e is my lord, 
golden beam of an e dead on the 

eyeless. 
'I saw the little elf-god e once . Vivien . 9S 

eyelid. 
Ray-fringed es of the ' Clear-headed [friend? etc. 6 

144 

240 

19 

51 



Miller's D. 
CEnone 
TJte Sisters 
Lotos-E's. . 



Her e quiverM as she spake. 

Weigh heavy on my e's : 

I kiss'd his e's into rest : 

tir'd e's upon tir'd eyes ; 

With half-dropt e's still, 1. . 135 

before my e's dropt their shade, . D. ofF. Worn. 1 

I closed mine e's, lest the gems . M. d' Arthur 152 

Her e's dropp'd their silken eaves. Talking O. 209 

Pacing with downward e's pure. . Two Voices 420 

Beat balm upon our e's. . . Princess, iii. 107 

on my heavy e's My anguish hangs Maud, II. iv. 73 

A little flutter'd, with her e's down, Tlie Brook . 89 

cheek burn and either e fall, . " 

answer, either e wet with tears. 

the vast e of an inky cloud, . 

slow tear creep from her closed e 

forehead, e's growing dewy-warm 

here upon a yellow e fall'n . 

eyesight. 
Not with blinded e poring . 



Enid 775, 1283 
Vivien. . 229 



Titltonus 
Lucretius 



■ 755 



141 



. Locksley H. 172 

eye-witness. 
would'st against thine own e-w fain Vivien . 642 



faace. 

fun un theer a-laaid on 'is./ . 

fable {s.) 
we grew The/of the city 
coast Of ancient/ and fear — 
Read my little/: . 

fable f verb. J 
aught they/of the quiet Gods. . 



N. Farmer 33 

Gardener's D. 6 
Maud, II. ii. 32 
Tlie Flower 1 7 

Lucretius . 53 



fabled. 
why we came? If nothing fair, . Princess, vi. 120 

face. 
Old f's glimmer'd thro' the doors, Mariana . 66 
Breathing Light against thy/, . Adeline . 56 
Sweetfs, rounded arms, and bosoms Sea Fairies 3 
I was down upon my/ . . Oriana . 53 

O pale, pale/so sweet and meek, 11 . 66 

He said, ' She has a lovely/; L. ofS/mlott.iv. 32 
The clear perfection of her/ Mariana in the S. 32 
slowly grow To a full/ . . Elednore . 92 

While I muse upon thy/; 11 . 129 

turning look'd upon your/ . . Miller's D. 157 
Grow, live, die looking on his/ . Fatima . 41 
tell her to her/how much I hate . (Etione . 224 
Heaven, how canst thou see my/? n . 232 

She was the fairest in the/: . The Sisters 2 

Two godlike/V gazed below ; . Pal. of Art 162 
silent/'^ of the Great and Wise, . n . 195 

fs pale, Dark fs pale against that Lotos E s. . 25 
With those old/'s of our infancy , ir .111 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



POEM. LINE. 

turning on my/ The star-like . D. o/E. Worn. 90 
for such ay"had boldly died," . 11 .98 

father held his hand upon hisy; . 11 . 107 

heryGlow'd, as I look'd at her. . 11 . 239 

Hisy is growing sharp and thin. D.o/theO. Year 46 
a new-yat the door, my friend, . 11 .53 

The fullness of her/"— ' Of oldsat Freedom' etc. 12 
all his/ was white And colourless, M. a" Arthur 212 
new men, strangey\r, other minds.' 11 . 238 

If thou should'st never see myy again, 11 . 246 

Then he turn'd Hisy and pass d — Dora . . 148 
lJora hid hery liy .Mary. 11 . 153 

on the king With heated/'* ; . . Audley Ct. 36 
hid hisy from all men, . Walk, to the M. 14 

A prettyyis well, and this is well, Ed. Morris 45 
f's grow between me and my book ; St S. Stylites. 1 73 
I know thy glitteringy . . 11 . 202 

Once more before myyi see . Talking O. . 2 

seen some score of those Fresh fs, 11 . 50 

God's glory smote him on they' . Two Voices 225 
Hisy that two hours since hath died; ir . 242 

daughter, whose sweet /He kiss'd, 11 . 253 

Whose wrinkles gather'd on hisy, 11 . 329 

Turn youry Nor look with that Day-Din. . 17 
Gravey'j gather'd in a ring. . 11 .58 

vawn'd, and rubb'd hisy and spoke, 11 . 151 

. There I put myyin the grass — . Ed. Gray . 21 
crypt Of darken d forms and/"' s. . Will Water. 184 
Her sweety from brow to . L. 0/ Burleigh 62 
So sweet ay, such angel grace, . Beggar Maid 13 
panted hand in hand withy ^ pale Vision 0/ Sin 19 

and eyes, and limbs, nntlf's, 11 . 39 

Every/ however full, Padded . 11 . 176 

town With happy/"* and with . Princess, Pro. 56 
sense of wrong had touch'd hery . 11 . 213 

Prince I was, blue-eyed, and fair iny 11 i. 1 

saw my father'syGrew long . 11 - 57 

keep your hoods about the/; . 11 ii. 337 

I'ush'd her flat hand against his / 11 . 345 

sent for Blanche to accuse her/toy, - 11 iv. 220 
falling on my/* was caught ■■ . 251 

lrooning from her, turn'd hery 11 . 349 

Stared in her eyes, and chalk'd hery 11 . 358 

I know Youry * there in the crowd — 11 . 489 

Bent their broady* toward us . i> . 529 

so from hery They push'd us, . ir . 532 

Thyy across his fancy comes, . 11 . 556 

every/she look'd on justify it) . 11 v. 128 

therefore I set my/ Against all men, n . 378 

Took the face-cloth from they . 11 . 542 

haggard father's face and reverend 11 vi. 87 

once more she look'd at my palcy: 11 . 99 

And turn'd each/her way : . 11 . 128 

when she learnt his/ Remembering. 11 . 142 

thro' the parted silks the tenderyPeep'd, n vii. 45 
at which her/A little flush'd, . » .65 

Hortei ia, pie iding : angry was hery 11 , 117 

ran Mine down myy ... 11 . 125 

vis the perfect./ ... 11 . 209 

hal have not seen thy/ . In Mem. Pro. 2 

Roves from the living brother's^ " xxxii. 7 

re on the mother'sy . . 11 xxxix. 10 

strive to paint The/ 1 knew ; . 11 Ixix. 3 

Looks thy fairy and makes it still. 11 . 16 

metimes in a dead nian'sy . 11 Ixxiii. x 

in a moment set thyy ... 11 Ixxv. 2 

wrought on form and y," . 11 lxxxi, 2 

I their unborn/'* shine . . ulxxxiii. 19 

I within him li ;ht hisy . n lxxxvi. 36 

swims The reflex of a human y . n cvii. 12 
Bnd his comfort in thyy, - . . n cviii. 20 

II regret: the/will shine . 11 cxv. 9 

Many a merryy Salutes them— . 11 Con. 66 

hearts are warm'd and/'* bloom, 11 . 82 

/as a flint, . . Maud, I. i. 31 

mil clear-cut /(rep. iii. 1) . 11 ii. 3 

I I / star-sweet 11 iii. 4 

over her beautifuiy 11 iv. 16 

Maud with her exquisite/ . . « v. 12 

Kf of tenderness might be feign'd, n vi. 52 

A bought commission, a waxeny 11 x. 30 



POEM. LINE. 

Hisy as I grant, in spite of spite, Maud, xiii. 8 

Last year, 1 caught a glimpse of hisy 11 . 27 

struck me, madman, over they 11 II. i. 18 

And they* that one meets, . 11 iv. 93 

yof night is fair on the dewy downs, 11 III. vi. 5 

sweety of her Whom he loves most, Enid . . 122 

visor up, and showed a youthfuiy 11 . . 189 

Guinevere, not mindful of thc-y .11.. 191 

kept her off and gazed upon hery n . . 519 

Across they of Enid hearing her ; 11 • . 524 

all hisy Glow' d like the heart . 11 . . 558 

glance at her good mother'sy n 766 

rested with her sweety satisfied 11 . 776 

to her own brighty Accuse her 11 959 

Greeted Geraint fully but stealthily, 11 . 1128 

sweety* make good fellows fools 11 . 1248 

mar a comelyy with idiot tears. . 11 . *399 

"Set, since they is comely — . . 11 . 1400 

warm tears falling on hisy,* . 11 . 1434 

turn'd hisy And kiss'd her climbing; 11 . 1608 

mildy of the blameless King, . 11 . 1660 

ywilli change of heart is changed. 11 . 1747 

lifted up A /of sad appeal, . . Vivien . 83 

still I find Vouryis practised, . 11 . 217 

So tender was her voice, so fair hery 11 . 251 

For, look upon hisy.' — . . 11 .611 

harlots paint their talk as well asy 11 . 670 

shoulder, and they Hand-hidden 11 . 745 

with what/ after my pretext made, Elaine . 142 

Had marrd hisy and mark'd it . 11 . 247 

all ni^ht long hisy before her . 11 . 330 

a painter, poring on ay Divinely " . 331 

and so paints him that hisy . 11 . 333 

so they before her lived, . . 11 . 336 

Rapt on hisy as if it were a God's. 11 . 355 

the blood Sprang to hery . . 11 . 376 

bright hair blown about the scriousy 11 . 391 

with smiling'/ arose, With smilingy " . 551 

sharply turn'd about to hide hery 11 . 605 

Where could be foundy daintier? 11 . 638 

lifted her fairy and moved away : 11 . 679 

Some read the King'sy . 11 . 723 

Sat on his knee, stroked his grayy 11 . 745 

Came on her brother with a happy y 11 . 787 

Hery was near, and as we kiss . 11 . 824 

task assign'd, he kiss'd hery . 11 . 825 

heart's colours on her simpley, - . 11 . 833 

often the sweet image of oney . 11 . 878 

like a ghost she lifted up hery . 11 . 914 

' Not to bewith you, not toseeyoury— 11 . 942 

bloodred light of dawn Flared on hery 11 1020 

So dwelt the father on hery . 11 1024 

y bright as for sin forgiven, 11 1096 

Winking his eyes, and twisted all hisy 11 1*39 

hery and that clear-fcaturedy Was 11 XI 53 

that oarsman's haggardy . . " 1243 

ythat men Shape to their fancy's eye 11 1244 

looking often from hisy who read 11 * 2 77 

By God for thee alone, and from hery 11 135S 

like a face-cloth to they . . Guinevere . 7 

Modred's narrow foxyy . . 11 . 63 

grimy* came and went Before her, n . 70 

deary of the guileless King, . 11 -85 

Fired all the palt-yof the Queen, . 11 . 355 

grovcll'd with hery against the floor : 11 . 412 

made hery a darkness from the King: 11 . 414 

might see hisy and not be seen.' . 11 . 582 

so she did not see they, " . 580 

gray eyes and weather-beaten y . En. Arden . 70 

in their eves and fs read his doom ; ti -73 

as thciryj drew together, groan'd, 11 . 74 

hisy Rough-redden'd with a thousand " . 94 

shall look upon youry no more.' . 11 . 212 

Spy out myy and laugh at all . 11 . 216 

Cared not to look on any humany n . 281 

4 I cannot look you in they,* . 11 • 314 

dwelt a moment on his kindly y . " • 325 

hcryhad fall'n upon her hands ■ . 11 . 388 

before hery Claiming her promise. » . 454 

Philip's rosyy contracting grew . » • 48: 

could not sec, the kindly humany, it . 58a 



128 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Enoch yearn'd to see her/again . En. Arden 718 
might look on her sweet,/" again . 11 . 719 

deady would vex her after-life. . ir . 892 

With half a score of swarthy_/'j . Aylmer's F. 191 
a hoary _/ Meet for the reverence . ir . 332 

her sweety and faith Held him . 11 . 392 

mixt Upon their/'.s', as they kiss'd 11 . 430 

*" to./ With twenty months of silence, n . 566 

careless of the householdy's near, if . 575 

Hisy magnetic to the hand tr . 626 

the wife, who watch' d hisy Paled tr . 731 

he veil'd His,/ with the other, . tr . 809 

pendent hands, and narrow meagrey 11 . 813 

rabbit fondles his own harmless./ ir . 851 

sitting all alone, his,/ Would darken, Sea Dreams 12 
His dear little./ was troubled, . Grandmother 65 
Her./ was evermore unseen, . The Voyage 61 

Till they of Bel be brighten'd, . Boadicea . 16 
hide their,/'.?, miserable in ignominy ! 11 .51 

Were their/"'.? grim. . . . T/ie Captain 54 
Imitates God, and turns her/" . On a Mourner 2 
His,/ was ruddy, his hair was gold, The Victim 36 
altho' his fire is on my./" . . Lucretius . 144 
flying over her sweet little,/? . The Window 13 
Ah my lady, if ask'd to her,/ . 11 .96 

face -cloth. 
Took thefc from the face . . Princess, y. 542 
like z.f-c to the face, Clung . . Guinevere . 7 

faced. 
Hey" the spectres of the mind . InMein.xcv. 15 
ythis morning of farewell Brightly En. Arden . 182 

face-flatterer. 
F-f's and backbiters are the same. Vivien . 673 

facet. 
sparkle like a gem Of fifty f's; . Enid . 1144 

f's of the glorious mountain flash. The Islet . 22 

fact. 
Thought hath wedded F. ' Love thou thy land? etc. 52 
that plain,/ as taught by these, . Two Voices 281 
Taught them with f's. . . . Princess, Pro. 59 
Ay* within the coming year ; . InMem. xci. 10 

faction. 
Wherey"seldom gathers head, l Youaskmewhy,'etc.i-$ 
Notless, tho' dogs of .F bay, Love tlwu thy land, etc. 85 
Not swaying to thisy"or to that ; . Ded. of Idylls, 20 

faculty. 
all my faculties are lamed. . . Lucretius . 123 

fade. 
then as slowlyy again, . . Elednore , 93 

Ripens andy'.?, and falls, . . Lotos-E's. . 82 
Ay, ay, the blossomy'j, . Walk, to the M.^g 

marginy^ For ever and for ever . Ulysses . 20 
little cared for f's not yet. . . InMem. viii. 20 
Before the spiritsyaway, . . it xlvi. 14 
Be near me when I y away, . . ir xlix. 13 
F wholly, while the soul exults, . 11 lxxii. 14 
year by year our memoryy's . ir c. 23 

f's the last long streak of snow, . if cxiv. 1 
flame ory and the war roll down. Maud,Ill.vu 54 
When can their gloryy? . . Lt. Brigade 50 
love, that seems not made toy . Elaine 1007 

since the nobler pleasure seems toy Lucretius . 227 

faded. 
the heart Faints,./by its heat. . D. ofF. Wom.iZZ 
by Nature's law, Havey long ago ; Talking O. . 74 
y, and seems But an ashen-gray . Maud, I. vi. 21 
this kindlier glow F with morning, Aylmer's F. 412 

fading. 
F slowly from his side : . . L. of Burleigh 86 

Growing andyand growing upon Maud, I. iii. 7-9 

faggot. 
we will make it f's for the hearth, Pri?icess, vi. 29 

fail. 
thy hand F from the sceptre-staff. CEnone . 124 
So wrought, they will noty . . Pal. of Art 148 
Lest she shouldy and perish utterly, it . 221 



POEM. LINE, 

for a man mayyin duty twice, . M. d' Arthur 129 

y to match his masterpiece.' . . Gardener'sD. 31 
cannotybut work in hues to dim . it . 166 

made a saint, if iy here? . . StS.Stylites 47 
Thy leaf shall nevery nor yet . Talking O. . 259 
not toy In offices of tenderness, . Ulysses . 40' 
I shall noty to find her now. . Two Voices 191 

'Themanyy.' the one succeeds.' Day-Dni. . 116 
Her heart within her did noty.* . Lady Clare jZ 
Rose again from where it seem'd toy Vision of Sin 24 
perchance your life mayy; . . Princess, iii. 220 

y"so far In high desire, ... 11 . 262 

if wey wey And if we win, wef: 11 v. 312 

What end soever :f you will not . 11 . 396 

breadth, noryin childward care, . 11 vii. 267 

Forgive them where theyy in truth, InMem. P?v. 43 
seem toy from out my blood . n ii. 15 

thou should'styfrom thy desire, . 11 iv. 6 

Swell out andy as if a door . . 11 xxviii. 7 

y not in a world of sin, ... 11 xxxiii. 15 
truth in closest words shaliy . 11 xxxvi. 6 
life shouldyin looking back. . 11 xlv. 4 

No life mayybeyond the grave, . 11 liv. 2 

I shall pass ; my work willy . 11 lvi. 8 

make thee somewhat blench ory . tr lxi. 2 

spirit shouldy from off the globe ; 11 Ixxxiii. 36 

A thousand pulses dancing, y . 11 cxxiv. 16 
shall I shriek if a Hungary,/"? . Maud, I. iv. 46 
solid ground Noty beneath my feet n xi. 2 

tries the bridge he fears mayy . E?iid . 1152 

fine plots mayy Tho' harlots paint Vivien . 669 

spouting from a cliff F's in mid air, Guinevere . 603 

f's at last And perishes as I must; Lucretius . 260 

y to find thee, being as thou art . 11 . 264 

failed. 
sweet incense rose and nevery . Pal. of Art 45 
heartyher; and the reapers reap'd, Dora . . 76 
the year in which our olivesy . Princess, i. . 124 
none to trust Since our arms,/— . 11 v. 417 

Old studiesy.* seldom she spoke ; tr vii. 16 

hady In sweet humility; hadyinall: 11 . 213 

for a vast speculation hady . . Maud, I. i. . 9 
every to draw The quiet night . Enid . . 531 
on all those who tried andy . Vivie?i . 440 

many tried andy because the charm 11 . . 445 
believe she tempted them andy tr 668 

y to find him tho' I rode . . Elaine . 705 

yet thee Shey to bind, 1376 

Sheyand sadden' d knowing it ; . En. Arden . 256 
all her force F her ; ... ir . 372 

thought and natureya little, . it . 793 

As havingyin duty to him, . . Lucretius . 274 

failing (part.) 
F to give the bitter of the sweet, . D.ofF. Worn. 286 
utteranceyher, She whirPd them Princess, iv. 376 
youy I abide What end soever: . 11 v. 395 

failing (s.) 
that unnoticedyin herself, . . Enid . . 896 

fain. 
howywas I To dream thy cause . Princess, vi. 182 

y Have all men true and leal . Vivien . 642 

faint (adj.) 
F she grew, and ever fainter, . L.of Burleigh 81 
The voice grewf: there came a . Vision of Sin 207 
hues arey And mix with hollow . In MemAxix. 3 
haunting whisper makes mey . tr lxxx. 7 

let her eat ; the damsel is soy . Enid . 1055 

And I was,/ to swooning, . . Vivien . 130 

tooyand sick am I For anger : . Elaine 1080 

F as a figure seen in early dawn . En. Arden . 354 

faint (verb.) 
I./in this obscurity, . . Ode to Mem. 6,44,123 
My very hearty j . * A spirit haunts,' etc. 16 

flowers wouldyat your cruel cheer. Poet's Mind 15 
F's like a dazzled morning moon. Fatijua . 28 
the heart F's, faded by its heat. D. of F. Wom.zBS 
Cry,ynot .... Two VoicesiS 1,184 
Theyy on hill or field or river : . Princess, iii. 361 
toy in the light that she loves (rep.) Maud, I. xxii. 9 



**mim 



texxvso.vs works. 



129 



faint-blue. roEM. line. 

kf-b ridge upo:-. the right, . Mariana in tit! S. 5 

fainted. 
at the clamouring of her enemy/. Boddicea . 82 

fainter. 
Faint she grew and every; . . L.of Burleigh Si 

ftintlier. 
Then laugh'd again, buty, . . Guinevere . 58 

faintly. 
', merrily— far and faraway — En. Arden . 615 

faintly-flushed, 
v/f-f, how phantom-fair, . . The Daisy . 65 

fa in tly-shadmv'd. 
traced a/-s track, . . Elaine . 165 

faintly-venonied. 
smiles, andf-z) points Of slander . Vivien . 28 

fair. 

But beyond expression./ . . Adeline . 5 

rind ingrav'n ' For the most/' . (Enone . 71 

■ re frail to judge off 11 . 155 

rest wife? am I not/7 u . 192 

ks I must be/| for yesterday, ■■ . 194 

see! rep . The Sisters . 6 

y tall, And most divinely/ D. of F. Worn. 83 

that R whom men call/ tr . 251 

. and thrice as/; Md ' Arthur, Ep. -20 

. . Talking O. 35 

oak on lea - 1 /as thU.' it . 244 

moral is in being/ . . Day- Dm. . 200 

it wonder, if he thinks me/.'' • . 272 

ill things / . 7"<> E. /,. . 5 

whatever/ an . . L.of Burleigh 27 

ty Beggar Maid 2 

f . . Princess, ii. 9Q 

/within her eyes, . n . 305 

and/ 11 . 414 

ii vi. 147 

• gather light . •• vii. 8 

.nd so/ In Mem. Pro. 38 

ii vi. 27 

a" we 1 I, . . 11 xxiii. 17 

If all ■■ met, ■■ xxiv. 5 

I w..rk. who seem'd s ■/, n Iv. 9 

th.it which 1 H cxv. 8 

id. 11 Con. 36 

I then to be/ . . Maud, I. i. 68 

. it would 1m.*/ . . ii \ i. (, 

/without, faithful within, . . .. xiii. 37 

the dewy downs, ■■ III. vi. 5 

troh. and / rep. . The Brook . 217 

e elsewhere, anything so/ . Enid . . 409 

nd take as fairest ofthe/ u . '553 

prize of fairest./ rep •■ . . 719 

huwcv not fairer in new 11 . . 721 

her half so/; u . . 741 

tnely/and dissolutely pale, n . 1124 

uras the fairest/ .1 . 1681 

the /•', . 11 . 1811 

■ • c, so/her face, Vivien . 25: 

eir Queen w:is / ' . ., . 458 

Elaine . 1 

'If what is/be but for what is/. 11 .237 

v ; . •■ . 406 

1222 

lously/ it 1360 

my King, Pure . 11 

1 art/ . 11 

' ! 
. v.z* not f;Ayl»ier' 
iit and/— 11 

11 . 681 

irful :/' Sea Dreams 81 

' in make it /"; .■ . 83 

. Reouitttat . i 

tan. 26 

. the Ifiiidom 72 

\ uu %uj I an. I so black f . 1. 74 



POEM. LINE. 

Talking 0. . 101 



fair s.) 
the/Was holden at the town 

fairer. 
guerdon could not alter me To f (Enone . 151 
Emilia, /than all else but thou, . Audiey Ct. < 3 
thou art/ than all else that is. . n . 66 

Stiller, not/ than mine. . . Maud II. v. 71 

E than aught in the world beside, " . 73 

/in new clothes than old. . . Enid . . 722 

as much/— as a faith once fair . Elaine J222 

E his talk, a tongue that ruled the Ayliuers F. 194 
F than Rachel by the palmy well, 11 . 679 

F than Ruth among the fields of corn, 11 . Ceo 

/she, but ah how soon to die ! . Requiescat . 5 

fairest. 
all which thou hast drawn of/" . Ode to Mem. 89 
claiming each This meed of/ . (Enone . £5 
So shalt thou find me/. 11 . 153 

F — why/ wife? am I not fair? .11 .1 ._■ 

She was the/in the face : . . The Sisters 2 
the tallest of them all And/ . M. d' Arthur 208 

prize of beauty for the/there, . Enid . . 485 
'Advance and take as/of the fair, 11 . . 553 
beardless apple-arbiter Decided/ Lucretius . 92 

fairest-spoken. 
Thou art the fs tree . . . Talking 0. 263 

fair-fronted. 
F-f 'Truth shall droop not 'Clear-hcadedfriend,' ctc.fi 

fair-haired. 
F-h and redder than a windy morn ; Princess, Con. 91 
a/-/' youth, that in his hand Hare Enid . ic.o 

when the/-// youth came by him n . icV*. 
a loftier Annie Lee, F-h and tall, En. Arden . 7-0 

f airily. 
Made so/ well With delicate spire Maud, II. ii. 5 

fairily-delicate. 
E-d palaces shine .... The Islet . 1 3 

fairness. 
To doubt her/ were to want an eye, Elaine i^Cy 

fairplay. 
but space and/ for her scheme ; . Princess, v. 27; 

fairy. 
The oriental/ brought, 
As to fairies, that H ill (lit . 



. BleSnore . 14 

. Talking 0. C) 

fairy-circle. 
The flickering/-*: wheel d and broke Guinevere 255 

Fairy Queen. 
Look how she sleeps— the F Q, so fair ! Elaine 1243 

fairy-tale. 
told her ft' s, Show'd her the fairy Aylmer's F. £9 

faith. 

simple /than Norman blond. L. C. I'. deVere 56 

Upon the general decay of/ . 'The Epic . i3 

run My/ beyond my practice . Ed. Morris $.; 

we closed, wc kis>'d, swore/ . n . 114 

with a larger/ appeal'd . . Talking O. 15 

Wait: my/" is large in Time, Love ami Duty 25 

keep I fair thro' faith and prayer . Sir Galahad 23 

If there be any/in man." . . Lady Clare 44 

'.. what/"" said Alice . 11 .45 

wfcj K]t ,: iityour,!' . . T:nu:ess v 94 

their sinless / A maiden moon . 11 . 177 

/in womankind Beats with his blood, 11 vii , 

sense of duty, something of a/, 11 Con. 54 

spurt half-science, fill me with a/ " . 76 

By/ and/ alone, embrace, . In Mem. Pro. 3 

We have but/; wc cannot know ; 11 . at 

' has centre everywhere, . 11 xxxiii. 3 

Her/ thro' form is pure as thine, . » .9 

This/has many a purer priest, . nxxxvii, 3 

/as vague as all unswect : 11 xlvi, 5 

ur me when my/is dry, . 11 ,\!ix. 9 

love be blamed for want of/f h i. 10 

stretch lame hands of/ and grope ■■ liv. 17 



130 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

breed with him, can fright my/ IuMem. Ixxxi. 4 



xciv. 
xcv. 



CVll. 


5 


CX 111. 


II 


CX X 111. 


2 


CXXV1. 


I 


exxvn. 


3 


exxx. 


9 



They the vigour, bold to dwell 
Perplext in/ but pure in deeds, 
lives more_/"in honest doubt, 
To find a stronger/ his own ; 
to him she sings Of earlyy . 
Her/is fixt and cannot move, 
What profit lies in barreny 
"What is she, cut from love andy 
Our dearest^*; our ghastliest doubt ; 
all is well, tho'_/and form Be sunder'd 
comrade of the lessery . 
ythat comes of self-control, . 

havey in a tradesman's ware or his word? Ma?ed,I.'i.26 
a rock in ebbs and flows, Fixt on her/ Enid . 813 
./•"and unfaith can ne'er be equal powers : Vivien. 238 
Unfaith in aught is want of/in all. n . 239 

break/with one I may not name? Elaine . 682 

/ unfaithful kept him falsely true. tt . 873 

ybnee fair Was richer than these 11 1222 

His resolve Upbore him, and firm/ En. Arden . 801 
sweet face andy Held him from that : Aylmer 's F.^gz 
Havey have/7 We live byy said he; Sea Dreamsi$3 
Has given all my/a turn ? . . The Ringlet 52 
honouring your sweetyin him, . A Dedication 5 
F from tracts no feet have trod, . On a Mourner 29 

faithful. 

Lean'd on him,y gentle, good . Two Voices 416 
fair without, y within, . . . Ma?td, I. xiii. 37 

for all my pains, She is noty to me Enid . . 117 

faithless. 
Lest I be found asyin the quest . Elaine . 757 

falcon. 
If all the world wereyV, what of. Golden Year 38 
Forgetful of they and the hunt, . Enid . . 51 
No surer than oury yesterday, . Elaine . 653 

falco?i-eyed. 
A quick brunette, well-moulded,/,?, Princess, ii. 91 

fall{s.) 
many ayOf diamond rillets . Arabian N*s. 47 

comes the check, the change, the/ Two Voices 163 
woodlands, echoing/',? Of water, . To E. L. . 1 
Came in a sun-lityof rain. . . SirL.andQ. G.4 
the river made a/ Out yonder: . Princess, iii. 156 
Rapt to the horribley: . . it iv. 162 

mark'd it with the red cross to the/ tr vi. 25 
huddling slant in furrow-cloven/',? tr vii. 192 

leaves that redden to they; . In Mem. xi. 14 

back we come aty of dew. . . n Con. 100 

Here at the head of a tinkling/ . Maud, I. xxi. 6 
pride is broken : men have seen my f.' Enid . 578 
broken down, for Enid sees my//' rr . 590 

drumming thunder of the hugery if 1022 

Enid heard the clashing of hisy . it 1358 

never woman yet, since man's firsty Elaine . 855 
to think of Modred's dusty/ . Guinevere . 55 

mean'd to 'a stubb'd it at/ . . iV. Farmer. 41 
rapid of life Shoots to the/— . A Dedicatio?i 4 
like the flakes In ay of snow, . Lucretius . 167 

fall (verb.) 
Letting the rose-leaves/; . . Claribel . 3 
Place it, where sweetest sunlight/"'.? Ode to Mem. 85 

/to the ground if you came in. . Poet's Mind 23 
shaliy again to ground. . . Deserted H. 16 

passeth when the tree shaliy LoveandDeath 14 
my ringlets wouldy Low adown, . The Mermaid 14 
all day long toy and rise . . Miller's D. . 182 
seem'd to hear them climb andy . Pal. of Art 70 
dully sound Of human footstepsy 11 276 

toy and pause andydid seem. . Lotos-E's. . 9 
sweet music here that softery\s . 11 .46 

Fs, and floats adown the air. . it -76 

fades, a.ndf's, and hath no toil, . 11 .82 

In silence : ripen, yand cease : . it -97 

thunder-dropsy on a sleeping sea : D.ofF. IVom. 122 

ydown and glance From tone to tone, u . 166 

F into shadow, soonest lost : . To J. S. . 11 

that on which it throve F's off, .11 .16 



POEM. LINE. 

from Discussion's lip mayy ''Love thou thy laiid'etc. 33 
The goose letya golden egg . The Goose , 11 

f's not hail, or rain, or any snow, M. d' Arthur 260 
F down, O Simeon : thou hast . StS.Styliles 97 
oft 1/ Maybe for months, . 11 . 100 

Once more the gate behind me f's; Talking O. . 1 
when my marriage morn may/ . 11 . 285 

not leap forth and/about thy neck, Love andDuty 41 
and the shadows rise andy . . Locksley H. 80 
now for me the roof-tree/ 11 . 190 

Let ityon Locksley Hall, u . 193 

Then did my response clearery. - . Two Voices 34 
billow, blown against, F's back, . n . 317 

to one engine bound F's off, ti . 343 

Until theyyin trance again. . n . 354 

I'll take the showers as they/ . Amfihioji . 10= 
Perfume and flowers/in showers, Sir Galahad 11 
On whom their favoursy/ . tr i.j. 

Swells up, and shakes andyV. . it . 76 

like a thunderbolt he f's . . The Eagle . 6 
with shadows and toy (rep. v. 465) Princess, i. 10 
but prepare : I speak ; itf's.' . tt ii. 206 

gracious dews Began to glisten and toy." ir . 296 

The splendour/.? on castle walls . tr iii. 348 

Bred will in me to overcome it ory tt v. 341 

Yea, let her see mef! ... it . 506 

tho' he trip andy He shall not blind it vii. 311 
Her place is empty,yiike these ; . InMem.xm. 4 
fill'd with tears that cannoty . n xix. ii 

My deeper anguish alsoy s, n . 15 

If such a dreamy touch shouldy . tt xliii. 13 

y Remerging in the general Soul, . it xlvi. 3 
Be near us when we climb ory. - . u 1. 13 

can but trust that good shaliy . it liii. 14 

drop by drop the water/.? . . 11 ivii. 3 
on my bed tns moonlight/ s, . n lxvi. 1 
on mine ear this message/^, . tt lxxxiv. 18 
lightly does the whispery,* 11 .89 

strangely./"V our Christmas eve. . tt civ. 4 

A shadey's on us like the dark . it Con. 93 
breaking let the splendoury. . tt . 119 

Shall I weep if a Polandy? . . Maud, I. iv. 46 

ybefore Her feet on the meadow . 11 v. c5 

For I heard your rivulety . . tt xxu. 36 
heavensyin a gentle rain, . . tt ILL 41 
dewy splendoury^ on the little . tt iv. 32 

Then I rise, the eavedropsy it .62 

Mourning when their leaders/ . Ode on Well. 5 
if I/her name will yet remain . Enid . . 500 
slowly falling as a scale tha.tf's, it 525 

cheek burn and either eyelidy . 11 . 775, 1283 
Before he turn toyseaward again, tt . . 966 
when he passesy upon him.' . .11. . gj'o 

they will/upon him unawares. tt 9G3 

wiliyupon you while you pass.' tt . 994 

if If cleave to the better man.' . tt . 1001 

a dreadful loss F's in a far land . 11 . 1346 

made as if to/upon him. . it 1624 

fearnot, Enid, I shouldyupon him, it . 1635 

for three days seen, ready toy . Vivien . 145 

charge you know, to stand ory.' .11.. 553 
the victim's flowers before he/' . Elaine . go6 

footstep seem'd toy beside her . En. Arden . 510 
F back upon a name ! rest, rot in Aylmer' s F. 385 
heads of chiefs and princesy so fast, tt . 763 

as f's A creeper when the prop is . 11 . 809 

seem'd Always about toy . . tt 822 

his own head Began to droop, toy,* n . 835 

1 Set them up ! they shall not/"/' . Sea Dreams 220 
woods decay, the woods decay andy Tithouus . 1 
F from his Ocean-lane of fire, . The Voyage 19 
Bloodily, bloodily/the battle-axe, Boddicea . 56 
she felt the heart within hery . . .81 

y unawares before the people Hendccasyllabics 7 

f's the least white star of snow, . Lucretius . 107 
She heard him raging, heard himy,* tr . 272 

fallen. 
stem, which else had_/quite, . Isabel . . 35 
.F silver-chiming, seem'd to shake Arabian N's. 51 
dews, that would havey in tears, . Miller's D. . 151 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



m 



POEM. LINE. 

She ceased in tears, / from hope D. of F. Worn. 257 
/in Lyonness about their Lord, . Mil' Arthur 4 
half has/and made a bridge ; Walk. totheM.24 

/into die dusty crypt . . . Will Water. 183 
1 'he rain had / the Poet arose, . Poet's Song. 1 

/'in darker ways. 1 . . Princess, v. 65 
Our enemies have/ nave/; (rep.) n vi. 17 
when she tum'd, the curse Had/, In Mem. vi. 38 

are these have/ from me ? . n xvi. 1 

towers/ as soon as built — . . 11 xxvi. 8 

into her father's grave, . 11 lxxxviii.48 

There lias/a splendid tear . . Maud, I. xxii. 59 

fax length that tower of strength . Ode on Well. 38 
me would wish. . Enid . . 129 
So that 1 be not/ in fight. . .. . 223 

here had/ a great part of a tower, 11 . . 317 
When now they saw their bulwark/ 11 . 1017 

gently born l!ut into bad hands/ 11 . 104: 

catch a lothly plume/from the wing Vivien . 577 
Lay like a rainbow/upon the grass, Elaine . 430 
Where these had/| slowly past 11 1234 

wliat has/upon the realm? . . Guinevere . 273 
reel'd, and would have/ . . ir . 302 

her face had/upon her hands ; . En. Arden . 388 
thunders of the house Had/first. Aylmers F. 279 
low his brother's mood had/ 11 . 404 

* Let them lie, for they have/' . Sea Dreams 221 
here upon a yellow eyelid/ . . Lucretius . 141 

fall 

/down to twilight grots, . Ode to Mem. 107 

upon her/ light — . L. of Shalottjx. 21 

/' into a still delight, And luxury . Eleanore . 106 

Lo, /from my constant mind, . Fatima . 5 

f thro* the clov*n ravine . (Jinone . 8 

h the emcrald-colour'd water/ Lotos-Ee. . 141 

ng, in/ thro' the dell, . DofF. Worn. 183 

the foeman's ground, . Locksley II. 103 

Rising,/ like a wave . . VisionofSut 125 

/on them like a thunderbolt, Prvucss, Pro. 43 

1 hammers/On silver anvils, , n i. 213 

slanted forward,/in aland Of promise ; " ii. 123 

/on my face was caught and known. 11 iv. 251 

iraartyr of our cause, Lie: 11 . 484 

kill'd in/ from his horse. . . In Mem. vi. 40 

I, /on his faithful heart, . . 11 xviii. 14 

] wander, often/lame, . . 11 xxiii. 6 

/"with my weight of cares . . n liv. 14 

<", idly broke the peace Of hearts . 11 lvii. 5 

Vhen twilight was/ . . . Maud, I. xii. 2 
I watch the twilight/ brown To /'. D. Maurice 14 
that falls, . Enid . . 525 

felt the warm tears/on his face ; . 11 . 1434 

His fingers . En. Arden . 780 

let appear the brand of John — Aylmers F. 509 
deadly wounded /'on the dead. . The Captain 64 

falling out. 
rigs on the/a . . . Princess, i. 251 

fall out. 
When wefo with those we love . Princess, i. 253 

falloio. 
nd hearts lie/ in these halls, Princess, ii. 378 
ny a field and/ . . The Brook . 44 

false. 

seem'd A touch of something/ . Ed. Morris 74 

little of the/ or just.' . Two Voices 117 

what, I would not aught of/-— . Princess, v. 392 

> thee as/ //tome i . 11 vi. 187 

Ah/but dear, Dear traitor, . \< . 274 

i into/and true, . . . In Mem. xvi, 19 

King out the/, ring in the true. . 11 cv. 8 

true ; . Enid . . 853 

1 'all herself/: 11 . . 963 

/and filth . Vivien . 646 

: wife Whom he km Guinevere 511 

tly took himselffor true ; Sea IheamsiSl 
■ 'uty/ in bunuuvamoroua tears ; Lucretius 90 



falsehood. poem. LINE. 

F shall bare her plaited 'C lear-lieaded friend,' etc . 1 1 
A gentler death shall F die, 11 . . 16 

The/of extremes ! ' Of old sat Freedom' etc. 24 
I'o war with/ to the knife, . . Two Voicei 1 1 
Your/and yourself are hateful to us : Princess.iv. 524 

falsely. 
'F,f have ye done, O mother,' . Lady Clare 29 
might play me/, having power, . Vivien . 365 
looking at her, Full courtly, yet not/ Elaine . 236 

falser. 

/"than all fancy fathoms, /than . Locksley II. 4: 

falter. 

Whose spirits/in the mist, ' Yon ask me why,' etc. 3 
He to lips, that fondly/ . . L. of Burleigh 9 
progress/ to the woman's goal.' . Princess, vi. in 
1/ where I firmly trod, . . In Mem. liv. 13 

happy Yes F's from her lips, . Maud, I. xvii. 10 

Nor let her true hand/ . . Enid . 1361 

wirer of their innocent hare /"before Aylmer's F. 401 

faltered. 
in the middle of his song He/ . Guinevere . ;oi 

fallereth. 
My tremulous tongue/ . . Eleanore . 136 

faltering. 
Madcmemosthappy,/'I am thine.' Gardener' sD. 230 
/', would break its syllables, . Loveaud/ 

voice /'and fluttering in her throat, Princess, ii. 17c 
/sideways downward to her belt, Vivien . 699 

falteringly. 
Philip standing up said/ . . En. Arden . :3;> 

fame. 
threaded The sccrctest walks of/. - The Poet . 10 
with a worm I balk'd his/. . . D.ofl'Ai'om. 155 
remembcr'd Kvcrard's college/ . The Epic . 4I5 
much honour and much /were lost.' M. d 'Arthur 109 
among uslived Her/ from lip to lip. Gardener s D. 50 
my/is loud amongst mankind, . StS.Stytites 80 
Name and/.' to lly sublime . Vision of Sin 103 

grief to find her less than/ . . Princess, i. 7a 
With only F for spouse . . 11 iii. 226 

nor would we work for/; n . 244 

mincers of each other's/ . . o iv. 494 

l is quench'd that I foresaw, luMcm. lxxii. 5 

What/is left for human deeds .11 .it 

hollow wraith of dying/ . . 11 .13 
here shall silence guard thy/; . 11 Ixxiv. 17 
To breathe my loss is more than/ o Ixxvi. 15 
his honest/ should at least by me Maud, 1. i. 18 
Preserve a broad approach of/ . Ode on Well. 78 

id echo of all human/ . 11 . 145 

Their ever-loyal iron leader's/ . 11 . 229 

use and name and/ [ 153, 190, 224, 819) Vivien . 63 
such fire for/ Such trumpet-blowings 11 . 267 

felt them slowly ebbing, name and/ 11 . 287 

touching/ howe'er you scorn my song, 11 . 294 

For/ could/ be mine, that/were thine, 11 . 297 

Man dreams of /' while woman wakes it . 310 

F. The F that follows death is nothing n . 313 

what is /"in life but half-disfamc, 11 . 313 

the scroll ' I follow/' ... n . 326 

for motto, ' Rather use than /' . 11 . 330 

/'with men l!uing but ampler means 11 . 338 

Use gave me /'at first, and /'again 11 . 343 

well know I that /'is half-disfame, 11 . 354 

/ Toone at least, who hath not children 11 . 355 

in that star To make/nothing : . 11 . 363 

rather dread the loss of use than/; 11 , 369 
Bom to the glory of thy name and/ Elaine 1363 
your crescent fear for name and/ ■■ 1391 

courtliness, and the desire of/ . Guinevere . 478 

must not dwell on that defeat of/ 11 . 621 

beat a pathway out to wcalthand/ Aylmer's /'. 439 

/in song hath done him much wrong, Spiteful Let. 3 

1 in fallen leaf, isn't/ as brief i . 11 9,13 

familiar. 

the Royal mind, /with her, . . Princess, iv. 216 

grow / to the stranger's child ; . InMcm.c. 20 



132 



CONCORDANCE TO 



familiarity. poem. line. 
Such dear familiarities of dawn? Aylmer's F. 131 

famine. 
Blight andy plague and earthquake, Loios-E's. 160 

Ay"after laid them low, . . The Victim 2 

' Help us fromyAnd plague .11 9 

blight andy on all the lea : . 11 .48 

famous. 

made thee_/"once, when young: . The Blackbird 16 

fan (s.) 
To spread into the perfect,/", Sir L. and Q. G. 17 

toys in lava^f's Of sandal, amber, Princess,Pro. 18 

fan (verb.) 
fray brows and blow The fever 
A soft z.\rf's the cloud apart ; 
fancied. 
I hadyit would be fair, 
shey ' is it for me V 

fancy (s.) 
"With youthfuiy"reinspired, . 
scarce my life withy play'd . 



In Mem, lxxxv. 
Tiihonus . 2 

Maud, I. vi. 

Elaine . 83 



. Ode to Mem. 
Miller's D. 



thought that it was./] and I listen'd May Que en ^nx.^ 



D. ofF. Worn. 49 
Gardener's D. 58 
Lockdey H. 



Day-Dm. . 10 

tr . 238 

ti . 246 

Will Water. 145 

Vision of Silt 156 



sharp fancies, by down-lapsin 
if I said that F, led by Love, 
In the Spring a young man'sy 
Falser than ally fathoms, 
Soothe him with thy finer fancies. 
I have but an angry f: 
Fool, again the dream, thef! 
■well thro' all myy yet. 
Across myy brooding warm, 
So much your eyes myy take — 
Myy ranging thro' and thro', 
But whither would myy go ? 
Set thy hoary fancies free ; . 
maidenfanczes ; loved to live alone Princess, i. 
crush her pretty maiden fajicies dead n 
"What were thosey^^Vs ? tr 

fair philosophies That lift they; . tr iii. . 

sweet as those by hopelessyfeign'd " iv. . 
fancies hatch' d In silken-folded . 11 

melted Florian'syas she hung, . 11 

Thy face across hisycomes, ', ti 

understanding all the foolish work Of F, ir vi. . 
fancies like the vermin in a nut . tr 

flattersthusOurhome-bredy^zczV,?: In Mem, x. 
My fa?icies time to rise on wing . 11 xlii. 
but for fancies, which aver . . ti xv. 

"Whoseyfuses old and new, . 
And F light from F caught, 
I vex my heart -with fancies dim : 
f's tenderest eddy wreathe, . 
dare we to thisygive, . 
I lull ay trouble-tost 
You wonder when my fancies play 
Take wings ofy and ascend, 
Theny shapes, asycan, The grief 
Ah, backward y wherefore wake . 
Ill brethren, let they fly. 
villainy fleeting by, 
all the breeze of F blows, 
It circles round, andy plays, 
Theyflatter'd my mind, 

wastes where footless fancies dwell 11 xvm. 
the primrosey zwczVs of the boy, . The Brook 
Lay your e arthly fancies down, 
Myy fled to the South again, 
let hery flit across the past, . 
Hery dwelling in this dusky hall 
sweet self-pity, or they of it, 
which lately gloom.' d Youry 
fixt hery on him : let him be. 
once to me Mere matter of they 
snare her royaiy with a boon 
Rapt in thisyof his Table Round, 
Full often lost iny lost his way; 
ghostly grace BeamM on hisy 
her fancies with the sallow-rifted . 
you never yet Denied my fancies — ■ 



ir 


XVI. 


18 


If 


XX111. 


14 


If 


xli. 


1 


II 


xlviii. 


6 


If 


Iii. 


5 


tr 


lxiv. 


2 


tr 


lxv. 


2 


ir 


lxxv. 


1 


. p 


Ixxix. 


S 


ir 


Ixxxiii. 


46 


11 


lxxxv. 


12 


ir 


ex. 


t« 


if 


CXX1. 


17 


ir 


Con. 


81 


Maud, I.xiv. 


2 3 



Ode on Well. 279 

The Daisy . 108 

Enid . . 6a$ 

11 . . S02 

1198 

175 

626 

773 

72 

130 

164 

882 

996 

1 106 



Vivien 



Elaine 



POEM. LINE. 

For her ! for your newy . . Elaine 1210 

men Shape to their/'.? eye . . n 1245 

evil fancies clung Like serpent eggs En. Arden . 476 
Hisyfled before the lazy wind - ir . 658 

Edith's eageryhurried with him . Aylmer's F. 20S 
still Clung to theiryz;z(:zV?) . . Sea Dreams 36 
drifting up the stream Iny . . 11 . 105 

Like F made of golden air, . . The Voyage 66 
F came and at her pillow sat, . Coquette, i. . 5 
F watches in the wilderness, . tr .12 

Poor F sadder than a single star, . tr .13 

y made me for a moment blest . 11 fi. 6 

fancy (verb.) 
iyher sweetness only due . . Maicd,\ % r}Xl. 33 
may hear, or see, Ory . . . Enid . 1265 

fancy-borne, 
f-b perhaps upon the rise And long Lucretius . 10 

fancy-fed. 

And pining life hef-f . . . InMe7u.lxxxiv.g6 

fancy-flies. 

love the mud, Rising to no f-f . Vision of Sin 10? 

fancying: 
y that her glory would be great . Vivien . 66 

fane. 

translucentyOf her still spirit ; . Isabel . . 4 

built himy's of fruitless prayer, . ZnMem.lv. 12 

heard once more in collegey's . ti Ixxxvi. 5 

As befits a solemny; . . . Ode on Well. 250 

hopes and hates, his homes and f's, Eucretius . 251 

fang; 

f's Shall move the stony bases . Princess, vi. 41 

fann'd. 

flame, By veering passiony . . Madeline . 29 

bounteous forehead was noty . Eleanore . 9 

A summery with spice. . . Pal. of Art 116 

Low breezesy the belfry bars, . The Letters . 43 

y the gardens of that rival rose . Aylmer's F. 455 

fantastical. 

Albeit I know my knightsy . . Elaine . 592 
Soyis the dainty metre. . Hendecasyllabics 14 

fantasy. 

Her gay-furr'd cats a paintedy . Princess, iii. 170 

A bordery of branch and flower, . Elaine . 11 

so she lived iny fr 27, 397 

rather in they than the blood. . it 1126 

fa r-l> lazing; 
F-b from the rear of Philip's house, En. Arden . 728 

far -brought. 
Xovefb From out the storied l Love thou thy land,' etc. 1 

farce. 
made myself a Queen off! . , Princess, vii. 228 

fare (s.) 
store of rich apparel, sumptuousy Enid . . jog 
My lord, eat also, tho' theyis coarse, 11 . 1057 

costlier than with mowers'y . ir . 1080 

said Geraint, ( I wish no bettery.* ir . 1081 

Fridayywas Enoch's ministering. En. Arde?i . 100 

fare (verb.) 
So fs it since the years began, . Will Water. 169 
O heart, how f's it with thee now I?i Mem. iv. 5 
How/'j it with the happy dead? . ir xliii. 1 
bring us what he is and how hey s, Elaine . 546 

F you well A thousand times ! — .it . . 692 
How f's my lord Sir Lancelot?' tr 791 

Fs richly, in fine linen, not a hair Aylmer's F. 659 
All is over : F thee well ! * . . Lucretius . 277 

fared, 
sof she gazing there ; . . . Princess, vii. 26 
Whereon with equal feet wef; . InMem.xxv. 2 
Soy it with Geraint, (rep. 857, 1349) Enid . . 343 

farewell. 
might I tell of meetings, of f's — . Gardener's D. 246 
F, like endless welcome, lived and LoveandDuty 66 



TE.V.VVSO.Y'S WORK'S. 



r 33 



POEM. LINE. 

a long farewell to Lockslcy Hall ! Locksley H. 1S9 
reach'd White hands of/ to my sire Princess, v. 223 

fsuch as closed Welcome,,/". " Con. 95 

n those sad words I took/: . InMem.WA. 1 
I cannot think the thing/! . . » cxxii. 12 
needs must bid /to sweet Lavaine, Elaine . 340 

a thousand times/".' ..." . 693 

Nor bad/ but sadly rode away . " . 981 

bad a thousand/'* to me . . o 1050 

for you left me taking no/i . . 11 1267 

to take my last/of you. . . 11 1268 

I left her and I bad her no/ . 11 
their la^t hour, A madness oifs. . Guinevere . 102 
/c have taken our/'j. . . " .116 

J- ■ I should have answer*d his^ . 11 . 608 

faced this morning of/ Brightly . En. Arden . 1S2 

far-Jleeted. 

/"/by the purple island-sides, . Princess, vii. 151 

far-folded. 
/"/mists, and gleaming halls of morn. Titkonus 10 

far-heard. 
F-h beneath the moon. . D. of F. Worn. 1 

farm. 
crows from the /upon the hill, . May Queen, ii. 23 
With farmer Allan at the/abode. Dora . . 1 
set out. and reach'd the/ » . 126 

discuss'd the/, The fourfield system Andley Ct. 32 
crowded/'* and lessening towers. In Mem. xi. 11 
To leave the pleasant fields and/'* •• ci. 22 
Philip's/I flow . . Tlu Brook . 31 
Philip's/where brook and river meet 11 . 38 

call'd old Philip out To show the/: it . 121 

how he sent the bailiff to the/ . h . 141 

I the b.iililf riding by the/ . n . 153 

'Arc you from the/.'' ..." . 209 

'it the/we tenanted before . 11 . 222 

the wealthier/**, Aylmer's F. 503 
princely halls, and/'*, and flowing 11 

. ind, parcell'd into/'* ; " . 847 

Willy had not been down to the/ Grandmother 33 
pa-t by the gate of the/ Willy,— 11 . 41 

at home in my father's/at eve : . ir .90 

farmer. 

With/Allan at the farm abode . Dora . . 1 

par off the /came into the field n .72 

when the/pas ,'d into the field " -83 

Francis Hale, The/ 1 * son, . . Audley Cl. 



\\ pac 
e/of 



robb'd the/ of his bowl of cream : . Princess, v. 214 

farmstead. 
he, by/ thorpe and spire, . . Will Water. 137 

far-off. 

And the/« stream is dumb, . The Owl, i. 3 

dimly see My/« doubtful purpose, CEmme . 247 

■in a f-o grandsire burnt Princess, i. 6 

The/-o interest of tears? . . In Mem. i. 8 

one f-o divine event, ... " Con. 143 

f-o sail is blown by the breeze . Maud, 1. iv. 4 

her/-« cousin and betrothed, . The Brook . 75 

wmc/o touch Of greatness to know Elaine . 449 

In those fo seven happy y.-ars . En. Arden . 687 

fa r- renowned, 
fr brides of ancient song . . D.of F. H'oiu.ij 

fir-shadcr.vitig. 
half in light, and half /•'-'* from the Princess, Con. 42 

far-s 
Fs summoncr of War and Waste . Ded. of Idylls, 36 

far-souule.t. 
Ccraint, a name/-* among men . Enid , . 427 

fash 1 
'he/of the time . . . Arabian iW. X19 
1 the day:, The 

1 
want in forms lor/'* sake, . . In Menu C". C 



POEM. LINE. 

No more in soldier/ will he greet Ode on Well. 21 
sumptuously According to his/, . Enid . 1134 

In any knightly/for her sake. . Elaine 
In sailor/ roughly sermonizing . En. Arden . 204 
Fire-hollowing this in Indian/ . 1. . 570 

fashion (verb.) 
skill To strive, to/ to fulfil— . In Mem. cxii. 7 

fashioned. 
/for it A case of silk, and braided Elaine . 7 

fastis.) 

all the passion of a twelve hours'/' Enid . . 306 

heard mass, broke/ and rode away: Elaine . 414 

Fast with your/'*, not feasting . Guinevere . 670 

fast verb.) 
If it may be, /Whole Lents, and StS. Stylites 173 
bear his armour? shall we/ or dine? Enid 13 <9 
/"with your fasts, not feasting . Guinevere . 670 

fastened. 
if she be/to this foollord, . . Maud, I. xvi 24 

fastening. 
loosed the/'* of his arms, . . Enid . I^Co 

fast-rooted. 
F-r in the fruitful soil . . . Lotos-E's. . 83 

fat. 
Old Summers, when the monk was/ Talking O. SI 
grew/ On I. u>itanian summers. . Witl Water. 7 
Padded round with flesh and/ . Vision of Sin 177 

fatal. 
sweet a voice and vague, /to men, Princess, iv. 4 5 

fate. 
right of full-accomplish'd /•'; . Pal. of Art 207 

hearts, Made weak by time and/^ Ulysses . 69 
love in sequel works with/ . . Day-Dm. . 103 
The sphere thy/allots : . . Will Water. 218 
we three Sat muffled like the /"*; Princess, ii. 443 
thy/and mine are scal'd ; " vi. ^74 

The limit of his narrower/ . . In Mem. lxiii. 21 
link'd with thine in love and/, " Ixxxiii. 38 

whose gentle will has changed my/ Maud,\. xviii.23 
She is coming, my life, my/: . " xxii. 62 

the weight and/of Europe hung. OdeonWell. 240 
man is man and master of his/ . Enid . . 355 
me some slight power upon your/ Vivien . i£2 

My/ or fault, omitting gayer youth 11 . ;;6 

fat-faced. 
said the//curatc Edward Hull, Ed. Morris 42, 90 

fattier (s.) 

stand beside my fs door, . . Ode to Mem. 57 

to vex me with his/'* eyes ! . (Enone . 251 

there the Ionian/of the rest ; . Pal. of Art 137 

/held his hand upon his face ; D. of F. Wont. 107 
died To save her/'* vow ; . . 11 .196 

My God, my land, my/— these did 11 . 209 

subdued me to my/'* will ; . ir . 234 

in her last trance Hermurder'd/'* head, 11 . 267 

in my time a/'* word was law . Dora . . 25 
left his/'* house, And hired himself 11 . -35 

/'*gatc, Heart-broken, and his/help'd " . . 48 

OF! — if you let me call you so — 11 . . 137 

was wrong to cross his/thus : " 145 

learn to slight His/'* memory ; 11 

llask of cider from his/'* vats, . Audley Ct 

Her/left his good arm-chair, . Talking <K 103 

Puppet to a/'* threat, . . . Eocksley II. 42 
O, the child too cloihes the/ . 11 -9' 

first he leaves his/'* field, . . " . n.' 

fell my/cvil-starr'd ; — " . 155 

'Where wcri thou when thy/play'd Two I 'o ices 319 

' O seek my/'* court with me, . Day-Dm. . 191 

My/left a park to me Amfhion . 1 

I licr/'* and mother's will : Ed. Cray . 10 
And they leave her/'* roof. . L.ofBurle 
■ i 

My/ sent ambassadors with fun " . 41 



134 



CONCORDANCE TO 



IF XXX. 

tf xxx ix. 

" Hi- 
ll lxxxviii. 

n xcvii. 

ti civ. 

ii cxxiii. 

Maud. I. i. 



IV. 



POEM. LINE. 

broken means (His fs fault) . Princess, i. 53 

Jnyf's face Grew long and troubled 11 . 57 

'My/ let me go. It cannot be . h . 67 

hear my fs clamour at our backs if . 104 

Hard by your/'5 frontier : . ii . 147 

masque or pageant at my/'j court. ir . 195 

hangs his portrait in my fs hall . n ii. 221 

F will come to thee soon ; w . 465 

./'"will come to his babe in the nest, u . 468 

I never knew my/ but she says . it iii. 66 

Into his/*.? hands, who has this night, u iv. 383 

The second was my/'j running thus : 11 . 387 

Behold your/5 letter.' 11 . 448 

since our_/— Wasps in our good hive, 11 . 514 

( then we fell Into your/',? hand, 11 v. 49 

And roughly spake My/ it . 144 

Your captive, yet my/ wills not war: 11 . 267 

'sdeath ! against my fs will.' . u . 288 

Back rode we to my/'j camp, . n . 321 

My/heard and ran In on the lists, it vi. 10 

haggard/'.? face and reverend beard ir . 87 

My/stoop'd, re-father'd o'er my . 11 . 113 

Not one word ; No ! tho' your/sues : n . 223 

Help,/ brother, help ; speak to the 11 . 286 

king her/charm'd Her wounded soul n . 325 

her/ cease to press my claim, . u vii. 72 

sidelong glances at my/'j grief, .11 .92 
O/ wheresoe'er thou be, . . In Mem. vi. 9 

fs chimney glows In expectation n . 29 

O F, touch the east, and light . ir xxx. 31 

doubtful joys the/move, . . tf xxxix. 9 
How many a/have I seen, . 
Had fall'n into her/5 grave 

fs bend Above more graves, 
Our/5 dust is left alone 
crying, knows his/near ; 
Of! O God ! was it well ?— 
as my/ raged in his mood ? 
purse-mouth when my/ dangled 
When have I bow'd to her/ 
Your/has wealth well-gotten, 
Your/is ever in London, 
Why sits he here in his/5 chair; 
Not touch on her/5 sin : 
Maud's dark/ and mine 
Mine, mine — our/5 have sworn, 
evermore her/came across 
would I take her/ for one hour, 
As looks a/on the things 
Thou noble F of her Kings to be. 
Affirming that his/left him gold, E?iid 
thought, but that your/ came 
loved me serving in my/'j hall : 

slain your/ seized yourself. . n . 1686 

whom his/ Uther left in charge . n . 1781 

Leaving her household and good/ Elaine . 14 

Here laugh'd the/ saying ' Fie,' . 11 . . 200 

Nay,/ nay, good/ shame me not tf . . 207 

But/give me leave, an if he will ti . 219 

Crept to her/ while he mused alone, ir . . 744 

Then her/nodding said, 'Ay, ay, ti . . 766 

Her/5 latest word humm'd in her ir . . 776 

brother's love, And your good/5 m . . 941 

came her/ saying in low tones h . . 988 

call'd The f, and all three in hurry n . 1018 

So dwelt the/on her face if 1024 

sweet/ tender and true, Deny me ti . 1104 

She ceased : her/ promised ; ti 1124 

Her/laid the letter in her hand, n . 1128 

testimony, Her brethren, and her/ ti . 1292 
said my/ and himself was knight Guinevere . 232 

So said my / — yea, and furthermore, ii . 248 

Not even thy wise/with his signs 11 . 272 

one, a bard : of whom my/ said, ti . 275 

So said my/— and that night the bard n . 283 

tales Which my good/ told, . ti . 315 

Nor let me shame my/5 memory, ir . 316 

so thou lean on our fair/ Christ, . if . 558 
(His/lying sick and needing him) En. Arden . 6$ 

would prove A/to your children : n . 408 

think They love me as a/; if . 409 



xin. 
xix. 



The Brook 



59 
23 
17 
37 
43 
108 

IF . TI4 

The Letters 23 
Ded. of Idylls 33 

■ 45i 
1 163 

1547 



POEM. LINE. 

o'er her second/stoopt a girl, . En. Arden . 748 
Hers, yet not his, upon the/5 knee, m . 761 

Uphold me, F, in my loneliness . if . 785 

Never: no/5 kiss for me — ■ . m . 791 

let them come, I am their/; . ,, . 891 

lean'd not on his/5 but himself. . Airliner's F. 56 
was his, had been his/5 friend : if . 344 

out a despot dream The/panting if . 528 

/suddenly cried, ' A wreck, . Sea Dreams 50 

her/ was not the man to save, . Grandmother 5 
remember a quarrel I had with your/ it . 21 

at sixty, your/ at sixty-five : . n .86 

at home in my/5 farm at eve : ir .90 

My/ raves of death and wreck, . 11 19 

warrior/ meets the foe, ' Lady, let therolling,' etc. 7 
upon his/5 lance, ' Home they brought him,' etc. 8 
Beat upon his/5 shield — n h 9 

father (verb.) 
in the round of time Still/Truth? Love and Duty 5 

father-fool. 
Thwarted by one of these old//'5, Aylmers F. 390 

fatherhood. 
twelve sweet moons confused his/* Vivien . 5C2 

father-grafie. 
f-ggrew fat On Lusitanian summers. Will Water. 7 

Father-land. 
sweet it was to dream of F-l, . Lotos-E's. . 30 

fatherlike. 
Appraised his weight and fondled/ E?i. Arden . 154 

fathom. 

Falser than all fancy/*5, . . Locksley H. _ 41 

'Tis hard for thee to/ this ; . . InMem.lxxxiv.go 

Philip did not/ Annie's mind : . En. Arden . 341 

fathom- deep. 
gulf him fd in brine ; . . . In Mem. x. 18 

fathomless. 
half-attain'd futurity, Tho' deep not/ Ode to Mem. 33 

fatten. 
many streams to/lower lands, . Golden Year 34 



he was/than his cure. 



fatter. 



. Ed. Morris 15 



fault. 



tho' the f's were thick as dust . TotheQueen 18 
fs he would not show; ' You might have "won , 'etc. 17 
broken means (His father's/) . Princess, i. . 53 
4 My/' she wept 'my// and yet 11 iii. 14 

child is hers— for every little/ . u v. 84 

her one/The tenderness, not yours, n vi. 169 

dearer thou for/5 Lived over: . ti vii. 326 

let it be granted her : where is the/? Maud, I. ii. 4 
the/5 of his heart and mind, . 11 xix. 68 
'The/ was mine, the/ was mine' — u II. i. 1 
' The/was mine,' he whisper d, 'fly !' " - 30 

seeming-genial venial/ . Will . . 13 

' If Enid errs, let Enid learn her/' Enid . . 132 
voiceless thro' the/of birth .... 1115 

My fate or/ omitting gayer youth Vivien . 776 

for her/she wept Of petulancy ; ti 801 

He is all/who hath no/at all : . Elaine . 133 

call me wilful, and the/ Is yours . tf . . 746 
it is no more Sir Lancelot's/ . tf . 1069 

Nor mine the/ if losing both of . Aylmer*s F. 719 

faultless. 
Faultily/ icily regular, . . Ma?td, I. ii. 6 

Faun. 
Arise and fly The reeling F, . InMem. cxvli. 26 

quickens into Nymph and F ; . Lucretius . 1C7 

Fauntis. 
in the garden snared Picus and F, Lucretius . 1C2 

favour. 
On whom their/'5 fall ! . . Sir Galahad 14 

the/ and assumed the Prince. . Princess, iv, 57} 
Who have won her/.' . . . Maud, I. xii. iJ 



TEX.VVSO.VS WORK'S. 



125 



POEM. 

Enid 



Elaine 



LINE. 

. 626 

. 700 

. 357 

11 . . 361 

11 • 363.473 

En. Arden . 2S4 

. 286 

312 



seek a second/at his hands. 

lo»e or fV.tr, or seeking/ of us, 

should wear her/at the tilt. 

weir My/at this tourney. - ' 

worn F of any lady in the lists. 

carre to ask a/of you.' 

' /•" from one so sad 

the/that I came to ask. 

Else ! withdraw/and countenance Aylmer's F. 307 

favouritism. 

' So puddled as it is with/.' . . Princess, iii. 130 

faiun (s.) 
yourirrow-wounded/Camc flying Princess, ii. 251 
That was/'x blood not brother's, 11 . 256 

faivn [verb.) 
And/at a victor's feet. . . Maud, I. vi. 30 

fawning. 

Crou:h'd/in the weed. . . CEnone . 197 

fend. 

an' row theer's lots of, . ■ N. Farmer . 39 
feSld. 

Ktzzin' an' ma'azin' the blessed/'* -V. Farmer. 62 

fealty. 

tru; answer, as beseem'd Thy/ . M.d Arthur 75 

doubt her more But rested in her/ Enid . 1815 

:'iil of their troth and/ . Guinevere . 439 

saps The/of our friends, . . 11 . 5'7 

fear(s.) 

That hope or/or joy is thine? .Adeline . 23 

Whispering to each Other half in/ Sea Fairies 5 

:hev cros,',l themselves for/ L. o/S/talott.'w. 49 

the world with doubt and/ Eleanore . 99 

love dispelled the/ [hat I should die Milter -'* D. 89 

loved you better for your/' *, . " . 149 

Acting the law we live by without/; CEnone . 146 

my si^ht ftir/: . 11 . 184 

Remaining utterly confused with/'*, Pal. of Art 269 

would not brook my/Of the other: D.ofF.Wom. 154 

/of change at home, that drove Walk, to the M. 60 

low wind hardly breathed for/ . Godiva . 55 

Boring a little augur-hole in/ " .68 

this in .ul,| .if hopes and/'x . . Two Voices 28 

heaping on the/of ill The/of men 11 . 107 

burnish d without /The brand, . 11 . 128 

Such hope, lknown.it/; . . Sir Galahad 62 

et the/ of little books . WillWater. 195 

! all the groves from/of Sir 1.. andQ. (',. 13 

for/This whole foundation ruin, Princess, ii, 319 

fiinr solid aim be dissipated , n iii. 249 

F Stared in her eyes, ..." iv. 357 

ime you not so much for/; . 11 . 485 

Six thousand years of/ have made " . 486 

Fatherly /' * — you used as courteously » v. 207 

B back'd with/: ... ■• vi. 339 

but for/it is not so, The wild unrest In Mem. xv. 14 

tie thought, aU curious/'*, 11 xxxii. 9 

that v. 1411,; /implied in death ; . 11 xl. 14 

hopes and/' j " xlviii. 13 

the grave with /'* untrue : n I. 9 

nine Philosophy . . 11 Iii. 14 

parate from/** : . 11 Ixxxiv. 66 

;ble soul, a haunt of/**, . " cix. 3 

1 death. . . 11 cxiii. 10 

1 hot with burning/'*, . " cxv jj- 22 

like a child in doubt and/; . . " exxiii. 17 

sunder d in the night of/; . . " exxvi. 2 

that fly with Hope and* 7 , .. cxxvii. 9 

the place hi! the pit and the/.' . Maud, I. i. 64 

of anger and/; . " x. 49 

Sick once, with a/of worse, . » xix. 75 

light-headed, 1/ .11 m . 100 

lie and/— . " II. ii. 32 

1 .1 nameless/ .-44 

haunl I/, . ■ . "II I. vi. 2 

1, .nt the dress. Enid . 142,844 

the/andin the wonder of it ; 11 . . 529 



TOEM. LINE. 

For love or/ or seeking favour Enid . . 700 
way smoke beneath him in his/; 11 . 1381 

Enid in their going had two/'x, .. . 1665 

She shook from/ and for her fault Vivien . 801 

First as in/ step after step, she stole Elaine . 341 
came on him a sort of sacred/ . 11 . 353 

/our people call you lily maid . 11 . 385 

So fine a/in our large Lancelot 11 . 593 

in hurry and/ Kan to her, . . 11 1018 

your crescent/for name and fame 11 1391 

or a vague spiritual/ — . . Guiuez'ere . 71 

All his Annie's/**, Save, as his . En.Arden . 183 
and laugh at all your/'*.' 11 . 216 

/'* were common to her state, . 11 . 517 

no/that her first husband lives?" 11 . S07 

poor soul,' said Miriam, '/enow! 11 . B08 

doubts and/'* were all amiss, . The Ringlet 19 
And a/to be kiss'd away.' . . 11 .22 

The King was shaken with holy/; '/"/;•• Victim 61 
hollow as the hopes and/'* of men. Lucretius . 180 
brightens and darkens like my/ The Window 19 

fear verb. 1 

to name my spirit loathes and/'* : P. ofF. Worn. 106 
I/My wound hath taken cold, . M. if Arthur 165 
I/it is too late, and I shall die.' . " . 180 

/That we shall miss the mail: Walk, to the M. 101 
I /to slide from bad to worse. . Two Voices 231 
What is it that I may not ft' . « . 240 

F not thou to loose thy tongue ; . VisionofSin 155 
1/ If there were many Lihas . Princess Pro. 14s 
Let them not/: some said their heads 11 ii. i}i 

I /.My conscience will not count me " . 273 

dearest Lady, pray you/me not, 11 . 312 

' Ah,/me not Replied Melissa " ■ 3 21 

'What/ye brawlers? ...» iv. 477 

what is it ye/.' Peace ! . . 11 . 479 

' We/ indeed, you spent a stormy « v. no 

/we not To break them more . 11 vi. 44 
Sighing she spoke ' I /They will not.' 11 vii. 2C0 
Approach and/ not ; breathe upon my 11 . 332 

mock thee when wc do not/: . in Mem Fro. 30 
She f's not, or with thee beside . » Con. 43 

me behind her, will not/: .... ■ 44 

1/ the new strong wine of love, . Maud, I. vi. £2 
some one else may have much to/; 11 xv. 4 

Should I/to greet my friend . .. II. iv. 85 

/they are not roses, but blood ; . " v. 78 

I/that 1 am no true wife.' . . Enid . . 108 
tries the bridge he/'* may fail, . " . 1 1 s2 

/me not: I call mine own self wild, 11 . nfv 
and he/'* To lose his bone, . " . J4°9 

/not, Enid, I should foil upon him, » . 1635 

men may/ Fresh fire and ruin. . " . 1670 

had cause To/ me,/ no longer . » . 1673 

usin ; I am changed indeed.' " • 1- -i 

/still more you are not mine, . Vivien . 176 

Wherefore, if I / Giving you power » . 363 

for 1/ My fate or fault, . . " .775 

a Hash, I /"me, that will strike . Elaine . 966 

/■ not : thou shalt be guarded . Guinevere . 445 

/no more for me; or if yon/ . En.Arden 
I/you'll listen to tales, be jealous Grandmother 54 
' F not, isle of blowing woodland, Boiidicea . 38 

feared 

/To meet a cold ' We thank you, Princess, iv. 308 
/To incense the Head once more ; 11 
she/that I should l,,sc my mind, 11 . 84 

There sat the Shadow/ of man ; . InSIrm.rxa. 12 
that she/she was lint a true wife. Enid . . 114 
/In every wavering brake an ..... S99 
Enid/his eyes, Moist as they were, 11 . 1199 
ever/ you were not wholly mine ; Vivien . ■' 1 
rid, l'n away to die?' So /the King, plains 

end abroad a shrill . . Bh~ Arden . 7' 3 



I/Lest the gay navy there . 



Sea Dreamt 126 



fearful. 
Too /that you should not please. . Miller's /' 
Half/that, with self at strife . Will Water, iti 



136 



CONCORDANCE TO 



fearing. poem. line. 

hid my feelings, f they should do Locksley H. 29 
Fx.o lose, and all for a dead man, Enid . 1412 

f for his hurt and loss of blood, . 11 . 1625 

F the mild face of the blameless . it . 1660 

yheaven had heard her oath, . Vivien . 789 

_/rust or soilure fashion'd for it . Elaine . 7 

Still hoping, y is it yet too late?' Gui?ievere . 683 
F the lazy gossip of the port, . En. Arden . 3.32 

_/"night and chill for Annie tr . 440 

lingeringly on the latch, F to enter : 11 .516 

y waved my arm to warn them oft"; Sea Dreams 128 

feast (s. ) 
church-harpies from the master' sf; To y. M. K. 3 
I made a_/"; I bade him come ; . The Sisters 13 
Rise from they of sorrow, lady, . Margaret . 62 
while Audley_/ Humm'dlikeahive Audley Ct. . 3 
near his tomb ay Shone, silver-set; PriucesSyPro.io^ 
Nymph, or Goddess, at high tide off 11 i. 194 

Blanch'd in our annals, and perpetuaiy n vi. 47 

we shall sit at endlessy . . In Mem., xlvi. 9 

neither song, nor game, norf; . 11 civ. 21 

The reeling Faun, the sensual f; . 11 cxvii. 26 

stay to share the morningy . . 11 Con. 75 

Again they the speech, the glee, 11 . ici 

Once fit {or f's of ceremony) . Enid . . 297 

wine-heated from they," ir 1200 

our knights aty Have pledged us Elaine . 115 

such ayAs neverman had dream'd ; Guinevere . 261 
not feasting with youry^ ; 11 . 670 

No largery than under plane . Lucretius . 210 

feast (verb.) 
y with these inhonour of their earl ; Enid . 1136 

feasted. 
three days heyus, . . . Princess, i. 117 

F the woman wisest then, . . 11 ii. 330 

feasting. 
noty with your feasts ; . . . Guinevere . 670 

feat. 
often heard me praise Youry\? of arms, Enid . 435 

feather. 
All grass of silky f grow — . . Talking O. 269 
I did but shear ay . . . Princess, v. . 530 

whether The habit, hat, andy . Maud, I. xx. 18 
Arn't we birds of ay? . . . The Window 75 

We'll be birds of ay ... n . 83 

feather (verb.) 
?)1 .^out the large lime f's low, . Gardener 's D '. 46 
wood began Toy toward the En. Ardeu 68, 371 

feather/an. 
Cooling her false cheek with ay . Aylmer's F. 289 

feathering. 
the rippleyfrom her bows : . . En. Arden . 540 

feature. 
chisell'dy's clear and sleek. . A Character 30 

Conjectures of they's of her child (Euone . 248 
Reading her perfecty's in the Gardener's!). 171 

I cannot see they'.? right, . . In Mem. Ixix. 1 

February. 
silver tongue, Cold Gloved is dry ; The Blackbird '14 

fed. 
y\Vith the clear-pointed flame . Isabel . . x 
y the time With odour . . . Arabian N's. 64 
F thee, a child, lying alone, . Elednore . 25 

these, tho'ywith careful dirt, . Amfihion . 89 
By dancing rivuletsyhis flocks, . To E. L. . 22 
yher theories, in and out of place Princess, i. 128 
y you with the milk of every Muse ; ir iv. 276 

breast thaty or arm that dandled you, n vi. 165 

heart and ear wereyTo hear him, In Mem. Ixxxv'iii. 22 
hidden summitsy with rills, . . i> cii. 7 

You have buty on the roses, . Maud,\. iv. 60 

y With honey'd rain and delicate air, 11 xvni. 20 

federation. 
the F of the world. . . . Locksley H. 128 

The F's and the Powers : . . Day-Dm. . 228 



I'OEM. LINE. 

. In Mem.\xx\\\\,$ 
. Maud, I. i. 45 



fee. 
To hold the costliest love \nf 
kills her babe for a burial^ . 

feeble. 
Now am \f grown ; . . . StS.Stylites 35 
f, all unconscious of itself, . . Priiiccss, vii. 102 
knees Were./ so that falling prone En. Arden . 780 

feed. 
kingly intellect shaliy ' Clear-headed friend,' etc. 20 
Some honey-con versey 's thy mind, Adeline 40 

Upon himself himself did /: . . A Character 27 

ywith crude imaginings 'Love thou thy laud,' etc. 10 
The fat earthy thy branchy root, . Talking O. . 273 
race, That hoard, and sleep, andy Ulysses . 5 
little ducts began Toy thy bones . Tiuo Voices. 326 
early woke toyher little ones, . Princess, vii 236 
full new life thaty\y thy breath In Mem. lxxxv, 10 

y the mothers of the flock ; . . 11 xcix, 16 

rose-carnationy With summer spice n c. 7 

ywith sighs a passing wind : . n cvii. 4 

goodly cheer Toythe sudden guest, Enid . [133 

flesh and wine toy his spears. . u . [449 

like horses when you hear themy; it . 1454 

feedeth. 
yThe senses with a still delight . Margaret . 16 

feeding. 
water-pipes beneath, F the flower D.ofF. Worn. 207 
yhigh, and living soft, . . . The Goose . 17 

.Flike horses when you hear them Enid . 1454 

feel. 
I feel the tears of blood arise . Oriana . 77 
y their immortality Die . . The Mermaid 29 

Joying to./ herself alive, . . Pal. of Art 178 
one thaty's a nightmare on his bedil/. d' Arthur 177 
toythe truth and stir of day, . n Ej>. 19 

many strong in speaking truth . 11 .68 

my heart so slow Toy it. . Love and 'Ditty 35 

yabout my feet The berried briony Talking O. . 147 
him who works, and f's he works. Golden Year 72 
guinea helps the hurt that Honour f s, Locksley H. 105 

109 

445 

28 

237 



Make meythe wild pulsation 
Toyaltho' no tongue can prove 
master-chord of all I felt andy 
Live long, noryin head or chest 
y myself the shadow of a dream, 
put in words the grief If; . 
f's Her place is empty, . 
I should noty it to be strange 
her arms Toy from world to world 
iyit, when 1 sorrow most ; . 
call To what iyis Lord of all, 
Yety's, as in a pensive dream 
I felt andy tho' left alone, . 
Canst thouyfor me Some painless 
My Ghost mayy that thine is near. 
darklyy\r him great and wise, 
Toy once more, in placid awe, 
yThere is a lower and a higher ; 
ythee some diffusive power, . 
iy with thee the drowsy spell. 
If I shall owe you a debt, . 
iyso free and so clear . 
f's a glimmering strangeness in his 
let heryherself forgiven 
f's no heart to ask another boon 
Mightysome sudden turn of ange 
low desire Not toy lowest 
helpmate, one toy My purpose 
voices make mey"so solitary.' 
living nerves tof the rent ; . 
who f's the immeasurable world, 
Put forth andya gladder clime.' 

feeling (part.) 
ofteny of the helpless hands, 
blind wavey round his long sea-hall 
/"that you felt me worthy trust, 
downward to her belt, And f; 
yall along the garden-wall, . 



Two Voices 
Will Water. 

Princess, i. . 
hi Mem. v. . 

11 xiii. 

ti xiv. 

ii xxi. 

11 xx vii. 

11 liy. 

ti lxiii. 

11 lxxxiv. 

11 xcii. 
ti xcvi. 
u cxxi. 
n cxxviii. 
11 cxxix. 
Maud,\. xviu. 
11 xix. 

The Brook 
Vivien 



19 

14 

19 

17 

42 

87 

16 

34 

5 

3 

7 

72 

87 

98 

216 

231 

232 



u^ . . 677 

Guinevere . 481 
En. Arde?i . 394 
Aylmers F. 536 
A Dedication 7 
On a Mourner 15 



Princess, vii 
Vivien 



06 
8t 

.. . . 183 

11 . . 700 

En. Arde?i . 774 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



137 



feeling ($.) poem. link. 

of love, To tamper with the/'*, . Gardener 'sD. 19 

Sayiiu; ' I have hid my/'s, . . Locksley N. 29 

On arrange of lower/ j . . ir -44 

ware dangerous guides the/'* — . 11 .95 

their/ as it is, . . . InMem.xx. 5 

:er/crept Upon us : . . 11 xxx. 17 

J j 1 ■. >rce the F from her mate the . The Brook . 95 

feign. 

things that being caught/death, . Princess, v. 105 

feigned, 

those by hopeless fancy/ . . Princess, iv. 37 

A face of tenderness might be/ . Maud, 1. vi. 52 

lay still, and/himself as dead, . Enid . 1436 

/a sleep until he alcpt. . . . Elaine . 838 
feigning. 

/piqueatwhatshecaU'dTheraillery, Princess,'\v. 564 

/■// (covering.) 
Half-suffocated in the hoary/ . Vivien . 688 

/•// mountain.) 
ye meanwhile far over moor and/ Maud,l.xvm, 76 

/■// verb.) 
rusted nails/ from the knots. . Mariana . 3 
tears/ with the dews at even ; . n . 13 

shadow of the poplar/ . . . n_ . 55 

forth anew Where'er they/ 
babble of the stream /■', 

Lway before they/. . . Milter s l>. . 152 

They were together, and she/; . The Sisters 4 

that floating as they/ . . Pal. of Art 35 

on the fourth she/ Like Herod, . \< . 218 

loathing of her solitude /*' on her, 

me, ere 1/ 
V' in a doze ; and half-awake 
Vsh'd and/ the brand Bxcalibur : 
Veaten d darkness, llared and/: 
su\/ and all the land was dark. . 
wraith of flowers/ At I > ira's feet. 
in wYtd Mahratta-battle/my father Locksley II. 
silvc\ lily heaved and/; . . To E. L. 

Ic my Grandsire, when he/ Princess, ii. 
r toward his death and/ " iii 
a sudden transport rose and/ . 11 iv 

the lean She sang of, shook and fell, it 
transit to the throne, whereby she/ 11 
f Into his father's hands, . . n 

Across the tumult and the tumult/ 
' then we/ Into your father's hand 
darkness closed me; and If. 
high tree the blossom wavering/ 
sadness on the soul of Ida/ 
Star after star, arose and/; 
back 1/ and from mine arms 
moved, and at her feet the volume/ 
Thro 1 four sweet years arose and/ In Mem. xxii. 3 
sadly /our Christmas-eve. . . 11 xxx. 4 

In vaults and catacombs, they/; . n lvii. 4 
calmly/our Christmas-eve : . " lx.wii. 4 

/in silence on his neck : . . n cii. 44 
/with him when he/ . . Maud, I. i. 8 

silence/with the waking bird, . ti xxii. 17 
white lake-blossom/into the lake 11 . 47 

ed, for it/ at a time of the year 11 III. vi. 4 
torrent vineyard streaming,/ The Daisy . 10 
While horse and hero/, . . Lt. Brigade 44 
there fell A horror on him, . . Enid . . 28 
t In the great battle . 11 . 595 

if Like flaws in summer . . " . , 763 

ng, the casque F, 1238 

1 of the two that/ 11 

c/ n 17 

.tinst the heathen " . [8x0 

melani holy ; . ' 'ivien . 45 

/and n labhorrM: . Elaine . 43 

il -T stream, . . 11 . 214 

■ then/; 11 . 302 

( )f .ill this will ] >/ 11 . 962 

1 ivea . 11 1025 

their eyes met and hers/, . 11 1303 



. The Poet 
Mariana in theS. 52 



11 . 230 

D.ofF. Worn. 235 
The Epic . 13 
St. if Arthur 142 
Ep. 2 
Do7-a . 77, 107 



1 IS 

'9 

--'■I 

346 

v. 11 

• 42 
■ 359 
. 382 

• 476 
v. 48 

.' 531 

'i. 64 

ii. 14 

• 35 

• '44 
. 238 



hurl'd him headlong, and he/ . Guinevere . 107 
his hand/ from the harp, 11 . 301 

prone from off her seat she/ . 11 . 411 

by mischance he slipt and/: . En. Arden . 106 

on him/ Altho' a grave and staid 11 . lit 

these things/ on her Sharp as reproach, 11 . 484 

/Sun-stricken, and that other lived 11 . 570 

so/ back and spoke no more. . n . 913 

Tho" Leolin flamed and/again, . Ayltner'sF. 409 
/The woman shrieking at his feet, 11 . 810 

/In vast sea-cataracts — . . Sea Dreams 53 
statues, king or saint, or founder/; 11 . 217 

down their statue of Victory/ . Boiidicea . 30 
F the colony, city, and citadel, .11 .86 

Bullets/like rain ; . . . The Captain 46 

A plague upon the people/ . '/ 'he I 1. tint 1 

/on him, Clasp'd, kiss'd him, . Lucretius . 275 

fell oat. 
Wefo, my wife and I, . . Princess, i. 248 

we/o 1 know not why, 11 

fell to work. 
He spoke and// w again. . . Enid . . 292 

f-ird. 

/him, and set foot upon his breast, Enid . . 574 

fellow. 
if his/spake, His voice was thin, Lotos-Es. . 33 

lowing to his/'i Gardener's D. 87 

'This/would make weakness weak, In Mem. xxi. 7 
he. Poor/ could he help it? . The Brook . 158 

a hart Taller than all his/'j, . Enid . . 150 

heard one crying to his/ ' Look .11.. 908 
sweet faces make good/'s fuols . ". ■ ,2 4& 

I'.i 1 In this proud/again, . . Elaine 1059 

pock-piitcn/had been caught ? . Ajliuer'sF. 256 
let that handsome/ Averill walk . n . 2C9 

fellow-citt 

Welcome, f-c's, Hollow hearts . Vision of Sin 173 

fellowship. 

goodliest/of famous knights . M. d' Arthur 15 

sorrow, cruel/ . . . . In Mem. m. 1 
Mere/ of sluggish moods, . . " xxxv. 21 
give him the grasp of/; . . Maud, I. xiii. 16 
your /O'er these waste downs . Elaine . 224 
My brethren have been all my/ 11 . 6C9 

fellow-worker. 

In which I might your/-iu be, . Princess, iv. 2S9 

felt. 
/he was and was not there. . Mariana in the S. $o 
pray'd for both, and so I/rcsign'd May Queen, iii. 31 
She/her heart grow prouder : . The Goose . 22 
F earth as air beneath me, . Gardener' sD.vyj 
Dora/her uncle's will in all, . J'ora . . 5 
I/a pang within . . . . TalkingO. . 234 
pulsation that I /before the strife, Locksley II. n 1 
search thro' all 1/or saw, . . T'.e 
something/ like something here ; 11 . 382 

round her waist she/ it fold . Vajf-Dtn. 

1 never /'the kiss of love, . . Sir Galaha 
master-chord Of all I/and feel. . Hill Water. 28 
1 read and/ that I was there : . ToE.L. . 8 

/My heart beat thick with passion Princess, iii. 173 
/the blind wildbeast of force, . " vi. 256 
you have known the pangs we/ . " . 364 

tender orphan hands F at my heart » .426 

/my mmis Stretch with fierce heat ; " _■ 526 

/Thy helpless warmth about my . 11 vi. 184 

/it sound and whole from head to foot, 11 __ . 194 
they/ their power, . • » Con. 13 

I/it, when I sorrowM most, InMetn. Ixxxiv. 2 
I/and feel, tho 1 Ii fl >I me, . " .• 4 2 

/The same, but not the same : . 11 Ixxxvi 

1/ the thews of Anakim, . . " iii. 3 1 
A love o-ly/, . . no 

/thy triumph was as n . ■• tax, 11 

p and .uiswer'd ' I have/' 
B e he/so fiYd in truth : . » exxiv. 8 

Nor have l/so much of bliss . 11 ton. 5 



/ 



138 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

y himself in his force to be Nature's Maud, I. iv. 33 

F a horror over me creep, . . 11 xiv. 35 

I_/she was slowly dying . . it xix. 21 

Strange, that ly"so gay, . . 11 xx. 1 

cause that iyto be pure . . 11 III. vi. 31 

1 have_/with my native land, . h .58 

His love, unseen Duty o'ershadow Ded. of Idylls 49 

F you were somewhat, yea . . Enid . . 430 

f, were she the prize of bodily force, n . . 541 

iyThat I could rest, a rock .11.. 811 

y that tempest brooding round his 11 . . 860 

f Her low firm voice . . " 1042 

f the warm tears falling on his face ir . 1434 

y so blunt and stupid at the heart : if . 1595 

yhim hers again : . . . " 1616 

y His work was neither great . n . 1768 

old man, Tho' doubtful,ythe flattery, Vivien . 40 

feeling that you/me worthy trust, 11 

yas tho' you knew this cursed charm, ir 

lay Andy them slowly ebbing, . if 

darklingythe sculptur'd ornament if . 584 

own side sheythe sharp lance go : . Elaine . 621 

y the knot Climb in her throat, . 11 . 736 

y theKing's breath wander o'er her neck, Guinevere 576 

life's ascending sunWasyby either, En. Arden 39 

well had deem'd hey the tale Less n . 712 

vhen hey the silence of his house Aylmers F. 830 

839 
55 
15 



keepers, and the silence which hey 



Tithonus 
. The Voyage 
. Boadicea 



Princess, iv. 197 



y my blood Glow with the glow 
y the good ship shake and reel, 
y the heart within her fall 

female. 
then a loftier form Thany . 

fen. 
From the darky of the oxen's low Mariana . 
o'er wasteyV and windy fields, . Sir Galahad 

fence. 
three horses that have brokeny 
Robins — a niver mended ay.* 



Princess, ii. 364 
N. Farmer . 50 

fenced (fought.) 
voice with which If A little ceased Two Voices . 317 

fenced (hedged.) 
iy it round with gallant institutes, Princess, v. 382 

fern. 
learned names of agaric, moss, andy Ed. Morris 17 
Hail hidden to the knees iny . Talking O. 29 
hide thy knotted knees iny (201, 245) 11 93, 149 
Fromslope to slope thro' distantyV, Princess, Con. 99 
Sparkle out among they . . The Brook . 25 
In copse andyTwinkled the innumerable if . 133 
shatter'd archway plumed withy, - Enid . . 316 
palms andyV and precipices ; . En. Arden . 594 

fertile. 
As boys that slink Fromy . . Princess, v. 36 

fescue. 
Sweeping the frothily from they Aylmers F. 530 

fester. 
Eye, to which all ordery^, . . Locksley H. 133 

festival. 
Two strangers meeting at ay; . Circumstance 3 

festoon. 
in many a wildy Ran riot, . . CEnone . 98 

festooning. 
humid armsy tree to tree, . . D.ofF.Wom. 70 

j fetch. 
Goyyour Alice here,' . . . Miller's D. 143 
down I went toy my bride : . n . 145 

Goya pint of port : Will Water. 4 

with furs And jewels, gifts, toy her : Princess, i. 42 

ythe wine, Arrange the board . InMem. cvi. 15 
the colt wouldy its price ; . . The Brook . 149 

y Fresh victual for these mowers Enid . 1073 

I wiliyyou forage from all fields, it . 1476 

went ambassador, at first, Toyher, Vivie?i . 625 



POEM. LINE. 

Well, I will wear it : f it out to me : Elaine . 370 
Eh, let mey'em, Arden/ . . En. Arde?i . 872 

fetched. 
y His richest beeswing . . . Aylmer*s F. 404 

feud. 
Rosey with question unto whom CE?wne . 80 
New and Old, disastrousy ' Love thou thy la?id.' -jj 
thisybetwixt the right and left.' . P?"iucess, iii. 61 
rose a littley betwixt the two, . tr Con. 23 

I wage not anyywith Death . In Mem. lxxxi. 1 
Ring out they of rich and poor, . u cv. 11 

ever mourning over they . Maud, I. xix. 31 

and to splinter it intoy's . . Guinevere . 19 

mar this little by theiry'j. . . Sea Dreams 49 

fever. 
at last ay seized On William, . Dora . . 52 
hungers and in thirsts, f 's and cold, StS.Stylites 12 
mix the foaming draught Ofy . Princess, ii. 234 
blow They from my cheek, . . In Mem., lxxxv. 9 
some lowf ranging round to spy . Ay liner* s F. 569 

few. 
Clash'd with his fiery-yand won ; Ode on Well. 100 
that honesty Who give the Fiend ToF. D. Maurice 5 

fat. 
Thisy some what sooth'd himself . Aylmer*s F. 26 

fibre. 
Thy f's net the dreamless head, . In Mem. ii. 3 

fickle. 
'You're too slight andy I said, 
fierce andy is the South, 
Rapt from they and the frail 



Ed. Gray . 19 
Princess, iv. 79 
In Mem. xxx. 25 



fiddle. 
And ta'en myy to the gate, (rep.) Amfthion 
Twang out myf! shake the twigs ! n 



Andyin the timber 



fiddled. 



Amfihion . 16 



field. 
highyon the bushless Pike, . Ode to Mem. 96 

Whither away from the high greeny Sea Fairies 8 
liongf's of barley and of rye, . L.ofShalott,i. 2 
thro' they the road runs by . n .4 

willowy hills andy\r among, . n iv. 25 

in the long gray f's at night ; . May Queen, ii. 26 
in the f's all round I hear . . n iii. 2 

He shines upon a hundredy^, . if .50 

the wanderingy's of barren foam. Lotos-E's. . 42 
in fairy Myself for such a face . D.ofF. Worn. 97 
she down thro' town andy ' Ofoldsat Freedom,' etc. 9 
bore him to a chapel nigh they . M. a" Arthur 8 
They 's between Are dewy-fresh, Gardener sD. 44 
his horns into the neighboury . n .86 

hired himself to work within the f's; Dora . 36 
the farmer came into they . . if 72 

when the farmer pass'd into they if . 83 

boy's cry came to her from they . 11 . 102 

can recognise the f's I know ; . StS. Stylites 39 
To yonder oak within they . . Talking O. . 13 
Beyond the fair greeny . . Love and Duty 98 

first he leaves his father' sy . . Locksley H. 112 
white-flowerd elder-thicket from they Godiva . 63 
thy father play'd In his freey . Two Voices 320 
forth into they'-s I went m . 448 

o'er waste fens and windyy's. . Sir Galahad 60 
in her sleep From hollowyV; . Princess, Pro. 67 
when ayof corn Bows all its ears if i. 233 

First in they. - some ages had been " ii. 137 

for indeed these f's Are lovely, . it iii. 323 

faint on hill oryor river : ?r . 361 

your claim : If not, the foughteny u v. 287 

ran they Flat to the garden-wall : if . 351 

Man for theyand woman for . >f . 437 

Thro' openyinto the lists . . ?f vi. 68 

men Darkening her femaley.' . 11 vii. 10 

after that dark night among they.?, n . 58 

They the chamber and the street, InMem. viii. n 



TExxysoys works. 



139 



POEM. LINE. 

takes His license in they of time In Mem. xxvii. 6 
l'titer'd in the masterV/i . . ■■ xxxvii. 23 
My paths arc in they s I know . 11 xxxix. 31 
howlings from forgo tten_/"'j ; . it x\. 16 

those rive years ius richesty . . 11 xlv. 12 

A boundeciy nor stretching far ; . " 14 

hill and wood andydid print . n lxxviii. 7 

their dark arms about they . . 11 xciv. 16, 52 
leave the pleasanty^ and farms ; . 11 ci. 22 

Its lips in theyabove are dabbled Maud, I. i. . 2 
not, happy day, From the shiningyV, 11 xvii. 2 
By many ayand fallow, . . The Brook . 44 
all about they'j you caught . 11 . 52 

knight soever be iny Lays claim . Enid . „ 486 
Beheld her first iny awaiting him 11 . . 540 
these are his, and all theyis his, . 11 . 1075 

fetch you forage from zUl/'s, . u . 1476 

scatter'd,' and he pointed to they 11 . 1650 

the bandit scatter'd in they tr . 1666 

in they were Lancelot's kith . Elaine . 465 

vanish'd suddenly from they w 507 

went sore wounded from they.* 11 598 

crown'd with gold, Ramp in they 11 . . 661 
For pleasure all about ay of flowers : 11 . . 789 
rose Elaine and glided thro' they'j, 11 . . 839 
thro' the dim rich city to they'.?, u 843 

drave her ere her time across they\r 11 . . 886 
like a friend's voice from a distanty 11 . . 993 
Past like a shadow thro' the/ . n . 1134 

she thought ' he spies ay of death ; Guinevere . 133 
pace the sacred old familiar /'s, . En. Arden . 626 
Sunning himself in a wastey alone — Ay liner* s F. 9 
became in othery'j A mockery . 11 . 496 

Ruth among tlic-yV of corn, . 11 . 680 

all neglected places of they ir . 693 

Follows the mouse, and all is openy 11 . 853 

tills they and lies beneath, . . Tithonus . 3 
Floats up from those dim/'s . rr .69 

houseless ocean's heaving,/) . . The Voyage 30 
peep'd in from openy '//omethey brought hint,' etc. b 
Return from pacings in they . Lucretius . 6 

glory fly along the Italiany . 11 . 71 

Jieldfiower. 
Like arrow seeds of they/ . . The Poet . 19 
grew Likey/V everywhere ! . Princess, iii. 235 

Jiend. 
ybestknowswhethcrwomanorman Maud, I. i. . 75 

S'vc the /•' himself his due, . To F. />. Maurice 6 
is mood was often like ay . Elaiue . 251 

fierce. 
bright andyand fickle is the South, Princess, iv. 79 

1 that knew him/ and turbulent . Enid . . 447 

Jiery-hot. 
J-k to burst AH barriers . . fnMern. cxWi. 13 

Jiery-ncw. 

yet unkept Had rclishy« . , Will Water. 98 

fiery -short. 
f-s was Cyril's counter-scoff, . . Princess, v. 297 

fi/». 

1 he murmurs of the drum andy . Talking O. . 215 
merrily-blowing shrill'dthe martiaiy; I'rmeess,v.2^i 
March with banner and bugle and j Maud, I, v. 10 

More, more, some/ on a side, . Princess, v. 305 
waited, y I I toy . . . 473 

Alt, what shall I be at/ . . Maud, I. vi. 31 
Saty in the Maze of burning fire ; . Spec. 0/ Iliad 20 

r- , , • ,. J&*V\ 

rode into the/, . . . Oriana . . 21 

. and naming towns, . Loto$-E?s. . 161 

Laid by the tumult of the/ . Margaret . 26 

tutted in the heal ofausty/'*) Princess, ii. 223 

til and make an end : 11 iv. 568 

what uie did t<> Cyrus after,/ . 11 v. 356 

Something real, A gallant/', a noble ll Con. 19 



He that gain'd a hundred./* J, . Ode on Welt. 96 
So that 1 be not fall'n iny . . Enid . . 223 
My lord is weary with they before, ir . . 982 
rind him yet unbounded after/ . 11 , 
I, myself, when flush'd withy . ti . 1508 

stretch his limbs in lawfuiy . 11 . 1602 

having been With Arthur in they Elaine . 287 

got it ; for their captain aftery . Aylmer's E. 226 

fight (verb.) 
She saw mey she heard me call, . Oriana . 32 

y and march and countermarch, . AudUyCt. . 39 

y with shadows and tu fall. ( rep. v. 465] Princess, i. 10 
Nor would I y with iron laws, 11 iv. 57 

prove Your knight, andy your battle, ir . 572 

make yourself a man toy with men. 11 v. 34 

yin tourney for my bride 11 . 343 

what mother's blood You draw from, y,'ti . 395 

/•"andy well; strike and strike home. 11 . 399 

sees mey Yea let her sec me fall ! " . 505 

soonery thrice o'er than see it.' . 11 vi. 209 

king is scared, the soldier will noty >» C****. °° 
cannotythe fear of death. . . InMeni. cxiii. 10 

true life toy with mortal wrongs — Maud, I.xviii. 54 
better toy for the good, than to rail " III. vi. 57 

yhim, and will break his pride, . Enid 221, 416 
arms, arms, toy my enemy? tr . 282 

nephewy's In next day's tourney i» . . 475 
you, that have no lady, cannoty 11 . . 493 
noty my way with gilded arms, 11 . 870 

where two/ The strongest wins, . Aylmer's F. 364 
is a harder matter toy . . Grandmother 32 

Glory of Virtue, toy to struggle . Wages . 3 

fighter. 
rustiest iron of oldy^ hearts ; . Vivien . 424 

fighting. 

1 Noyshadows here ! . . Princess, iii. 109 

scem'd a dream, 1 dream'd Ofy . » v. 482 

[n the great battley for the king. . Enid . . 596 
In battle, yfor the blameless King. " . 1818 

Ally for a woman on the sea. . Vivien . 412 

fig tree. 

wildysplit Their monstrous idols, Princess, iv. 61 

figure. 

Tall as ayiengthen'd on the sand Princess, vi. 145 

Somey like a wizard's pentagram . The Brook . 103 

Faint as ay seen in early dawn . En. Arden. 354 

figure-head. 
full-bustedy/* Stared o'er the ripple En. Arden 539 

file. 
in the forcmosty 'i of time — . Locksley II. i;3 

filed. 
grated down andyaway with thought, Vivien . 473 

fill. 

/"the sea-halls with a voice of power ; The Merman 10 

y my K'ass : give me one kiss : . Miller's P. . 17 

/The spacious times of great Elizabeth D.o/F.H 'om.6 

tho' mine own eyes/« ilh dew, . To J. S. . 37 

y my eyes with happy dew : Hardener's />. E93 

Saw the heavensy with commerce, Locksley II. 1.1 

Heard the heavensy with shouting, . . 123 

F the cup, andy the can : rep. 1 Vision of Sin 95 

from all the provinces, And/the hive.' Princess, ii. 84 

sport half-science, ymc with a faith. 11 Con. 76 

twice a day the Severn/**; . fnJtfem.xuc. 5 

prosperous labour/'* The lips of men " Ixxxiii. 25 

Bala lake F's all the sacred Dee. Enid . 1778 

of God F's him : . . Elaine . 316 

on him thai used to/it for her, . En. Arden . 208 

tremulous eyes thaty with tears . Tithonus . 26 

/• "jout the homely cpiickset-screens. OnaMonrner 6 

filled. 
y the breast with purer breath. . Miller'sD. 92 
y with light The interval of sound. D. oil-'. Wom.ljl 
/"the hou vith clamour. . . TheGoose . 36 
right car, that is/ with dust, . Two Voices 116 
ds werey so full with song, . 11 -455 



140 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Ed. Gray . 15 

Vision of Sin 124 

Princess, vii. 157 

In Mem. xix. 11 

tt xxxi. 10 

Enid . 1507 

1775 

37 6 

and the ways Were/" with rapine, Guinevere . 455 



F I was with folly and spite, 

They are_/" with idle spleen ; 

F thro' and thro' with Love, 
y with tears that cannot fall, 

streets were./" with joyful sound 
fa. horn with wine and held it 

F all the genial courses of his blood 

Sprang to her face and/" her with Elaine 



Godiva 



. StS.Stylites 197 



Vivien 



/"the shores With clamour. . . E?i. Arden 
when their casks were_/ they took 11 

magic cup that_/" itself anew. . Aylmer's F. 

y the house with sudden light. . if 

fillest. 
/"all the room Of all my love, . In Mem. cxi. 

filling. 

F with light And vagrant melodies The Poet 

fillip'd. 
_/"at the diamond in her ear ; 

film. 

with a grosser_/"made thick . 

filth. 

poach'dy* that floods the middle . 

fin. 

gold_/in the porphyry font : 
is not left the twinkle of a.f . 

find. 

blessings which no words cany . 

So shalt thou_/me fairest 

meeker pupil you musty 
/my garden-tools upon the . 

can't be long before Iy'release ; . 

But they smile, theyya music 

to seek, toy and not to yield. 
yno statelier than his peers . 

seem toy but still to seek. . 

to seem toy Asks what thou Iackest, 

man, may hope some truth toy . 

I shall not fail toy her now. 

undo One riddle, and toy the true, 

Wilt thouy passion, pain, or pride? 

' Wef no motion in the dead.' 

In Nature can he nowherey 

Could his dark wisdomyit out, . 

As here weyin trances, 
yThe quiet chamber far apart. 

if youy no moral there, 

In bud or blade, or bloom, mayy," 

Nory\? a closer truth than this 

if youy a meaning there 

iy a magic bark ; .... 

Until iy the holy Grail. 

grief toy her less than fame, 

chafing me on fire toy my bride) . 

As yet weyin barbarous isles, 

' But you wiliyit otherwise' 

Less welcome/among us, if you . 
yyou here but in the second place, 

shouldy the land Worth seeing ; . 

come thou down Andy him ; 
yhim dropt upon the firths of ice, 

dance thee down Toy him in the . 

there iyhim worthier to be loved. 

/"in loss a gain to match? 

glad toy thyself so fair, 

Soy I every pleasant spot 
yA flower beat with rain 

Treasuring the look it cannoty . 
y Another service such as this.' 

Then might iy ere yet the morn 
f's ' I am not what I see, 
f's the baseness of her lot, . 

To/me gay among the gay 

iya trouble in thine eye, 

A man upon a stall mayy . 
yAn image comforting the mind, 

would butyin wife and child 



636 
647 

J 43 
6S2 



. 647 



Princess, vii. 


163 


Enid 




!3 2 3 


Miller's D. 


*38 


CEnone 




153 


L.C.V.deVereil 


May Queen, ii. 45 


n 


111. 11 


Lotos-E^s. . 


162 


Ulysses 




70 


Two V 


rices 


29 

96 

97 
176 
191 
233 
243 
279 
293 
308 
352 


Day-Dm. 


127 


u 




198 


II 




206 


if 




249 


tr 




270 


Sir Galahad 


38 


it 




84 


Princess, i. 


72 


ti 




164 


11 


ii. 


107 
183 
333 


,',' 


iii. 


141 
iS5 


ii 


vh. 


185 
191 
195 


In Mem. Pre 


. 40 


11 


i. 


6 


u 


vi. 


27 


if 

Tf 


viii. 


9 

14 


II 


xv iii. 


19 


ir 


XX. 


7 


ti 


xx vi. 


13 


ir 


xliv. 


7 


11 


lix. 


6 


IP 


lxv. 


3 


IT 


Ixvii. 


10 


M 


xx vi. 


9 


11 lxxxiv. 


5° 


it lxxxix. 


7 



POEM. LINE. 

iynot yet one lonely thought InMemAxxxix. 23 

Toya stronger faith his own ; . n xcv. 17 

f's on misty mountain-ground . it xcvi. 2 

iyno place that does not breathe n xcix. 3 

Whatyi in the highest place, . n cvii. 9 

yhis comfort in thy face ; . it cviii. 20 

God grant I may_/it at last ! . Mand, I. ii. 1 

If iy the world so bitter . . 11 vi. 33 

To./" they were met by my own ; . m viii. 7 

y what he went to seek, . . 11 xvi. 3 

iy whenever she touch'd on me . 11 xix. 59 

come to her waking, y her asleep, it II. ii. 81 

Toy the arms of my true love . 11 iv. 3 

shaliythe stubborn thistle bursting Ode on Well. 206 



Enid 



Guinevere 



. 219 

■ 4i7 
. 792 

1220 
1277 
1712 
. 60 
. 216 

■ 373 

■ 433 

. /.<32 

. 510 

■ 533 
. 680 

• 77i 
. 148 
- 332 

• 53 5 

• 547 
. 625 

• 7=>5 

■ 75 3 

• 755 
IO <5 

• *73 
. 190 
. 2 9 5 
. 401 

• 3 QI 

■ 49 2 



y at some place I shall come at, 
thought toyArms in your town, . 11 
how should Enidy A nobler friend ? 11 

yhim yet unwounded after fight, n 
eyes toy you out however far, . it 

ythat it had been the wolf's indeed : it 
none couldy that man for evermore, Vivien 
still iy Your face is practised, . 11 
hide it, hide it ; I shaliyit out ; . u 

ya wizard who might teach the King ir 
but did theyyA wizard? . . 11 
open,yand read the charm : . 11 

in the comment did lythe charm. ti 
if theyy Some stain or blemish . it 
vile term of yours, iywith grief! " 

listen to me If I musty you wit : Elaine 
thro' all hindrancey's the man . n 
ride forth andy the knight. . . it 
cease not from your quest, until youy n 
the prize and could noty the victor, n 
fail'd toy him tho' I rode all round it 
'andy out ourdear Lavaine.' . » 

needs must hence Andy that other, m 
Until iythe palace of the King. » 

that we mayy the light ! 
And weighingy them less ; . 
could heyA woman in her womanhood 11 
sigh'd toy Her journey done, . it 

y the precious morning hours were En. Arden 
Suddenly set it wide toya sign, . " 

youyThat you meant nothing— . Aylmer's F. 312 
should iyyou by my doors again, n . 324 

being used toyher pastor texts, . n . 6o5 

ya deeper in the narrow gloom . it . 840 

yA sort of absolution in the sound Sea Z) reams 60 
I shouldyhe meant me well ; . 11 . 149 

toyTheir wildest wailings never out u . 223 

iy myself often laughing at things Grandmother 92 
blest Toy my heart so near . . Coq?cette, ii. 7 
beastlike as I y myself, Not manlike Lucretius . 228 
fail toy thee, being as thou art . 11 . 264 

For it's easy toya rhyme, (rep.) . The Window 149 

finding. 
ythat of fifty seeds . . . In Mem.Xxv. 11 
y there unconsciously Some image Ded. of Idylls 2 
y neither light nor murmur there En. Arden . 638 

fine. 
What isy within thee growing coarse LochsleyH. 46 
cuckoo ! ' was ever a May soy? . The Window 153 

fineness. 
ofteny compensated size : . . Princess, ii. 133 
some pretext ofyin the meal . En. Arden . 338 

fi?test. 
because he was They on the tree. Talking O. 238 

finger. 
weary with a. f's touch ' Clear-headedfriend'etc. 22 
kiss Thy tapery\y amorously, . Madeline . 44 
Thro' rosy tapery's drew . Mariana in the S. 15 
Threey'j round the old silver cup Miller's D. 10 
With rosy slenderyV backward . CEnone . 173 

one, by those fairy's cull'd, . Garderier'sD. 14S 

with a flyingy swept my lips . u . 241 

save her littleyfrom a scratch . Ed. Morris 63 
Baby~y*j, waxen touches, . . LocksleyH. 90 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



141 



POEM. LINE. 

little/" ache For such as these?' . Godiva . 22 
Her gradual/'* steal . ' . Will Water. 26 
kept the book and had my/in itj Princess, Pro. 53 
takes a lady's,/ with all care, . it . 171 

now a pointed./ told them all ; 11 v. 260 

laid A feeling/ on my brows, . ir vi. 105 

innocent arms And lazy lingering/',?, if . 123 

With trembling./'* did we weave . In Mem, xxx. 1 
God's/" touch'd him, and he slept. 11 lxxxiv. 20 

A fiery/ on the leaves ; . . n xcviii. 12 

would work eye dim, and/lame, Enid . . 628 
He sits unarm'd ; I hold a/ up, . . . 1186 

moving back she held Her/ up, . . . 1302 

clench'd her/'* till they bit . . Elaine . 608 

Enoch's golden ring had girt Her/ En. Arden . 158 
Suddenly put her/ on the text, . n . 493 

dug His/'* into the wet earth, . 11 . 781 

My lady with her/'* interlock' d . Ay liner's F. 199 
And on thy heart a/lays, . . On a Mounter xi 

fingering. 

/"at the hair about his lip, . . Princess, v. 293 

finger nail. 
seem'd All-perfect, finished to the/«. Ed. Morris 22 
tap Of my J'-n on the sand, . . Maud, II. ii. 22 

fi.7iger-tips. 
sway'dThe rein with dainty/-; 1 , . SirL.a7idQ.G.$\ 

finials. 
grasping the pews And oaken/'* Aylmer's F. 823 

finished. 

when four years were wholly./ . Pal. of Art 289 
All-perfect, /"to the finger nail. . Ed. Morris 22 

fire (s.) 
Thou who stealest/ . . . Ode to Mem. 1 
Tho' one did fling the/ . . The Poet . 30 

Losing his/" and active might _ . Eled7iore . 104 
a languid/" creeps Thro' my veins n . 130 

O Love, Of! once he drew . . Fatima . 19 
from beyond the noon a/ Is pour' d 11 . 30 

at their feet the crocus brake like/, GLnone . 94 

she says A/dances before her, . 11 . 260 

earth and air seem only burning/.' n . 264 

Burnt like a fringe of/ . . . Pal. of Art . 48 
Would seem slow-flaming crimson/'* " . 50 

And highest, snow and/] . n .84 

She howl'd aloud, ' I am on/" within tr . 285 

wild marsh-marigold shines like f May Queen, i. 31 
before the fluttering tongues of/; D. ofF. Wont. 30 
with their/'* Love tipt his keenest 11 . 173 

The glass blew in, the/* blew out, The Goose . 49 
Allan's watch, and sparkled by thefDora . . 133 
Or burn'd in/ or boil'd in oil, . StS. Stylites 51 
Sit with their wives by/'*, 11 . 106 

Have scrambled past those pits of/ 
winks behind a slowly-dying/ 
with rain or hail, or/" or snow ; 
Like Stephen, an unquenched/ 
On the hall-hearths the festal/'* 
The/" shot up, the martin flew, 
No, I cannot praise the/ 
her arm lifted, eyes onf— . 
finest Gothic, lighter than a/] 
kill Time by the/in winter/ 
chafing me on/to find my bride) 
like the mystic/on a mast-head 
some/ against a stormy cloud 
like/he meets the foe, 
red-faced war has rods of steel and/; 
living hearts that crack within the/ 
/'* of Hell Mix with his hearth : 
out of stricken helmets sprang the/! 
from a darken'd future, crown'd with/ if vi. 159 

A looming bastion fringed with/, hi Mem. xv. 20 
Is shrivel'd in a fruitless/ . . ir liii, n 

Laburnums, dropping-wells of/ . 11 lxxxii. 11 

shine Beside the never-lighted/ . n lxxxiii. 20 

on her forehead sits a/; . . n cxiii. 5 

compass'd by the/'* of Hell ; . n cxxvi. 17 



Locks ley H \ 



Two Voices 
Day-Dm. 



136 
193 
219 

34 

. ." ." I4 3 

Vision ofSi7i 183 

Pri7icess, Pro. 41 

it . 92 



i. 164 

iv. 255 

. 365 

• 560 

v. 114 

• 369 

• 444 



POEM. 

Maud, I 
tr xviii 
it II. i 



LINE. 

r. 16 
39 
9 



11 III. vi 

The Letters 
The Daisy 
Enid . 



Vivien 



S3 
28 

• 53 

• 559 

• 634 

■ 955 
1670 
1671 

. 267 

. 65I 

. 686 

• 3i5 

• 413 

• 73o 

■ 73i 

■ 345 
. 422 

• 593 

• 7i 
192 



/of a foolish pride flash' d over 
Cold/'*, yet with power to burn 
/'* of Hell brake out of thy rising 
/'* of Hell and of Hate ; 
blossom of war with a heart of/ 
in my words were seeds of/ 
The giant windows' blazon'd/'* 
like the heart of a great/at Yule 
night of/ when Edyrn sack'd 
loosed in words of sudden/ the 
land, From which old/'* have 
men may fear Fresh/ and ruin, 
into such a song, such/for fame, 
like a/among the noblest names, ir 
godlike head crown'd with spiritual/ ir 
the/of God Fills him : . . . Elaine 
shot red/and shadows thro' the cave, 11 
ran the tale like/about the court, m 
F\n. dry stubble a nine days' wonder n 
that he scape the doom of/, . . Guinevere 
children born of thee are sword and/ 11 
making all the night a steam of/ 11 

All-kindled by a still and sacred/ E71. Arde7i 
clean hearth and a clear/ for me, 11 

flung her down upon a couch of/ Aylmer's F. 574 
flood,/ earthquake, thunder, wrought tr . 639 

not passing thro' the/ Bodies, but v . 6yz 

No desolation but by sword and/? n . 748 

tongue isa/asyou know, my dear, Gra7idmother 1% 
The moon like a rick on/ . 11 

beat the twilight into flakes of/ . Tithonus 
Fall from his Ocean-lane of/ . The Voyage 
With wakes of/ we tore the dark ; 11 

Flash, ye cities, in rivers of// . IV. toAlexa7i 
Thunder, a flying/ in heaven. . Boddicea 
many a/ before them blazed : . Spec, of Iliad 10 
many a/between the ships and . ir • T 7 

Sat fifty in the blaze of burning/: n . 20 

thorpe and byre arose in/ . . The Victim 3 
a/ The/that left a roofless Ilion, Lucretius . 64 
altho' his/is on my face v . 144 

/'* burn clear, And frost is here, . The Window 46 
/'* are all the clearer, . . . 11 .58 

king of the wrens with a crown of/ it . 159 

fire (verb.) 
/'* your narrow casement glass, . Miller's D. 243 
furzy prickle/ the dells, . . Two Voices 71 

fire-balloo7i. 
z.fb Rose gem-like . . . Princess, Pro. 74 

firebra7id. 
this/"— gentleness To such as her ! Princess, v. 160 

fire-crowiid. 
fie king of the wrens from out of . TheWi?idow 151 

fired. 

wires and vials/A cannon : . . Pri7icess, Pro. 65 
/an angry Pallas on the helm, . ir 

saw F from the west, far on a hill, Elai7ie 

F all the pale face of the Queen, . Guinevere 

rose at dawn and,/with hope, 

Not a gun was/ . 

fire-fly. 

Glitter like a swarm of fire-flies 
//wakens : waken thou with me. Pri7tcess, vii 

firefly-like. 
glitter/-/ in copse And linden alley: Princess, i, 

fire-hollowing. 

F-h this in Indian fashion, fell . En. Arden . 570 

fireside. 
her old/Be cheerM with tidings . fnMem.xxxix.22 
at your own/ With the evil tongue Maud, I. x. 50 

firewood. 
heap'd Their/ and the winds . Spec, of Iliad 7 

firm (adj.) 
nor slow to change, but/; ' Love thou thy land,' 'etc. 31 
/upon his feet, And like an oaken Golden Year 61 



Sailor 

The Captain 

L ocksley H. 



347 
168 
355 



40 



164 



205 



142 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

_/Tho' compass'd by two armies . Princess, v. 334 
he stood./"; and so the matter hung; The Brook 144-8 
the soldiery the statesman pure : Ode on Well. 222 
Met his full frown timidlyy . Enid . . 920 

Jinn (s. ) 
Head of all the golden-shaftedy , 

firmness, 

said to him With timid y 

first-born. 

love thou bearestTheyV'ofthy genius. Odeio Mem. 92 
Love at first sight, f-6, and heir . Gardener sD. 18 5 
x.ieal she makes On they"-£of her sons. Vision ofSiui 46 

first-famed, 

of the two/";/" for courtesy — 



Princess, ii. 383 



Enid 



Guinevere 



first-fruits. 
They/"of the stranger : . . Princess, ii. 30 

firstling. 
bring they to the flock ; . . .In Mem. ii. 6 

firth. 
find him dropt upon they's of ice, Princess, vii. 191 

fish. 

Pare we that love the mud, . Vision of Sin 101 

The star, the bird, they the shell, Princess, ii. 361 
* if we havey at all Let them be gold ; Enid . 669 
panic-stricken, like a shoal Of dartingy 1? 1318 

bird in air, and/" Vj turn'd . . The Victim 19 
beast or bird ory or opulent flower — Lucretius 245 

fisherman. 

O well for the f's boy, . . ' Break, break,' etc. 5 
A luckier or a boldery . . En. Arden . 

fishing-nets. 
coils of cordage, swarthy j-n, . En. Arden . 
wrought To make the boatmeny?;, 11 

. fit (s.) 
Gleam'd to the flymg moon by f's. Miller's D. 



in ay of frolic mirth 
breaking into song by f's, 
only breathe Shorty's of prayer, 
break her sports with graver/V, 



49 



11C 



Talking O. 137 
In Mem. xxiii. 2 
Enid . 1004 

Vivien . 36 



Walk, to the M. 57 
. Ode on Well. 14 
. Enid . . 717 
170 



• 949 



fit (verb.) 
f us like a nature second-hand ; 

slow As f's an universal woe, 

bettery's Our mended fortunes 
y their little streetward sitting-room En. Arden 

fitly. 
flower of life To one morey yours, Elaine 

fitted. 
Poweryto the season ; . . CEnone . 121 

pure white, thatyto the shape — Gardener sD . 125 
now 'tisy"on and grows to me, . StS. Stylites 206 
/to thy petty part, . . . Locksley H. 93 

As his unlikeness_/ mine. . JnMem.ixxviii. 20 

fitting. 
expert Inyaptest words to things, InMem. Ixxiv. 6 

five-acre. 
While Harry is in the f-a 



fixed— fixt. POEM. LINE, 

there like a sun remain F — . . Eleanore . 93 
last, youya vacant stare, . L. C. V. de Vere 47 
the dewy pebbles, y in thought ; . M.d' Arthur 84 
that the grounds of hope werey . Two Voices 227 
Bey and froz'n to permanence : . 11 . 237 

The blush isy upon her cheek. . Day-Dm. . 52 
Oneyfor ever at the door, . . Will Water. 143 
eyes Of shining expectationy on Princess, iv. 135 
F XvVf a beacon-tower above the waves n . 472 

this isy As are the roots of earth . tr v. 435 

F in yourself, never in your own arms if vi. 161 

I on her F my faint eyes, . . it vii 

yA showery glance upon her aunt, n Con 

Her faith is/ and cannot move, . InMem.~s.zvi. 
Because he felt soyin truth : . tr cxxiv. 
a morbid eating licheny . . Maud, I. vi. 
forks arey into the meadow ground, Enid . 
in ebbs and flows, F on her faith . tr 
clung to him, F in her will, . . Vivien 
Soy her fancy on him : . . . 11 
youy Your limit, oft returning . Elaijie 
eithery his heart On that one girl ; En. Arden . 
where hey his heart he set his hand 
yher swimming eyes upon him, . 
y the Sabbath. Darkly that day . Aylmer's F. 609 
y My wistful eyes on two fair images, Sea Dreams 231 
yupon the far sea-line ; . . . The Voyage 62 

flaccid. 
scheme that had left usy and drain'd. Maud, I. i. 20 

fi"g. 
never floats an Europeany . 

F's, flutter out upon turrets . 

flag-flower. 

taliy/'s when they sprung . 

flagrante. 

inf— what's the Latin word ? — 
flail. 

From Arac's arm, as from a giant' sy Princess, v. 489 
flake. 

sang Shrill, chill, withy's of foam. M.d' Arthur 49 

Before me shower'd the rose in f's; Princess, iv. 245 
yof rainbow flying on the highest ir v. 309 

rocket molten intoy's Of crimson fnMem. xcvii. 31 

here and there a foamyy . . The Brook . 59 

beat the twilight intoy's of fire. . Tithonus 

thicker, like they'slnafallof snow, Lucretius 
flame (s.) 

the clear-pointedy of chastity, 

A subtle, suddeny 

As with the quintessence ofy 

headed And wing'd withy . 

was traced iny Wisdom 



129 

3 2 

33 

8 

77 

,548 

813 

44 

626 

1034 

39 

2 93 

322 



. Locksley H. 161 
. W.toAlexan. 15 

. Miller's D. . 53 

Walk.totluM. 26 



. Grandmother 80 



. Isabel . 
. Madeline . 
. ArabianN's. 
. The Poet . 



42 



28 
123 



... 45 
Burn'd like one burningy together,, L. oj 'Shalott, iii.22 

17 

7 

161 

241 

26 



6 
173 



five-beaded. 
The tender pinky<5 baby-soles, . Aylmer's F. 186 

five-words-long. 
quoted odes, and ]ewelsf-w-l . Princess, ii. 355 

fix. 



Holding the bush, toyit back. Gardener'sD. 126 
all as one toy our hopes on Heaven Golden Year 57 
lynx eye Toy and make me hotter, Princess, iii. 31 
Nor cares toy itself to form, In Mem. xxxiii. 4 

/my thoughts on all the glow . it lxxxiii. 3 
Who shaliy Her pillars 1 . . 11 cxiii. 3 

could noty the glass to suit her eye ; En. Arden 240 I F's, on the windy headland flare ! W. to Alexan. 16 
Sun sets, moon sets, Love, f a day. The Window 165 down in a furrow scathed withy.* . The Victim 22 
wait a little, You shaliy a day' . 11 173 I girt With song andyand fragrance, Lucretius . 134 



A thousand little shafts ofy . . Fatima 

She died : she went to burningy." The Sisters 

thro' the topmost Oriels' colouredyiW. of Art 

hollow shades enclosing hearts ofy w 

Dark faces pale against that rosyy Lotos-F^s, . 

God divide the night with flyingy D.ofF. Worn. 225 

in the midst A fragrantyrose, . Princess, iv. 

with slow dilation roll'd Dry_/] . 11 vi. 

set a wrathful Dian's moon on/ . 

Pierces the keen seraphicy . 

This round of green, this orb ofy 

Life, a Fury slinging flame. . 

As slowly steals a silvery 

might'st have heaved a windlessy 

Ray round withy,*? her disk of seed, 

Ready to burst in a colour'dy," 

blood Break into furiousy,* . 

To rise hereafter in a stillery 

dewy hair blown back likey." 

the deadyof the fallen day . 

hair as it were crackling \wtofis 

I doom you to they 



InMem. xxx. 
ti xxxiv. 
11 xlix. 

if lxvi. 

lxxi. 



Maud, I. vi. 19 
Enid . 1676 

Elaine 1309 

Guifievere . 282 
En. Arden . 438 
Aylmer's F. 586 
The Ringlet 50 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



'43 



flame (verb.) poem. line. 

barking cur Made her cheeky"; . Godiva . 58 

wt rights himself, the rick J'"s, Princess, iv. 367 

im aid his high sun/ . . Aland, 1. iv. 32 

f's The blood-red blossom of war 11 IH. vi. 52 

Let it/or fade tr -54 

when the long-illumined cities/ . Odeon Well. 228 

headland after headland./ . . Guinevere . 241 

/and sparkle and stream as of old, The Ringlet 8 

flamed. 
/upon the brazen greaves . L.ofShalott,\\\. 4 
F in his cheek ; and eager eyes, . Ayliuer's F. 66 
Tho' Leolin/and fell again, . '• . 409 

By peaks that/ or, all in shade, . Tlte Voyage 41 

flaming. 
/downward over all . . Mariana in tlte S. 77 

flank. 
arisen since With cities on their/ \s — Vivien . 526 

flap. 
great echo/ And buffet . . Golden J ear 75 

1 icks, and the slacken'd sail/'.?, Princess, ii. 169 
dimpled flounce of the sea-furbelow/, Sea D reams 257 

flapped. 
They/my light out as 1 read : . St S.Stylites 172 

flare. 
Flames, on the windy headland/.' IV. toAlcxan. 16 

flared. 

threaten'd darkness,/and fell : At. d" Arthur, Ep. 2 

in dry stubble a nine days' wonder/: Elaine . 731 

red light of dawn F on her face, n . 1020 

a great mist-blotted light Fan him, En. Ardcn . 682 

flaring. 
A million tapers/bright . A rattan .Vs. 124 

iven the light of London/ . Locksley II. 114 

flash (s.) 
without speaking, like a/of light. May Queen, i. 18 
a shape, a shade, A/oflight. . St S. Stylites 200 
A living/of light he flew.' . . Two Voices 15 
The/'« come and go ; . . St Agues' Eve 26 

I learnt more from her in a/ . Princess, ii. 375 
Thcsc/W on the surface are not he. 11 iv. 234 

/ the weird affection came : . " v. 466 

A little/, a mystic hint ; 
As in the former/of joy, 

at the/and motion of the man . Enid . 1316 

I the/V* of his golden horns Vivien . 277 

•end One/ that, missing all things else ip . . 781 

hcc/'ei from .1 height Above her, Elaine . 644 

love's first/ in youth. Most common : 11 . 945 

r me, that will .strike 11 . 965 

ml the/of youth, . 11 1308 

1 insect and of bird, . En. Arden . 576 

emi-jealousy cleared it to her. Ayliuer's F. 189 

the/of a thunderbolt— . Lucretius . 27 

1 in the South i a /.md a groan : 'The Window 43 

I a/to the sun . 11 . 179 

11 coming, 1 come. . 11 . 190 

flash fverb.) 

F in the pool* of whirling Simois . CF.nouc . 202 

f the lightnings, weigh the Sun — . Locksley II. 186 

hro' his head, . Day-Din. . 115 

e and true, . In Mem. xvi. 19 

nee, my friend, to thee : . 11 xl. la 

Will/ along the chords and go. . nlxxxvii. 1a 

If, and/'erdown the vale Cuinev 
/■'int. 1 fury life from nothing, . Ayliuer's F. 130 
I /• from the bridge, ■■ . 766 

III iintain/ . The Islet . 22 

in rivers of lire ! . W.toAlexan. 19 

•nd lighten afar: . . T/ie Window 187 
million mile .. .301 

flashed. 

the crystal min 

/ thro' h.-i 
/and fell the brand Excalibur : 



. In Mem. xliii. 

exxi. 15 



POEM. 

The distant battle/ and rung. . Two Voices 126 
He/his random speeches : . . Will Wat 
fz. saucy message to and fro Princess, Pro. 78 

thought/ thro' me which I clothed 11 _L J92 

young captains/ their glittering teeth 



In Mem. xciv. 36 
Maud, 1 ' 



Enid 
I 'ivien 



L.ofShalott. iii. 34 
. Pal. of Art 214 
. .1/. it" Arthur 142 



His living soul was/on mine 

pride/over her beautiful face. 

Something/in the sun, 

Heaven/a sudden jubilant ray, 

/•"all their sabres bare, F as they 

Geraint/*into sudden spleen : 

out he/And into such a song, 

F the bare-grinning skeleton of death ! .. 

Suddenly/on her a wild desire, . Elaine 
/into wild tears, and rose again, . n 

down they/5 and smote the stream, n 
/ as it were, Diamonds to meet them. .. 

autumn into autumn/' again, . En. Arden . 453 
jests, that/about the pleader's room, Ayliuer's ^.440 

flasltest. 
along the valley, stream that/white, V. o/Cauterctz 1 

flashing. 
She,/forth a haughty smile. 
/round and round, and whirl'd 
1'he cataract/from the bridge, 
quickly/* thro 1 the shallow ford . 
Was ail the marble threshold/ 

flask. 

A/of cider from his fathers vats, 
Mere sits the Butler with a/ 
1 leave an empty/: 



Ode on Well. 129 
Lt. Brigade 27 

• =73 
. 266 
. 696 

• 356 
. 610 

1228 
1229 



D.o/F. Worn. 129 
M. d' Arthur 138 
In Mem. lxx. 15 
Enid . .167 
" • • 874 




AudteyCl. . 
Day-Dm. . 

Mi It Water. 



26 
45 

164 



flat (a level.) 
glanced athwart the glooming/""j. Mariana . 20 
here upon the/All that long nioin Princess, V. 357 

all about The same gray/'j again, InMent.lxxxvi. 13 

By sands and steaming/V, . . 'The Voyage 45 

flat 'note in music.) 
thro' every change of sharp and/; Coquette, i. 4 

flattened. 

Mangled, and/ and crush'd, 

flatter. 
sue me, and woo me, and/me, 
To/me that I may die ': 

/■" myself that always everywhere Princess, ii. 390 

7. x. 
Vivien 



Maud, I. 



. The Mermaid 43 

Two I Cites 204 



This look of ouiet/'j thus . . InMem.x. 

/his own wish in age for love, 

flattered. 

thought of power F his spirit ; 
lie/ to the height, 
snares them by the score /'and 
The fancy/ my mind, . 

flattering. 
/the golden prime 
/thy childish thought . 
O, I, that/my true passion, saw 
splendid presence/ the poor roofs 

flattery. 
the wit, The/and the strife. 
Nor speak I now from foolish/; . 
old man, Tho' doubtful, felt the/ 

flaunt. 
/Wiih prudes for proctors, . 
to/, to dress, to dance, to thrum, 
a time for these to/ their pride 1 



41 



O'uoiie . 135 

Pal. 0/ Art 19a 

Princess, v. 157 
Maud, 1. xiv. 23 

Arabian FTs. 76 
T'leiinore . 13 
/ 'ivien . 723 

Ayliuer's F. 175 



D.ofF.lVom.n't 

J'uul . .433 

Vivien . 40 



Princess, Pro. 140 

11 iv. 498 

Ayliuer's /•'. 770 



flar 



Like/"* in summer laying lusty . Enid . . -< \ 
WaOc.tothtM.i6 
Princess, v. 514 
Vivien . 522 



flay-flint. 
There lived a/near ; we stole 
flaying: 

F the roofs and sucking up the 

flea. 
text no larger than the limbs of/ s 



144. 



CONCORDANCE TO 



fleck. POEM. LINE. 

slid, a sunny_X From head to ancle TalkitigO. 223 
life is dash'd withy's of sin. . InMem.li. 14 



fleckless. 
conscience will not count me/; 



Princess, ii. 274 



fled. 

Her household./" the danger, . The Goose . 54 

voice/always ihro' the summer . Ed. Morris 67 
I read, and/by night, and flying " . 134 

Then/ she to her inmost bower, . Godiva . 42 

* O happy sleep, that lightly//' . Day-Dm. . 182 
Thought her proud, and ./"over the Ed. Gray . 14 

/fast thro' sun and shade, . . SirL.audQ.G.^j 
For maidens, on the spur she/; . Princess, i. 150 
when he fell, And all else/: . 11 ii. 225 

They/ who might have shamed us : if . 279 

As flies the shadow of a bird, she/ ir iii. 80 

day/ on thro' all Its range of duties " _ . 160 

/ as flies A troop of snowy doves . ti iv. 149 

Amazed he/away Thro' the dark 11 v. 46 

shuddering/ from room to room, . ti vi. 350 

Less yearning for the friendship/ In Mem. cxv. 25 
wise if I/from the place . . Maud. I. i. 64 
Whether I need have/? . . m II. ii. 72 
And I wake, my dream is/; . it iv. 51 

My fancy/ to the South again. . The Daisy . 108 

/With little save the jewels . . Enid . . 639 
E all the boon companions of the . ti . 1326 

/Yelling as from a spectre, ti 1580 

staring and aghast, While some yet/; n . 1653 

/from Arthur's court To break the Vivien . 146 

E like a glittering rivulet to the . Elaine . 53 

I my sons and little daughter/ u 276 

E ever thro' the woodwork, . i» . 439 

that day when Lancelot/ the lists, ir . . 524 
Queen Guinevere had/the court, Guinevere . 1 
hither had she/ her cause of flight n . 9 

E all night long by glimmering waste ?f . T27 

Moan as she/ or thought she heard n . 129 

had added 'get thee hence' E frighted 11 . 365 

E forward, and no news of Enoch En. Arden . 358 
His fancy/before the lazy wind . " . 658 

For one fair Vision ever/ . . The Voyage 57 

fledged. 
branches, /with clearest green, . D.ofF. Wo?n. 59 
lightlier move The minutes/ with Princess, iv. 19 
T^asit were with Mercury's ankle-wing, Lucretius 198 

flee. 

Melissa clamour'd c .F the death ;* Princess, iv. 148 
What time mine own might also/ In Mem.lxxxni.3j 
/from the cruel madness of love, Maud, I. iv. 55 
if I/to these Can I go from Him? En. Arden . 224 

fleece. 
heavens between their fairy/Vpale Gardener* sD. 256 
many-wintered/of throat and chin. Vivie?i . 690 

Fleece (Inn Sign.) 
The Bull, the .Fare cramm'd, . Audley Ct. 1 

fleeted].) 
/I v/as of foot : Before me shower'd Princess t iv. 244 

fleet (s.) 
I trust if an enemy's/ came yonder Maud, I. i. 49 
Ev'n in the presence of an enemy's/ Gui?ievere 277 
/of glass, That seem'd a/of jewels Sea Dreams 118 
An idle signal, for the brittle/ . 11 . 129 

my poor venture but a/ of glass . 11 . 134 

Welcome her,thundersoffortandof/7 W.toAlexan.6 
all the/ Had rest by stony hills . On a Mourner 34 

fleet (verb.) 
And the light and shadow/; . Maud, II. iv. 36 
And the shadow flits and/'s 11 .90 

fleeted. 
As fast we/to the South : . . The Voyage 4 

fleeter. 
Whether smile or frown be/? . Madeline . 12 



fleeting. 
Or that this anguish/hence, 
Or villain fancy/by, 
/thro' the boundless universe, 



POEM. LINE. 

. Tivo Voices 235 
. In Mem. ex. iS 
. Lucretius . 161 



. StS.Stylites 57 
n . 177 

. Talking O. 92 
. Vision 0/ Sin 177. 
InMein. xxxiii. n 
Ixxxiv. 27 
Maud, I. vi. 79 
372 
387 
39i 
1449 

477 
1249 



ti iv. 20 

. The Goose . 35 
. Two Voices 15 
. Day-Dm. . 143 
Will Water. 134 



flesh. 
my/ which I despise and hate. 
Mortify Your/ like me, 
far too spare of/ . 
Padded round with /and fat, 
Oh, sacred be the/ and blood 
All knowledge that the sons of/ 
O heart of stone, are you/ , 
Go to the town and buy us/ . Enid 
means of goodly welcome,/and wine. 11 
boil'd the/ and spread the board. ir 
call'd for/and wine to feed his spears, it 
hall was dim with steam of/; . u 
touch'd fierce wine, nor tasted/ Vivien 
how pale ! whatare they ?/and blood ? Elaine 
cannot take thy hand ; that too is/ Guijievere . 549 
in the/ thou hast sinn'd ; and mine own/ ti . 550 
My love thro'/hath wrought . n . 554 

they that cast her spirit into/ . Aylmers F. 481 
wilt not gash thy/ for him ; . n . 658 

swept away The men of/and blood, Sea Dreams 230 
never yet on earth Could dead/ creep, Lucretius 131 

flew. 
Out/ the web and floated wide ; L. q/Shalott, iii. 42 
loosely/ to left and right — . 
goose/this way and/that, . 
A living flash of light he/' . 
The fire shot up, the martin/ 
F over roof and casement : . 

till they /", Hair, and eyes, and limbs, Visiono/Sin 38 
dance, and/ thro' light And shadow, Princess, Pro.84. 

/kite, and raced the purple fly, . n ii. 230 

gust that round the garden/ In Mem. lxxxviii. 19 

/in a dove And brought a summons i? cii. 15 

o'er the hills her eagles/ . . Ode on Well. 112 
shadow/Before it, till it touch'd her, Gui7ievere . 79 
Changed every moment as we/. . The Voyage 28 
' Chase,' he said : the ship/ forward, TheCaJ>tam 33 

flexile. 
So youthful and so/then, . . Amfhion . 59 

flicker. 
The shadows/ to and fro : . D. of the O. Vear?g 
Where the dying night-lamp/'^, . Locksley H. 80 
wisp that/\ywhere no foot can tread.' Pr incess, iv. 339 
To/ with his double tongue. . InMein. cix. 8 

flickered. 
high masts/ as they lay afloat ; . D. q/E. Wojn.jf$ 

flickering. 
night-light/ in my eyes Awoke me.' Sea Dreams 101 

flight (flying.) 
And of so fierce a/ 
spread his sheeny vans for J"; 
Rapt after heaven's starry/ 
Beyond the furthest/'^ of hope, 
/from out your bookless wilds 

Edyrn's men had caught them in their/ Enid . 642 
her cause of/ Sir Modred ; . . Guinevere . 9 
What look'd a/ of fairy arrows . Aylmers E. 94 
E's, terrors, sudden rescues, . 11 -99 

In hope to gain upon her/ . . The Voyage 60 

flight (of stairs.) 
Broad-basSd/'j of marble stairs . Arabian N's. 117 
up a/ of stairs into the hall. .Princess, ii. 17 

fling (s.) 
Give me my/ and let me say my say.' Aylmers F. 399 

fling (verb.) 

/The winged shafts of truth, . The Poet . 25 

Tho' one did/ the fire. . it . 30 

/on each side my low-flowing locks, The Mermaid ^32 
take Excalibur And/him far . M. d' Arthur 37 
if thou spare to/ Excalibur, . 11 . 131 

good luck Shall/her old shoe after. Will Water. 216 

/the diamond necklace by.' . Lady Clare 40 



The Poet . 14 
Lovea?id Death 8 
Tivo Voices . 68 

Princess, ii. 42 



TENNYSOX'S WORKS. 



'45 



POEM. LINE. 

/The tricks, which make us toys .' Princess, ii. 48 
all prophetic pity, /Their pretty maids ir v. 371 

' Aour doors wide ! all, all, . . 11 vi. 314 

/it like a viper off, and shriek . h vii. 79 

/This bitter seed among mankind In Mem.lxxxix. 3 

f's Her shadow on the blaze of kings : 11 xcvii. 18 
Did he/himself down ? Who knows? Maud, I. i. 9 

/mc deep in that forgotten mere, . Elaine 1416 

Never a man could/ him : . . Grandmotlier 10 
not/ this horror off me again, . Lucretius . 173 
will she/ herself, Shameless upon me ? 11 . 199 

flinging. 

/"the gloom of yesternight . . Ode to Mem. 9 

flint. 
sparkling/'* beneath the prow, . Arabian N's. 52 
f's batter'd with clanging hoofs : . D. ofF. Worn. 21 
one part of sense not/ to prayer, . Princess, vi. 166 
out upon you,// You love nor her, 11 . 242 

face as a/ . . . Aland, I. i. 31 

But then what a/ is he ! . . 11 xix. 57 

no stoning save with/and rock ? . Aylmer's F. 746 

flippant. 
The/put himself to school . . In Mem. cix. 10 

flirt. 
Not one to/a venom at her eyes, Vivien . 459 

flit. 
/To make the greensward fresh, . TalkmgO. . 89 

.r girls/ Till the storm die ! Princess, vi. 317 
like to noiseless phantoms/; . InMem.xx. 16 

What slender shade of doubt may/ 11 xlvii. 7 
F's by the sea-blue bird of March ; 11 xc. 4 
A shadow/'* before me, . Maud, 11. iv. 11 

And the shadow/'* and fleets . 11 .90 

let her fancy/ across the past, . Enid . . 645 

look, now he/'*, . . T/ie Window 1 50 
/like the king of the wrens . . 11 . 159 

flitted. 
F across into the night, . . Miller's D. . 127 

The little innocent soul/ away . En. Arden . 269 
unawares they/off, . . . Aylmer's F. 202 
/away ! T/ie Window 38 

/I know not where 1 ... 11 . 41 

flitteth. 
The shallop/ silkcn-sail'd . . L.ofShalotl,\.22 

flitting 'part. I 
'What! You're//' 'Yes, we're/' Walk.l0lheM.3s 

flitting (s.) 
After the/of the bats, . . . Mariana . 17 
Plagued with a/ to and fro, . Maud, II. ii. 33 

float. 

of thy Inve-deep eyes F on to me. F.leanore . 77 

1 her hair or seem'd to/ . CEnone . 18 

• nd f's adown the air. . I.otos-E's. . 76 

you on the verge of night. . Margaret . 31 

/about the threshold of an age, . Golden Year 16 

pean flag, . . I.ocksley H. 161 

n, and cannot light? Day-Dm. . 276 

I/till all is dark. . . . . Sir Galahad 40 

•eem'd To/about a glimmering . Princess, i. 243 

'.'• and/ ir ii. 306 

t/ us each and all . 11 iv. 52 

F's up from those dim fields . Tithonus . 69 

floated. 

1 it /a dying swan . . Dying Swan 6 

< >ut flew the web and/ wide ; L.ofShalott, iii. 42 

■ lot : . . 11 iv. 23 

■•/by, 11 . 30 

1 ■ • rn'.l to float . CEnone . 18 

lowing sunlights, as she . 11 . 178 

•, Two Voices 373 

'i have . Princess, iv. 505 

ively, lordly creature/ on . 11 vi. 73 

floating. 
■ xhr under-sky . . . Dying Swan 25 
/• thru' an evening atmosphere, . Eleanore . too 



POEM. LINE. 

Pal. of Art . 35 
Vision of Sin 54 



11 l.xxxiv 
11 lxxxv 


69 

7 


II cu 


20 
26 


II cxxvi 


*3 


II exxvu 
. Elaine 
1 ii 


S 
103 1 
1037 
1040 



misty folds, that/as they fell 
Came/ on for many a month 

flock. 
By dancing rivulets fed his/'*, . To E. L. . 22 
bring the firstling to the/; . . in Mem. ii. . 6 
That feed the mothers of the/; . 11 xcix. 16 

The/'* are whiter down the vale, 11 cxiv. 10 

he came again, his/believed — . Aylmer's F. 600 
half amazed half frighted all his/; 11 . 631 

my eldest-born, the flower of the/; Grandmother 9 

flocked. 
thither/ at noon His tenants, . Princess, Pro. 3 

flood [s.) 
They past into the level/ . . Miller's D. 75 
spouted forth A/of fountain-foam. Pal. of Art 24 
From the westward-winding/ . Margaret . 9 
takes the/ With swarthy webs. . M.a r Arthur 268 
the/drew; yet I caught her ; . Princess, iv. 164 
died and spilt our bones in the/— 11 .511 

Their pretty maids in the running/ n v. 372 

Thro' prosperous/'* his holy urn In Mem. ix. 8 
Summer on the steaming/'*, 
shadowing down the horned/ 
At anchor in the/ below, 
roll'd the/'* in grander space, 
molten up, and roar in/; 
No doubt vast eddies in the/ 
used to take me with the/ . 
far up the shining/Until we found 
I was all alone upon the/ 

Beyond the poplar and far up the/ 11 1044 

the dumb went upward with the/— 11 1148 

his passions all in/ And masters . Aylmer's F. 339 
Bore down in/ and dash'd . . 11 . 633 

/ fire, earthquake, thunder, . 11 . 639 

sands and steaming flats, and/"* . The Voyage 45 
whiten'd all the rolling/; . . The Victim 20 

flood (verb.) 

F's all the deep-blue gloom . . D. ofF. Worn. 186 
F with full daylight glebe and . Two Voices 87 

burst and/the world with foam : . Princess, iv. 453 

/a fresher throat with song. . In Mem. lxxxii. 16 

/the haunts of hem and crake ; . " c. 14 

filth that/'* the middle street . Vivien . 647 

flooded. 
Were/over with eddying song . Dying Swan 42 
before his time And/at our nod. D. of F. Worn. 144 
beyond his limit, And all was/; . The Daisy . 72 
/with the helpless wrath of tears. En. Arden . 32 

floor. 
Old footsteps trod the upper/'* . Mariana . 67 
Flung inward over spangled/'*, . Arabian N s. 116 
meal-sacks on the whiten'd/ . Miller's D. . 101 
garden-tools upon the granary/; . MayQueen,'\\. 45 
waves Of sound on roof and/ . D.ofF. Worn. 192 
There's a new foot on the/ . D.oftheO.Ycar 52 
head and heels upon the/ . . The Goose . 37 
All heaven bursts her slurry f's . St Agnes' Eve 27 
cease To pace the gritted/ . . Will Water. 242 
plank and beam for roof and/ . Princess, vi. 30 
Throbb'd thunder thro' the palace/'*, 11 vii. 89 
crash'd the glass and beat the/; . /«.!/</*. Ixxxvi. 20 
Witch-elms that counterchangc the/ 11 Ixxxviii. 1 
let no footstep beat the/ . . 11 civ. 17 

russet-bearded head roll'd on the/ Enid . 1577 

wild passion out against the/ . Elaine . 738 

slic slipt like water to the/ . . 11 . . 826 
grovell'd with her face against the/; Guinevere . 412 

Flora. 

hues to dim The Titianic /•'. . . Gardener'sD. 167 

O, Lady /■', let me speak : . . Day-Dm. . 1 

So, Lady /•', take my lay, . . 11 197, 2C9 

Florence. 

Abroad, at F, at Rome, . . Maud.l.xix. 58 

' Poor lad, he died at A, . . Tht Brook . 3s 

At /•' too what gulden hours, . 1 he Daisy . 41 

K 



146 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Florian. poem. line. 

I stood With Cyril and with F, . Princess, i. . 51 
from court With Cyril and with F, n . 102 

F, but no livelier than the dame, . 11 ii. 97 

fifth in line from that old F, . 11 . 220 

loyal warmth of F is not cold . 11 . 226 

pacing till she paused By F; . m . 283 

sad and glad To see you, F. . tr . 288 

What think you of it, F? ir . 386 

murmur' d F gazing after her. . ir in. 81 

CyrilkeptWithPsyche,withMelissa.F, tr . 337 

F nodded at him, I frowning ; . tr iv. 141 

Alone I stood With F, cursing Cyril, it . 153 

'if this were she' But it was F. . tr . 199 

melted F's fancy as she hung, . it . 351 

Then Fknelt, and 'Come' he whisper'd it v. 60 

F, he That loved me closer ir . 519 

'Your brother, Lady, — F, — ask . tf vi. 293 

But Psyche tended F : . . . tr vii. 40 

florid. 

f, stern, as far as eye could see, . Sea Drea7ns 212 

floimce. 
dimpled/ of the sea-furbelow flap, Sea Dreams 257 

flounder. 
to move, And/into hornpipes. . Amphion . 24 

/"awhile without a tumble Hendecasyllabics 9 

floundered. 

They f all together, . . . The Goose . 38 

flour. 

/"From his tall mill . . . En. Arden . 339 

flourish fs.) 
In the mid might and/" of his May, Elaine . 553 

flourish (verb.) 
O/high, with leafy towers, . . Talking O. . 197 
Of, hidden deep in fern, . . it . 201 

life in him Could scarce be said tof The Brook . 12 

f'es Green in a cuplike hollow . E?i. Arden . 8 
Out of evil evil/ 'es, . . . Boddicea . S3 

flourish 'd. 
From all a closer interest/" up, . Princess, vii. 98 

/"then or then ; but life in him . The Brook . 11 
F a little garden square . . En. Arden . 735 

flout. 
put your beauty to this/ and scorn Enid . 1523 

flow (s.) 
silver/Of subtle-paced counsel . Isabel . . 20 
Down from the central fountain's/" A rabian N's. 50 
sonorous/Of spouted fountain-floods. Pal. of Art 27 

/"Of music left the lips of her . D.ofF.Wom. 194 
ebb and/conditioning their march, Goldeii Year 30 
rock in ebbs and/'.? Fixt on her faith. Enid. . 812 

flow (verb.) 
All night the silence seems to/" . Or tana . 86 
now thy beauty/'.? away, . Mariana in the S. 67 
Motions /"To one another . . Eleduore . 61 
There's somewhat/'.? to us in life, Miller's D. 21 
saw the gleaming river seaward/ Lotos-E's. . 14 
Accordingto my humour ebb and/ D.ofF. Wom.134 
dared to/ In these words toward you, To J. S. 6 
such tears As/ but once a life. . Love and 'Duty 63 
F down, cold rivulet, to the sea, . A Farewell 1 
F, softly/ by lawn and lea, . n . 5 

greatname/onwithbroadeningtime Princess,m. 148 
tide/ 's down, The wave again is In Mem. xix. 13 
The double tides of chariots/ . if xcvii. 23 

The hills are shadows, and they/ ir exxii. 5 

./""thro' our deeds and make them pure, 1: exxx. 4 

all we/ from, soul in soul. . . ir .12 

Till last by Philip's farm 1/ . The Brook . 31 

/"To join the brimming river (rep. 63 182) ir . 47 

let the turbid streams of rumour/ Ode on Well. 181 
the}' do not/ From evil done ; . Guinevere . 186 
the valley, where thy waters/", . V. ofCauteretz 3 

flowed. 

tide of time/ back with me, . Arabian N*s. 3 

/"upon the soul in many dreams. The Poet . 31 

Rare sunrise/ .... tr . 36 



POEM. LINE. 

F forth on a carol free and bold ; . Dying Swan 30 
From underneath his helmet/" L. of Shalott, Hi. 30 
o'er him/a golden cloud, . . (Enone . 103 

Thus far he/ and ended ; . . Golden Year 52 
dream and truth Ffrom me ; . Princess, v. 531 
by and by the town F in . . Enid . . 546 
Fast/ the current of her easy tears, En. Arde?i . 866 
(possibly He/and ebb'd uncertain, Aylmer's F. 218 
mother/in shallower acrimonies : ir . 563 

when the preacher's cadence/Softening 11 . 729 

Bloodily/ the Tamesa rolling . Boddicea . 27 

flower (s.) 
The stately/of female fortitude, Isabel. . 11 
In order, eastern/' jt large, . . Arabian N's. 61 
diaper'd With inwrought/'.? . ?i . 149 

peerless/'.? which in the rudest wind OdetoMem.i^ 
sweet showers Of festal/'.?, . it . 78 

stalks Of the mouldering/'^; ' A spirit haunts* etc. 8 
grew A/ all gold, . . . The Poet . 24 

pour Into every spicy/ . . Poet's Mind 13 
f's would faint at your cruel cheer. n .15 

Overlook a space of/' s, . . L. 0/ 'Shalott, i. 16 

many a deep-hued bell-like/" . Elednore . 37 
you were gay With bridal/'.? — . Miller's D. 165 
I roll'd among the tender/"'.? .* . Fatima . 11 
midway down Hang rich in f's . CEnoue . 7 
The purple/V droop : the golden bee u . 28 

and berry and/ thro' and thro'. . tr . 100 

A simple maiden in her/ . . L.C.V.deVcrei$ 
I must gather knots off's . . MayQueen,\. 11 
Last May we made a crown of/*'.?; 11 ii. 9 

There's not a/ on all the hills : . tr . 13 

I long to see a/so ... tr .16 

When the/'.? come again, mother, ir . 25 

land about, and all the f's that blow, 11 hi. 7 

Wild/'.? in the valley for other hands rr . 52 

enchanted stem, Laden with fruit and/ Lotos-E 's.29 
in the stream the long-leaved/'^ weep, tr . 55 
The/ripens in its place, - . . tr . 8r 

I knew the f's, I knew the leaves, D.ofF. Worn. 73 
Feeding the/"; but ere my/ to fruit m . 207 

shadow of tha f's Stole all the golden Gardeuer'sD. 128 
Each garlanded with her peculiar/" tr . 197 

made a little wreath of all the f's Dora . . 80 
wreath off's fell At Dora's feet. ■• 100 

of eloquence Stored from all f's ? Ed. Morris 27 
The/of each, those moments when tr . 69 

Proserpine in Enna, gathering/'.?; tr . 112 

bring me offerings of fruit and/'.?; StS. Stylites 126 
The/ she touch'd on, dipt and rose, TalkiugO. 131 
/of knowledge changed to fruit Love and Duty 24 
Live happy ; tend thy f's; . . 11 . 84 

About the opening of the/ . . Two Voices 161 
scarce could see the grass for/'.?. 11 . 453 

the/and quintessence of change. Day-Dm. . 236 
burst In carol, every bud to/ . ir . 256 

Perfume and/'.? fall in showers, . Sir Galahad 11 
That are the/of the earth?' . Lady Clare . 68 

What! the/of life is past : . . Vision of Sin 69 
F' s of all heavens, and lovelier . Princess, Pro. 12 
Laid it on f's, and watch'd it . ir i. 92 

and with great urns off's. . . it ii. 12 

the bird, the fish, the shell, the/" it . 361 

long hall glitter'd like a bed off's. it . 416 

Fluctuated, asf's in storm, . . it iv. 461 

Remembering her mother : O my/"/ tr v. 86 

household/Torn from the lintel — it . 122 

of the Prince, trampling the f's . it . 237 

I take her for the/of womankind, tr . 277 

Their feet inf's, her loveliest : . rr vi. 62 

With books, with/'.?, with Angel tr vii. 11 

like a/ that cannot all unfold, . it . 126 

The seasons bring the/ again, . In Mem. ii. 5 
A/beat with rain and wind, . tr viii. 15 

This poor/of poesy ... it . 19 

From/ to/" from snow to snow : . 11 xxii. 4 

Be all the colour of the/; . . ir xlii. 8 

The path we came by, thnrn and/ rr xlv. 2 

The perfect/of human time ; . it Ix. 4 

Made cypress of her orange/" . n lxxxiii. 15 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



147 



POEM. LINE. 

brushing ankle-deep in/V, In Mem. lxxxviii. 49 



cxxix. 
Con. 



Maud, I. iv. 
ti xxii. 

tr II. ii. 



Day, when I lost the/of men ; . 11 xcvm. 

The time admits not/'.? or leaves it cvi. 

/"And native growth of noble mind 

tho' I seem in star and/ 

But where is she, the bridal/ 

weight Of learning lightly like a/ 

pelt us in the porch with/'.?. 

seed Of what in them is/ and fruit 

Beauty fair in her/,- 

To the/' j, and be their sun. 

For a shell, or a/ little things 

On the little/that clings 

It is only/' s, they had no fruits, 

the white/of a blameless life, 

like a crag was gay with wilding/'.?: Enid 

Gwydion made by glamour out of/'s, ti 

Betwixt the cressy islets white in/; it 

noble deeds, the/of all the world. Vivien 

' to pluck the/in season ;' . . tt 

A border fantasy of branch and/ Elaine 

Lancelot, the/ of bravery, . . ir 

The/of all the west . . . n 

So saying from the carven/ above, 11 

if I bide, lo ! this wild/ for me ! ' . 11 

For pleasure all about a field of/'s : tr 

the victim's/'.? before he fall.' . n 

when you yield your/of life . it 

dashing down on a tall wayside/ Guinevere 

A glorious company, the/ of men, 11 

robed your cottage-walls with/'.? Aylmer's F. 

my eldest-born, the/of the flock ; Grandmother 

little Annie, /and thorn. 

my beauty, my eldest-born, my/; 

we nor paused for fruit nor/'s. 

Up there came a/ 

Cursed me and my/ . 

people cried ' Splendid is the/' . 

Most can raise the/'.? now, . 

Break, happy land, into earlier/' .?. W. to Alexan. 10 

in our winter woodland looks a/ A Dedication 13 

heart voice amid the blaze of/'s: Lucretius . 101 

Crown'd with a/or two, . . 11 . 226 

bird or fish, or opulent/ 1 — 

All of/'s, and drop me a/ (rep 

Cannot a/ a/be mine, 

Drop me a/ a/ to kiss 

her bower, All of/'s, a/ a/Dropt a/ 

/lower (verb.) 
white as privet when it/'.?. . 
as poets' seasons when they/ 

/lowerage. 
Busying themselves about the/ . Aylmer's F. 203 

/lower-bells. 
cluster'd/-£ and ambrosial orbs . Isabel . . 36 



64 
33 

77 
Ded. 0/ Idylls 24 

• 3*9 

• 743 
1324 

. 263 

• 572 
. 11 
■ "4 

• 249 

• 548 
. 641 

• 789 
. 906 

• 948 

• Z5i 
. 461 



The l^oyage 
The Flower 



tt . 245 

Tlie Window 26 

tt . 29 

• 31 

• 33 



lFalh.totheM.48 
Golden Year 28 



/lowered. 
All branch'd and/with gold, 

/lowering. 
/high, the last night's gale had . 

/lower-pot. 
With blackest moss the/-ji's . 

/lower-sheath. 
lightly breaks a faded/- s, 



Isabel . 
Enid . . 631 
Gardener' sD . 123 
Mariana. . 1 



Enid 



365 



floivery. 
course of life thatseem'd soytome Vivien . 729 

floweth. 
From thy rose-red lips my name F; Eleanore . 134 

flowing. 
clear streamy with a muddy one, . Isabel . . 30 
yrapidlybetweenTheirinterspaces, Arabian N's. 83 
F beneath her rose-hued zone ; . if . 140 

musicyfrom The illimitable years. Ode to Mem. 41 
F like a crystal river ; . . . Poet's Mind 6 
Winds were blowing, waters./^ . Oriana . 14 
F down to Cameiot. . . . L. ofShalott,\. 14 
The rapt oration/free, . . InMem.lx.xxvi.32 



POEM. LINE. 

Enid . . 569 
The Captain 27 
Coquette, iii. 7 



Gardener 'sD. 82 



Vision of Sin 

Princess, iv. 90 

In A/em. Con. 1 8 

Jl/aud,l.xxil. 2 
Vivien . 750 

Aybner's F. 84 

The IVindow 41 

N. Farmer . 6j 

In Mem. xciv. 56 

Princess, iv. 461 



Princess, vi. 335 
InMem. cxi. 15 



blood Of their strong bodies.y 
canvasy Rose a ship of France, . 
My tears, no tears of love, arey . 
Seas at my feet werey . 

flown. 
as tho' it were The hour justy 
horse with wings, that would havey 
tell her, Swallow, that thy brood isy. 
in the summers that arey 
the black bat, night, hasy . 
as the cageling newlyy returns, . 
Had tost his ball andyhis kite, . 
F to the east or the west, 

floy (fly.) 
a knaws naw moor nor ay; . 

fluctuate. 
Andy all the still perfume, . 

fltictuated. 
F, as flowers in storm ; Some red, 

fluctuatio?i. 
columns drown'd In silkeny 
world- widey sway'd In vassal tides 

flue. 
a blast of sparkles up they.* . M. d' Arthur, Ep. 15 

fluke. 

Anchors ofrustyy and boats updrawn En. Arden 18 

flung. 
costly doorsyopen wide, . . AraoiauN's. 17 
F inward over spangled floors, . n . 116 

Backward the lattice-blind shey Mariana in theS.Zj 
Then with both hands iy him, . M. d' Arthur 157 
Andy him in the dew. . . . TathiugO.. 232 
F the torrent rainbow round : . Vision of Shi 32 
^ball, flew kite, and raced the purple Princess, ii. 230 
sheyit. ' Fight' she said, . . tr iv. 575 

ydefiance down Gagelike to man, n v. 170 

Sheyit from her, thinking: . . it Con. 32 

yA ballad to the brighteningmooni/w^/^^.lxxxviii. 27 
yThe lilies to and fro, ... it xciv. 59 
heya wrathful answer back: . Enid . . 995 

y herself Down on the great King's Elaine . 606 

Unclaspingythe casement back, ir 975 

j^them, and down they fiash'd, . 11 . 1228 

y One arm about his neck, n *345 

yher down upon a couch of fire, . Aylmer's F. 574 
His body halfy forward in pursuit, if . 5S7 

Flur. 
F, for whose love the Roman Caesar Enid 

flush (s.) 
They of anger'd shame, 
here a suddeny of wrathful heat 
when the morningy Of passion 

flush (verb.) 
the brain And f'es all the cheek. 
the colour f'es Her sweet face 
by deniaiyher babbling wells 
f'es up in the ruffian's head, . 
his books, toyhis blood with air, , 



745 



Madeline . 32 
Gicinevere . 354 
Lucre tiiis . 2 

D. of F. Worn. 44 
L. of Burleigh 61 
Princess, v. 324 
Maud, I. i. . 37 
Aybner's F. 459 

fliished. 
.Fall the leaves with rich gold-green, Arabian N y s. 82 
F like the coming of the day ; . Miller's D. 132 
F in her temples and her eyes, . Pal. of Art 170 
Theny her cheek with rosy light, . Talking O. . 165 
Psychey and wann'd and shook : Princess, iv. 142 
first she came, ally you said to me it vi. 233 

her face A littley and she past on ; tt vii. 66 
Where oleanders_/"the bed . . The Daisy . 33 
ywith fight, or hot, God's curse, . Enid 1508 

that othcry And hung his head, . ?r . 1658 

Upright andy before him : . . Vivien . 761 

F slightly at the slight disparagement Elaine . 234 

flush i?ig. 
rosy redyin the northern night. . Locksley H. 26 
ythe guiltless air, Spout . . Lucretius . 236 



148 



CONCORDANCE TO 



flustered. poem. line. 

them by the score Flatter'd and/j . Princess, v. 157 
once in life was./" with new wine, . Vivien . 606 

him thaty his poor parish wits . Aylmer*s F. 521 

flute (s.) 
Blow, f, and stir the stiff-set sprigs, A mphion . 63 
rang To many af of Arcady. . In Mem. xxiii. 24 
Nor harp be touch'd, nory be blown ; 11 civ._ 22 
heard They; violin, bassoon ; . Maud, I. xxii. 14 
sound of dancing music and./ 's : . 11 II. v. 76 

flute (verb.) 
That lute and./ fantastic tenderness, Princess, iv.in 



fluted. 
mellow ouzel./ in the elm ; . 
f to the morning sea. 

flute-notes, 
thy f-n are changed to coarse, 
fluting, 
fa. wild carol ere her death, 



. Gardener* sD. 93 
. To E. L. . 24 

. The Blackbirds 



. M.d 'Arthur 267 

flutter. 
His spirit./ 's like a lark, . . Day-Dm. . 129 
Wingsy voices hover clear : . Sir Galahad 78 

There./ '5 up a happy thought, . In Mem. lxiv. 7 
The tender blossom/" down, . 11 c. 2 

Flags,/outupon turrets and towers ! IV. to Alexan.i^ 
heart within her fall and/ tremulously, Boadicea. 81 

fluttered. 
F about my senses and my soul, . Gardetier's D. 66 
A second/round her lip . . TalkingO. . 219 
melody F headlong from the sky. Vision of Sin 45 
A little/, with her eyelids down, . The Brook . 89 
there/ in, Half-bold, half-frighted, Enid . 1444 

fluttermg (part.) 
voice Faltering and/ in her throat, Princess, ii. 170 

fluttering (s.) 
I watch'd the little/V, . . Miller's D. . 153 

Jiyls.) 

The bluey sung in the pane: .Mariana _. 63 
flew kite, and raced the purple./, . Princess, ii 230 
In lieu of many mortal flies, . it in. 251 

men the flies of latter spring In Mem. xlix. 10 

tender over drowning _/??>.?, . . 11 xcv. 3 

head in a cloud of poisonousy?7<?.y. Maud, I. iv. 54 
call'd herself a gilded summer/" . Vivien . 107 
since you name yourself the summery if . 219 

~L\ke flies that haunt a wound, . Ayl/uer*s F. 571 
the life of the worm and they? . Wages . 7 

bees are still'd and the flies are kill'd, TkeWindow 52 

fly (verb. ) 
Then away she flies, . . . Lilian . 18 

whither away? f no more. . . Sea- Fairies 7, 42 
rainbow forms and flies on the land tr . 25 

Reverence, f Before her ' Love thou thy /and,' etc. 18 
ingroove itself with that, \i\i\eh flies, it . 46 

SunT?^ forward to his brother Sun : Golden Year 23 
F, happy, happy sails and bear the Press : tr .42 
F, happy with the mission of the Cross ; tr .43 
Here sits he shaping wings toy": . Two Voices 289 
order'd words asunder/! . . Day-Din. . 20 
The colour flies into his cheeks : . 11 . 119 

splinter* d spear-shafts crack and/". Sir Galahad 7 
F o'er waste fens and windy fields. it . 60 

f like a bird, from tree to tree : . Ed. Gray . 30 
The truth, that flies the flowing can, Will Water.iyi 
to_/ sublime Thro' the courts, . Vision of Sin 103 
F twanging headless arrows. . Princess, ii. 380 

]f' she cried, ' Of, while yet you may ! n hi. T2 

may yet be saved, and thereforey": it . 48 

As flies the shadow of a bird, . 11 .80 

^toher, and fall upon her gilded eaves, n iv. 76 

F to her, and pipe and woo her, . 11 * 97 

as flies A troop of snowy doves . tr . 149 

some sense of shame, she flies; . n . 330 

She flies too high, she flies too high ! tt v. 271-6 
As flies the lighter thro' the gross. In Mem. xl. 4 
111 brethren, let the fancy./ . it lxxxv. 12 



POEM. LINE. 

Fiercely _/?/<?.? The blast of North In Mem. cvi. 6 
fThe happy birds, that change . it cxiv. 14 
Arise andy" The reeling Faun, . ir cxvii. 25 
Wild Hours thaty with Hope and Fear, it exxvii. g 
fault was mine,' he whispered, 'f!' Maud, II. i. 30 
saw the dreary phantom arise andy" 11 III. vi. 36 
wildlyy Mixt with the flyers. . Enid . 1331 

' F, they will return And slay you ; tt . 1596 

f your charger is without t? *597 

When did not rumoursy? . . Elaine 1188 

y to my strong castle overseas : . Guinevere . 112 
yet rise now, and let usy . . it .119 

Stands in a wind, ready to break andy tt . 363 

crippled lad, and coming turn'd toy Aylmer*s F. 519 
Let mey says little birdie, (rep.) Sea Dreams 283 
We follow that \sh\eh flies before : The Voyage 94 
F on to clash together again, . Lucretius . 41 
gloryy along the Italian field, . tt .71 

do theyy Now thinner, and now thicker tr . 165 

so\i\. flies out and dies in the air." it . 270 

The lights and shadowsy/ . . The Window 1 
^little letter, apace, apace, . 11 .98 

to the light in the valley y (rep.) ir . 99 

flyer. 

ally's from the hand Of justice, . Enid . . 36 

wildly fly, Mixt with theyV. . 11 . 1331 

arms stretch'd as to grasp ay." . Aylmer*s F. 588 

flying. 
fled by night, andy turn'd ; . . Ed. Morris 134 
Dreary gleams of moorlandy . Locksley H. 4 
in they of a wheel Cry down the past, Godiva . 6 
we dropt, Andyreach'd the frontier: Princess~\. 108 
your arrow-wounded fawn Carney it ii. 252 

not see The bird of passagey south 11 iii. 194 
blow, set the wild echoesy . . it 352-64 

O Swallow, Swallow.yy South, . tt iv. 75 

O Swallow,yfrom the golden woods, \\ . 96 

yon the highest Foam of men's deeds — it v. 309 

ystruck With showers of random sweet u vii. 70 
F along the land and the main — . Maud, II. ii. 38 
Comesyover many a windy wave Enid . . 337 
white sailsyon the yellow sea ; . it . . 829 
F, but, overtaken, died the death 11 . 1026 

y from the wrath of Doorm 11 1379 

y back and crying out, ' O Merlin, Vivien . 792 
hear of rumoursy thro' your court. Elaine 1184 

A blot in heaven, the Raven,yhigh, Guinevere 132 
wheel'd and broke F, (rep.) . . tr 256 

following up Andy the white breaker, En. Arden 21 
Ory shone, the silver boss . . The Voyage 31 
Paid with a voicey by to be lost . Wages . 2 

are youyover her sweet little face? The JViudowij 
and birds' song F here and there, ir . 63 

foam (s.) 
the green brink and the runningy Sea-Fairies 2 
When the wind blows they . . CEnone . 61 
Aphrodite beautiful Fresh as they ir . 171 

Rolling a slumbrous sheet ofy below. Lotos-Ks. 13 
the wandering fields of barreny . 11 . 42 

the white cold heavy-plungingy D. ofF. Worn. 118 
Shrill, chill, with flakes ofy . M.d' Arthur 49 

burst and flood the world withy.* Princess, iv. 453 
on the highest F of men's deeds — tt v. 310 

from the three-decker out of they Maud, I. i. 50 
tremulously asyupon the beach . Guinevere . 362 
in the chasm areyand yellow sands ; En. Arden 2 
scaled in sheets of wastefuiy . Sea Dreams 53 

foam (verb.) 
forward-creeping tides Began toy In Mem. cii. 38 
Should all our churchmenyin spite ToF. D.Maurice 9 

foam-bow. 
cheek brighten'd as they<£ brightens CEnone • 60 

foamed. 
surging chargesy themselves away ; Ode on Well. 126 
yaway his heart at Averill'sear: . Aylmer's F. 342 

foa m-foun ta ins. 
monster spouted his f -fin the sea. Lotos-E f s. . 152 



TEXXYSOX'S IVOR AS. 



149 



foam-flakes, poem, line. 

Crisp// scud along the level sand, D.o/F. Worn. 39 

foe. 

tho' his/* spe3k ill of him, . D.oftheO.Year 22 

where girt with friends or/'* 'You ask me why,' etc. 7 

ever shock, \ikeaimedf's,'Love thou thy land,' etc. 78 

Had beat her/* with slaughter Princess.Pro. 34,123 

The next, like fire he meets the/ 11 iv. 560 

The general/ More soluble is . n v. 129 

t friend and noblest/; . . ti . 538 

two/'* above my fallen life, n vi. 114 

r/ Shall enter, if he will. " . 316 

I, to be struck by the public/ Maud, II. v. 89 

His/'* were thine ; he kept usfree ; Ode on Well. 91 

land pouring on her/*, n . 117 

never spoke against a/ . 11 . 185 

pur/ the sparrow-hawk, . Enid . . 444 

they long for, good in friend or/ 11 _ . 1724 

no friend who never made a/ . Elaine 1083 

lat man the worst of public/'* Guinevere . 508 

divine to warn them of their/'*; . .Sea Dreams 69 

Till -he near'd the/ . . The Captain 36 

warrior father meets the/ ' Lady, let the rolling; 7 

on them brake the sudden/; . The Victim 4 

foeman. 
forth there stept a/tall, . . Oriana . 33 
perish, falling on the/* ground, . Locksley H. 103 
What time the/'* line is broke, . Two Voices 155 
foemen scared, like that false pair Enid . _ 1025 
Hut they heard thc/'s thunder . The Captain 41 
still the/ spoil' d and burn'd, . The Victim 17 

fold 'doubling, etc. ) 

Down-droop'd, in many a floating/ Arabian. Vs. 147 

*"s, upon yielding down, Eleduore . 28 

all the vale in rosy/' j, . Miller's D. 242 

is, that floating as they fell Pal. of Art 35 

up, the/ is on her brow. . Two Voices 192 

detaching, /by/ Krom those stilt Visiouo/Sin 51 

y/Vofour great ensign shake Princess, v. 8 

/ to/ of mountain or of cape; ■■ vi. 366 

thee formless in the/ . /" Mrin. xxii. 15 

/upon/of hueless cloud, . . Maud, I. vi. 3 

Dirk in its funeral/ . . . Ode on Well. 57 

fsummerlaid between the/'*, Enid . 138 

f's innumerable Elaine . 438 

Enwound him/by/ and made liiin Guinevere . 597 

dense as those Which hid Aylmer's F. 772 

fold (enclosure.) 

thick-fleeced shecpfrom wattled/' s, Ode to Mem. 66 

mewhere in the ruin'd/'*, . (ICnone . 217 

re these? a wolf within the/.' Princess, ii. 173 

! from men 1 built a/ . . <i V. 380 

grange, or lonely/ . In Mem. xcix. 5 

tome black wether of St Satan's/ Vivien . 600 

r, of whose/ we be : » . 614 

very whitest lamb in all my/ . Aylmer's P. 361 

/-/-/'verb.) 

/"thy palms across thy breast, . A Dirge . 2 

/•"tlnne anus, turn to thy rest. .11 .3 

the green that/* thy grave . 11 6, et pass. 

faux wings. And cease from . f.otos-E's. . 64 

it of the memory fs . Gardener sD. 73 

rried briony/.' . . . Talking O. . 148 

High up the vapoun/and swim : Two Voices. 262 

iicr waist she felt it/ . . Day-Dm. . 166 

lily all her sweetness up, . Princess, vii. 171 

t, thou 11 . 173 

fold.;!. 

Thought /over thought, smiling . EleHnore . 84 

1. AudleyCt. . 62 

inn, . 11 .64 

Ins breast : . Two I 'nices 247 

v Dm. . 28 

on her palm and / up from wrong, Princess, iv. 269 

1 'ling. / in the mist. . . In Mem. cm. 4 

in these dear arms, . Enid . . 99 

kept them/ reverently " . .117 

being writ And/ . . Elaine 1104 



foliage. poem. line. 

rustlingthro'Thelowand bloomed/ ArabianX's. 13 



blown about the/underneath 
all thy breadth and height Of/ 



Princess, 
/«.!/(•/«. lxxxviii 4 



. Guinevere . 136 
. En. Arden . 475 



folk. 
slay the/ and spoil the land.' 

/that knew not their own minds 

follozu. 

lightningtothcthunderWhich/'iit, The Poet . 51 
because right is right, to/ right . (Enoue . 147 
To/llying steps of Truth 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 75 
good should/this, if this were done? M. d A rthur 92 
dark Earth/'* wheel'd in her ellipse; Golden Year 24 

/knowledge like a sinking star, . Ulysses . 31 
The vine stream'd out to/ . . Amphion . 46 
May my soul/soon I . . . StAgnes' Eve 4 
The rest would/ each in turn ; . Princess, Pro. 197 
'Then/me, the Prince,' I answer'd, 11 . 220 

V. 'entwithit, 'F,f, thou shalt win.' n i. 99 

land Of promise ; fruit would/ . 11 ii. 124 

If more and acted on, what/*? . 11 . 211 

Whence/'* many a vacant pang ; 11 . 381 

flying south but long'd To/; . 11 iii. 195 

Swallow, Swallow, if I could/ 11 iv. 81 
tell her. tell her, that I/thee. . 11 .98 

1 cannot cease to/you, . . 11 . 435 
To/up the worthiest till he die : . 11 . 446 
F us: who knows? we four may build n v. 22t 
on the ' F,f, thou shalt win.' . 11 . 461 

/; let the torrent dance thee down 11 vii. 194 

welcome for the year To/; . . 11 Con. 96 



Nor/ tho' I walk in haste, 



luMem. xxii. 18 



/ 'ivien 
Elaine 



Aylmer's F. 



The Voyage 



376 
165s 
1664 

3»4 
326 
506 
935 

i' 1 j 



Prince, as Enid past him, fain To/ Enid 

when the knight besought him, 'Ame, n 

'Enough, 'hesaid, '1/ and they went m 

Fame that/'* death is nothing 

the scroll ' I/famc.' 

I charge you, /me not.' 

serve you, and to/you thro' the 

fain would/ love, if that could be 

1 needs must/death, . 

Call and 1/ I/.' let me die.' 

might she/me thro' the world, 
/Such dear familiarities 

One who cried ' leave all and /me 

thin weasel there F's the mouse, 

I/till I make thee mine.' 

We/ that which flies before : 

which all our greatest fain Would/ Lucretius 

Not/the great law? ... 11 

A satyr, a satyr, see — /"*; . . » 

/•',/the chase I .... The IVindow it 

/■'them down the slope . . . 11 .16 

/them down to the window-pane . 11 . 17 

followed. 
surer sign had/ . 
Then/ counsel, comfort, 
The happy princess/him. 
Thro' all the world she/him. 
And/ with acclaims, 
And/her all the way. . 
I began, And the rest/; 
We/up the river as we rode, 

/then A classic lecture, 

resoliler'd peace, whereon /-"his tale. 11 v 

but Blanche At distance/; . . " vi, 

/up by a hundred airy docs. . 11 

tears /•'; the king replied not: . " 

silence/ and we wept. . . . ItlMent.XXX 
vassal tides that/thought. . n cxi, 

when they /us from Philip's door, The Brook . 167 
/■'up in valley and glen . . Ode on Well. 114 

/'"by the brave of other lands, . 11 

He/nearer ; ruth began to work Enid . 
He/nearer still ; the pain she had n 
overthrew the next that/him, . i> 
His lusty spcannen/hiin with noise : •• 
Vivien /, but he mark'd her not. . Vivien 
then she/ Merlin all the way . " 

Dear feet, tliat I have/ thro ' the world, 11 



1012 
J 306 
130 
664 
853 
64 
94 
79 
116 
190 



. M. d' Arthur, 76 

1 ,'.-> mid J)nty< 7 

. Day-Dm. . 172 

11 . 196 

. Will Water. 138 

. Lady Clare 64 

, Princess, Pro.Yifr 

n i. 203 

ii. .-51 

v. 46 

ii. 67 

• 71 

292 



10 



•94 

950 

J035 

>3'4 

M4> 

48 

5 a 

76 



ISO 



CONCORDANCE TO 



: ir 111. 


179 


" V. 

In Mem. xxii. 


410 
11 


xl. 


21 


. The Brook . 


166 


. Ode on Well 


211 


. Enid . 


2^7 


ir 


386 


tt 


399 


. Vivien 


1419 
148 


ii 


*75 


. Guinevere . 


290 
485 



POEM. LINE. 

You/me unask'd ; . . Vivien . 147 

stammering cracks and claps That/, tt . . 792 
Then/calms, and then winds variable, En. Arden s\r 
Aylmer. /"Aylmer at the Hall . Aylmer's F. 36 
the fierce old man F, ... ti . 331 

Seconded, for my lady/" suit, . ti . 558 

/"out Tall and erect, tt . 817 

I/: and at top She pointed seaward : Sea Dreams 117 
still we/ where she led, . The Voyage 59, 90 

day that/ the day she was wed, . Tlie Islet . 4 

follower. 

at her head a/ of the camp, . .Princess, v. 57 

my/'.? ring him round : . . Enid . n 85 

With all his rout of random/'.?, . it . 1231 

Went Enid with her sullen/on. . 11 . 1289 

In combat with the/ of Limours, tt . 1350 

tho' thou numberest with the/'s . Aylmer s F. 663 

following. 
/her dark eyes, Felt earth as air, Gardener s D. 206 
/ thro' the porch that sang . . Princess, ii. 8 

in long retinue/ up The river 

ever/ those two crowned twins, 

As we descended/ Hope, 
/with an upward mind . 
/"our own shadows thrice as lon£ 

He, that ever/her commands, 

with fixt eye/the three. 

youth, that/ with a costrel bore 

Let his eye rove in/ 

gentle charger/him unled ) . 

I look'd, and saw you/ still, 

fancy when you saw me/you, 
/you to this wild wood, 
/"these my mightiest knights, 
/up And flying the white breaker, En. Arden . 

'Ah,//' in mimic cadence answer d Golden Year 53 
' Ah,/.' for it lies so far away, . tt .54 

Fill'd I was with/ and spite, . Ed. Gray . 15 

others' follies teach us not, . . Will Water. 173 
brace Of twins may weed her of her/ Princess, v. 454 
Deep/: yet that this could be — . In Mem. xl. 9 
in which all spleenful/was drown'd, Maud, I. iii. 2 
poet is whirl'd into/ and vice. . 11 iv. 39 

perplext her With his worldly talk and/." it xx. 7 

the/ taking wings Slipt o'er . Aylmer's F. 494 

I hate the spites and thefollies. . Spiteful Let. 24 

fond. 
But too/ when have I answer'd Princess, vi. 367 

fonder. 
man of science himself is/of glory, Maud, I. iv. 37 

fondle. 
rabbit/'.? his own harmless face, . Aylmer 'sF. 851 

fondled. 
all this morning when I/you : . Vivien . 135 

Appraisedhis weight and/ fatherlike, E?i. Arden 154 
Too ragged to be/ on her lap, . Aylmer's F. 686 

fondling. 
/all her hand in his . . Enid . . 509 

font. 
One rear'd a/of stone And drew, Princess, Pro. 59 
winks the gold fin in the porphyry/: tt vii.163 
Entwine the cold baptismal/, In Mem. xxix. 10 

food. 
eat wholesome food, And wear 
And wine and food were brought, 

fool Is.) 
an absent/ I cast me down, 
should mimic this raw/ the world 
while we stood like/'.? Embracing Ed. A/orris 
happy season back, — The more/'.? Golden Year 66 
gilds the straiten'd forehead of the/ 7 Locksley H. 62 
F, again the dream, the fancy ! . tt . 173 

Bandied by the hands of/'.?. . VisiouofSiu 106 

Drink we, last, the public/ . tt . 149 

April hopes, the f's of chance ; . 11 . 164 



StS.Stylites 106 
Enid . 1 1 38 

Miller's D. 62 
Walk.totkeM.96 



13 



xiu. 5 
xiv. 38 
xvi. 24 



POEM. LINE. 

(God help herl she was wedded to a/; Princess, iii. 67 
slaves at home and/'.? abroad . 11 iv. 500 

Ah/ and made myself a Queen of farce! n vii. 228 
We are f's and slight ; . . . InMem.Pro. 29 
'Thou shalt not be the/of loss.' . it iv. 16 

to us The/' j of habit, . . tt x. 12 
The/ that wears a crown of thorns: it Ixviii. 12 
They call'd me/ they call'd me child: ti 
and the brazen/Was soften' d, . 11 cix, 
who but a/ would have faith . Maud, I. i. . 26 
Is cap and bells for a/ u vi. 62 
^"that I am to be vext with his pride ! 
thought like a/ of the sleep of death, 
if she be fasten'd to this/lord, 
Struck me before the languid/ . 11 II. 1. 
His party-secret,/, to the press : . it v. 35 
sweet faces make good fellows/'i Enid . 1248 
a wanton/ Or hasty judger. . 11 . 1281 
be he dead, I count you for a/; . tt . 1397 
he not crown'd king, coward and/' Vivien . 638 
shrieking out 'Of!' the harlot leapt 11 . . 821 
and the forest echo'd '/' . . 11 . . 823 
f's With such a vantage-ground . Aylmer's F. 386 
Went further, /.' and trusted him Sea Dreams 76 
bait to trap his dupe and/; . 11 . 187 
Ah, there's no/like the old one — Grandmother 44 
but I beant a/: .... N. Fanner. 3 
ship of f's' he shriek'd in spite (rep.) The Voyage 77 
' F,' he answer'd, 'death is sure . Sailor Boy . 13 
And a/ may say his say ; . . Tlie Ringlet i3 

fool. 
To/ the crowd with glorious lies, . InMem.cxxvii.14 

fool'd. 
Ah ! let me not be/ sweet saints : StS. Stylites 209 
half/ to let you tend our son, . Princess, vi. 257 

fooleries. 
these your pretty tricks and/ . Vivien . 114 

fool-fury. 
The red//of the Seine . . InMem.cxxvi. 7 

foolish. 

help thy/ ones to bear ; . . InMem.Pro. 31 

whether very wise Or very/; . Enid . . 470 

1 seem so/ and so broken down. . En. Arden . 315 

foot. 
O! hither lead thy feet! . .Ode to Mem. 64 
with echoing/rz" he threaded . The Poet . 9 
curl round my silver/^?/ silently, The Mermaid 50 
one black shadow at its feet, Mariana in tlieS. 1 
at thevcfeet the crocus brake . CEnone . 94 

from the violets her light/Shone 11 . 175 

laid him at his mother' sfeet. . The Sisters 35 

With your feet above my head . May Queen, ii. 32 
There's a new/on the floor, D.oftlie O. Year 52 

full of rest from head tofeet : . To J. S. . 75 
breaking at \ierfeet: ' Ofoldsat Freedom.'etc 2 

feet on juts of slippery crag . M. d' Arthur 189 

by gold chains about the feet of God 11 . 255 

So light of/, so light of spirit — . Gardener 'sD. 14 
a/ that might have danced . 11 . 132 

wreath of flowers fell At Dora'sfeet Dora . . 101 
a/ Lessening in perfect cadence, Walk, to the M. 46 
But put y r our best/ forward, . it , 101 

Or when I feel about my feet . Talking O. 147 
And at my feet she lay. . . u . 208 

Balm-dews to bathe thy feet .' . 11 . 268 

choler, and firm upon hisfeet, . Golden Year 6x 
till noon no/should pace the street, Godiva . 39 
Thy feet, millenniums hence, be set Two Voices 89 
Touch'd by hisfeet the daisy slept. n . 276 

Year after year unto herf . . Day-Dm. . 77 

feet that ran, and doors that clapt, 11 . 135 

pluck'd his one/ from the grave, . Atnphion . 43 
With folded/^!', in stoles of white, Sir Galahad 43 
At the/of thy crags, O Sea ! ' Break, break,' etc. 14 
lark drop down at \\\%feet. . . Poet'sSoug . 8 
stared, with his /"on the prey, . 11 .12 

tapt her tiny silken-sandal'd/; . Princess, Pro. 149 



7EX.VYS0.VS WORKS. 



iSi 



rOEM. LIN'E. 

Princess, Pro. 1 8 1 

» •• 59 

II u. 27 

11 . 240 

11 iii. 164 

11 . 340 

11 iv. 12 



our cloisters echo'd frosty feet, 
started on his feet, Tore the king's 
of her long hands, And to her feet 
if I might sit beside yourfeet, 
her/on one Of those tame leopards, 
light/ shone like a jewel set 
But when we planted level/*/, . 

fleet I was of/: .... " .244 

claspt :hefeet of a Mnemosyne, , 11 . 250 

mask vas patent, and my/Was to you : » . 307 

flickers where no/can tread.' . " . 335 

the lost Iamb at her feet n . 372 

dash'd Unopen'd at her/re/ : . " . 450 

lay nv little blossom at my feet, . 11 v. 97 

iron-c-amp'd their womcn's/«/; 11 . 366 

plant a solid/into the Time, . » . 405 

Their/v/ in flowers, her loveliest : 11 vi. 62 

Steps with a tender/ light as on air, 11 . 72 

See, your/ is on our necks, . . 11 . 150 

on ler/she hung A moment, . 11 vii. 64 

at herfeet the volume fell. . . " • 238 
/ Is on the skull which thou hast In Mem. Pro. 7 

Whereon with equA feet we fared ; 11 xxv. 2 

she bathes the Saviour's feet . 11 xxxii. 11 

On thy Parnassus set thy feet, . 11 xxxvii. 6 

nothing walks with aimless/r/ ; . " liii. 5 

feet are guided thro' the land, . 11 lxv. 9 

feet have stray'd in after hours . 11 ci. 14 

feet are set To leave the pleasant 11 . 21 

Htxfeet, my darling, on the dead ; " Con. 50 

feet like sunny gems on an . . Maud, I. v. 14 

before Herfeet on the meadow grass, 11 . 26 

solid ground Not fail beneath my feet 11 xi. 2 

herfeet have touch'd the meadows 11 xii. 23 

delicate Arab arch of herfeet . 11 xyi. 15 

light/ along the garden walk, . 11 xviii. 9 

Sets the jewel-print of yourfeet . 11 xxii. 41 

start and tremble under herfeet, 11 . 73 

A shadow there at my feet, . . 11 II. i. 39 

Lying close to my/ . . . " ii. 3 

A golden/or a fairy horn . . 11 .19 

rivulet at herfeet Ripples on . 11 iv. 41 

end to the stream of passing/??/, 11 v. n 

sketching with her slender pointed/ The Brook . 102 

clog of lead was round my feet, . T/te Letters 5 

feet of those he fought for, . . Ode on Well. 11 
Thro' cypress avenues, at our feet. The Daisy 

break covert at our feet.' . . Enid . 

1 bythe/v/ that now were silent, n 
fell'd him, and set/ upon his breast, 11 
rose Limours and looking at his feet, 11 



lays his /upon it, Gnawing and 

or. his/She set her own and climb'd ; 



48 

183 

321 

574 

"51 

1410 

1607 

1698 

5 

68 

76 



set his/ upon me, and give me life 
At Merlin s/v/the wily Vivien lay. Vivien 
kiss'd his/?e/, As if in deepest reverence, <i 
Dearfeet, that 1 have follow'd . u 
twined her hollow/*/ Together, . 11 

bathed yourfeet before her own ? 11 . 133 

by the noise upstarted at our feet, " . 272 

feet unmortised from their ankle bones 11 . 402 

judge all nature from herfeet of clay, 11 . 684 

path that show'd the rarer/ Elaine . 162 

• I rchead down to/ perfect — 11 . 639 

• to forehead exquisitely turn'd : 11 . 640 

with herfeet unseen Crush'd the wild " . 737 

wellnigh kiss'd hcr/v/ Forloyalawe, 11 1166 

shield of Lancelot at herfeet . n 1331 
ening from herfeet And . Guinevere . 81 

let us in, tho' late, to kiss his feet I 11 . 176 

a wild tea-light about his feet, . 11 . 240 

armed feet Thro 1 the long gallery 11 . 409 

heard his armed feet Pause by her ; 11 . 415 

laid her hands about his/-,-/. u . 524 

pride in happier summers, at my feet. 11 . 532 

while she grovell'd at his feet, n . 575 
Tumbled the tawny rascal at hisfeet, Aylmer's F. 230 

with Hi* light about thy feet, 11 .665 

fell The woman shrieking at nis/fr/, ■■ . 8ti 
her strong/v/ up the steep hill . Sea Dreams 116 

cold my wrinkled/--;/ . . . Tlthonus . 67 



5 
11 . 135 

TIte Window 83 



Princess, iv. 496 
Princess, iv. 267 



POEM. LINE. 

Scatter the blossom under herfeet! W.toAlexan. 9 
kiss'd herfeet a thousand years, . Coquette, ii. 13 
Faith from tracts no feet have trod, On a Mourner 29 
Seas at my feet were flowing, . 1865-1866 . 10 
woman heard his/Return from . Lucretius 
golden/v?/ on those empurpled 
Fine little hands, fine little/-*?/, 

football. 
drunkard's/ laughing-stocks of 

footcloth. 
tumbled on the purple/, 

footfall. 
2.ff ere he saw The wood-nymph, Pat. of Art 110 
palfrey's/ shot Light horrors . Godh'a . 58 
measured/firm and mild, . . Two Voices 413 
ghostly/ echoing on the stair. . Guinevere . 503 

footings. 
Show'd her the fairy /on the grass, Aylmer's F. 90 

foot-gilt. 
lay F-g with all the blossom-dust . Vivien . 131 

footprint. 
only make that/upon sand . 
sandy/ harden into stone.' . 
little/ daily wash'd away. 

footsore. 
as a/ ox in crowded ways 

footstep. 
Old/'* trod the upper floors, 
Like/'j upon wool, 
dully sound Of human/'.? fall. 
f's smite the threshold stairs 

More close and close his fs wind : Day-Dm. . 125 
While he treads with/ firmer, . L. of Burleigh 51 
The/'s of his life in mine ; . InMem.lxxxw. 44 
at his/leaps no more, . . 11 . 112 

let no/beat the floor, ... 11 civ. 17 

guide Her/' s, moving side by side n cxiii. 19 
He seems as one whose/'s halt, . Will . .15 
I prest my f's into his, . 



. Princess, iii. 223 

11 . 254 

. En. Arden . 2a 

. Aylmer's F. 819 

. Mariana . 67 
. OZnone . 246 

. l'al. of Art 276 
. StS. Stylites 18& 



footstool. 
drove The/ from before him, 

forage. 
will fetch you/from all fields, 

forager. 
they found — his f's for charms — . 



Lucretius . xz& 
Aylmer's F. 327 
1476 



Enid 



Vivien 



foray. 
Bound on a/ rolling eyes of prey, Enid 
brought upon their f's out . . 11 



. 4!>9 
1387 



forbad. 
F her first the house of Averill, . 

forbear. 
' F' the Princess cried ; '/', Sir' I ; 
purple scarf, and held, and said ' F ! Enid 
' F: there is a worthier,' 
That I/you thus: cross me no 

forbearance. 
Arguing boundless/: . 

forbid. 
'did I not F you, Dora?" . .Dora . . 90 
Chid her, and/ her to speak . Maud, I. xix. 63 

forbore. 
Bore and/ and did not tire, 
Geraint, from utter courtesy,/ 
the meek maid Sweetly/him ever, 
F his own advantage, (rep.] 



Aylmer's F. 502 

Princess, iv. 144 

• 377 

• 55° 
11 . 1526 

Aylmer's F. 317 



Two Voices 
Enid . 
Elaine 
Guinevere 



awed and promisc-bounden she/ En. Arden 



381 
852 

3*9 
870 

force I 

/to make me rhyme in youth, . Miller's D. »93 
All/ in bonds that might endure, . PaLrfAri 
broke a close with/and arms : . Ed.Morr:s 1 1 
old, but full Of/and cholcr, . Golden Ye,,,- 11 

passion shall have spent its novel/ LocksleyJI. 49 



152 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Titanic/'s taking birth 
freedom,/' and growth Of spirit 
felt the blind wildbeast of/, . 
stood nor spoke, drain'd of her/ 
patient/ to change them when we 
makes by/ his merit known . 
/that would have forged a name. 
I know thee of what/ thou art 
Seraphic intellect and/ 
with/ and skill To strive, 
Should licensed boldness gather/, 
this electric/ that keeps 



POEM. LINE. 

Day-Dm. . 229 
Princess, iv. 123 

ir v. 256 

11 vi. 249 

ti Con. 56 
In Mem. lxiii. q 

ii lxxii. 

11 lxxviii. 

11 cviii. 

11 cxii. 



16 

3 
5 
6 

. ■ J 3 
cxxiv. 15 
in his/to be Nature's crowning race. Maud,I.iv. 33 
of/ to withstand, Year after year, 11 II. ii. 24 

I spoke with heart, and heat and/ The Letters 37 
bereave him Of the/he made hisownOafccw Well.i-]-^ 
saying all your/is gone? . . Enid . . 88 
/Is melted into mere effeminacy ? n . . 106 
were she the prize of bodily/, . 11 . . 541 
strong bodies, flowing, drain'd their/. 11 . . 569 
either's/was match'd till Yniol's cry,n . . 570 
could I someway prove such/in her n . . 805 
elemental secrets, powers And/'i; Vivien . 483 

by/ they dragg'd him to the King. 11 . . 490 
I do not mean the/ alone, . . Elaine . 470 

what/is yours to go, . . ir 1057 

toward the hollow, all her/ Failed her \En. Arden^z 
promised that no/ Persuasion, no, Aylmer's F. 418 

force (verb. ) 
F's on the freer hour. . . . Vision of Sin 130 
this wild king to/her to his wish, Princess, Pro. 37 

forced. 

If a. way Thro' solid opposition . Princess, iii. 109 

/Sweet love on pranks of saucy boyhood : 11 vii. 322 

world howling/ them into bonds, . Vivien . 594 

/my thoughts on that fierce law, . Guinevere . 533 

forcing, 
ffar apart Those blind beginnings Lucretius . 241 

ford. 
By bridge and/ by park and pale, Sir Gala/iad 82 
drown'd in passing thro' the/ . In Mem. vi. 39 
quickly flashing thro' the shallow/ Enid 

forded. 
/Usk, and gain'd the wood ; 

forebode. 
His heart/'s a mystery : 

foreboding. 
f ' what would Enoch say ? ' 

forecast. 
who shall so/ the years 



Enid 



. Two Voices . 



167 



161 



290 



En. Arden . 252 



In Mem. i. . 



forefathers. 
His own/arms and armour hung. Princess, Pro. 24 
great F of the thornless garden, . Maud, I. xviii.27 

forefinger. 
on the stretched/of all Time Sparkle Princess, ii. 356 

forefoot. 
With inward yelp and restless/ 

foregone. 
could I, as in times/ . 

foreground. 
a/black with stones and slags, 

forehead. 
Thy bounteous/ was not fann'd 
about His dusty/drily curl'd, 
with dim fretted/'s all, 
made his/like a rising sun . 
Where shall I hide my/ , 
opposed Free hearts, {reef's — 
On her pallid cheek and/ . 
the straiten'd/of the fool ! . 
/, to herd with narrow/'j, . 
With that she kiss'd His/, . 
o'er her/past A shadow, 



Lucretius 



Talking O. 



Pal. of Art 81 



Elednore . 9 
Miller's D. . 6 
Pal. of Art 242 
M. d' Arthur 2i-j 
11 . 228 

Ulysses . 49 
Lochs ley H. 25 
11 . 62 

„ ." ..■ J 75 

Princess, 11. 291 



POEM. LINE. 

all their f's drawn in Roman scowls, Priucess,vii. 114 
her/ sank upon her hands, . . 11 . 231 

on her/ sits a fire : . . . In Mem. cxiii. 5 

turn'd our f's from the falling sun, The Brook . 165 
bared her/ to the blistering sun, . Enid . 1364 

From/ down to foot perfect — . Elaine . 639 
From foot to/ exquisitely turn'd : 11 . . bto 
Annie from her baby's/clipt . En. Arden . 234 
at last he said Lifting his honest/ ir . 385 

/ eyelids, growing dewy-warm . Tithonus . 53 



foreigner. 
A/ and I your countrywoman, 



Princess, it. 298 



foreland. 
many a fairy/ set With willow- weed The Brook 



forelock. 
Let it be. 



Golden Year 



Ode to Mem. S/ r 
Enid . 1S07 

Aylmer's F. £0 



Two Voices 



r 3i 



Are taken by the/ 

foremost, 
fin thy various gallery Place it, 
being ever/in the chase, 

foreran. 
So much the boy/; 

forerun. 

F thy peers, thy time . 

in the cold wind that/'s the morn Guinevere 

foresaw. 

The flame is quench'd that 1/ . InMem. lxxii. g 
what doubt that he/ This evil work Guinevere . 304. 

foresee. 
Oh, if indeed that eye/ . . InMem.xxvi. 9 
none of them/ Not even thy wise Guinevere . 271 

foreseeing. 
Howbeit ourself,/casualty, . . Princess, iii. 300 

foreshadow. 
Who dares/ for an only son . . Ded. of Idylls 23 

foreshadowing. 
Immersed in rich/'i of the world, Princess, vii. 29 
His heart/all calamity, 



foresight. 
Whose/preaches peace, 
Take wings of/; lighten thro' 

foreshortened. 
lie F in the tract of time ? 

forest. 
so deadly still As that wide/ . _ 
Between dark stems the/glows, . Sir Galahad 



En. A rden . 

Love and Duty 24 
InMem.lxxv. 5 

InMe?n.\xxvi. 4 

D. ofF. Worn. 69 

'27 

in 

5 



Better to clear prime/'s, . . Princess, iii. 
The/crack'd, the waters curl'd, . In Mem. xv, 
the harlot leapt Adown the/ . Vivien 
and the/ echo'd 'fool.' . .11. . 823 

gloomy skirts Of Celidon the// . Elaine \ 292 

The petty marestail/ fairy pines, Aylmer's F. 92 
While I roved about the/ . . Boddicea . 33 

forest-deeps. 
far, \nf-d unseen, . . . SirL. andQ. G. 7 

forester. 
Before him came a/ of Dean, . Enid . . 148 

forethought. 
So dark a/roll'd about his brain, Vivien . 79 

foretold. 

/ Dying, that none of all our blood Princess, i. . 7 

He too/ the perfect rose. . . In Mem. Con. 34 

Has come to pass as/; . . . Maud, II. v. 44 

forfeits. 
game of/done— the girls all kiss'd The Epic . 2 
magic music,/ all the rest. . . Princess,Pro.ig2 

forgave. 
there the Queen/ him easily. . Enid . . 592 
he/ me, and I could not speak. . Guinevere . 607 

„ , . . forge- 
a company/ j the wine. . . Maud, I. i. 



vi. 90 I /a life-long trouble for ourselves, Enid 



36 

852 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



153 



forged. poem. line. 

/a thousand theories of the rocks, Ed. Morris 18 
Who/ that other influence, . . Two Voices 283 
We/ a sevenfold -story. . . Princess, Pro. 198 

/ at last A night-long Present . In Mem. Ixx. 2 
force that would have_/a name. . m Ixxii. 16 
/ But that was later, boyish histories Ay Inter's F. 96 
gifts of grace hey", . . . Sea Dreams 188 

forget. 
fs to close His curtains . . Adeline . 42 
who that knew him could./ . . Miller's D. . 3 
Can he pass, and we/7 1. . 204 

What is love? for we/: . . 11 . 213 

I shall not/ you, mother, . . MayQueen,\\. 31 
God/the stranger !' . . . The Goose . 56 
Authority/'* a dying king, . . M. d' Arthur 121 
men F the dream that happens . Two Voices 353 
I might/my weaker lot ; 11 . 367 

i -ny St something— I/her . Princess, v. 283 
Could we/ the widow'd hour . InMem.xxxix. 1 
But he fs the days before . . ir xliii. 3 
Nor can it suit me to/ ti lxxxiv. 59 

The days she never can/ . . ir xcvi. 14 
should/That I owe this debt . Maud,\.x\x. 89 
all men else their nobler dreams/ Ode on Well. 152 
lience is the courtesy due . Elaine . 713 

Perplexthcr, madcher half/herself, Aylmer's F. 303 
ten years back, or more, if I don't/ Grandmother 75 
earth in earth/ these empty courts, Tithonus . 75 

forgetful. 
Fof Maud and me, . . . Maud,l.xx\. 4 
F of the falcon and the hunt (rep.) Enid . 51,159 
F of their troth and fealty, . . Guinevere . 439 
F how my rich procemion makes . Lucretius . 70 

forgetfulness. 
this/ was hateful to her. . . Enid . . 55 

forget-me-not. 
I found the blue F-m-n. . . Miller's D. . 202 
f inn's That grow for happy lovers. The Brook . 172 

forgetteth. 
The place he knew/him.' . . Two Voices 264 

forgive. 
wayward, but you'll/me now ; (rep. ) May Queen, ii. 33 
May God/me! — I have been to . Dora . . 158 
F me, I waste my heart in signs : Princess, vii. 337 
!i seem'd my sin in me . In Mem. Pro. 33 

F my grief for one removed, ti . 37 

/'these wild and wandering cries, ir . 41 

little hearts that know not how to/: Maud, II. i. 44 
iy '/the wrong,' . . 11 iv. 86 

F me ; mine was jealousy in love.' Elaine 1341 

/thee, as Eternal God F's: . Guinevere . 540 

I's it as his own, . . Aylmer's F. 401 

1 Love, /him :' but he did not . Sea Dreams 45 
' / ■ .' II iw many will say, '/' . ir .60 

neither God nor man can well/ . m . 63 

Drove him, rogue, and proved,/ . 11 . 167 

vVc must f the dead.' ir . 261 

/him, dear, And I shall sleep . 11 . 299 

I do/him!' 'Thanks, my love,' . ir . 303 

forgiven. 
not easily/Arc those, who setting Gardener' 'sD. 242 
one soft word and let me part/' . Princess, vi. 202 
lei her feel herself/ . . . Vivien . 231 

' in/, . . Elaine 1096 

1 I., my Que; n,f.' . , . u . 1343 
King, who hath/ . Guinevere . 627 
' Yea, little maid, for am / not/7' 11 . 657 

forgiveness. 
m no more : /want/ loo: . Princess, vi. 272 
you yet r\ ith all/ . 11 . 277 

forgiving. 
%el my heart on your/ him . 



Sea Dreams 260 
forgot. 
common mouth Gardener's D. 54 
The stecry lo graze ... 11 .84 



POEM. LINE. 

For is not our first year/? . . Two Voices . 368 
F his weakness in thy sight, . In Mem. cix. 4 

May or April, he/, . . . The Brook . 151 
1/ the clouded Forth, . . . The Daisy . 101 
Nor yet/ her practice in her fright, Vivien . 796 

F to drink to Lancelot and the . Elaine . 733 

sick man/her simple blush, . ir . 860 

sitting at her side / Her presence En. Arden . 381 
Sir Aylmer half/his lazy smile . Aylmer's F. 197 

forgotten. 
live/ and love forlorn.' Mariana in theS. \i,etpass. 
not to be/ 1 — not at once — Not all/ LoveandDutjiS 
F, rusting on his iron hills, . . J'rincess, v. 140 
meant': I have/ what I meant : . Lucretius . 122 

fork. 
grasps the triple/'*, ' Of oldsat Freedom' etc. 15 

Ruin'd trunks on wither'd/'*, . Vision of Sin 93 
double hill ran up his furrowy/'* Princess, m. 158 
/'*are fixt into the meadow ground, Enid . . 482 
they fixt the/'* into the ground, " 548 

dazzled by the livid-flickering/ . Vivien . 790 

I never saw so fierce a/— . . Lucretius . 28 

forked. 
things that are/ and horned, and The Mermaid 53 
/Of the near storm, and aiming . Aylmer's F. 726 

forlorn. 
In sleep she seem'd to walk/ . Mariana . 30 
live forgotten, and love/' . Mariana in theS. 12 
CEnone, wandering/Of Paris, . CEuone . 15 
I ceased, and sat as one/. . . Two Voices 400 
Yet we will not die/.' . . . Vision oj Sin 206 
The little village looks/; . . In Mem. lix. 9 
I walk as ere 1 walk'd/ . . 11 l.wii. 5 
Who am no more so all/ . . Maud, l.xviii. 32 
one scarce less/ Dying abroad . 11 xix. 28 

The tiny cell is/ . ... it II. ii. 13 
A tonsured head in middle age/ . The Brook . 200 
' Favour from one so sad and so/ En. Arden . 286 

form (shape, etc.) 
her fairest/'* are types of thee . Isabel . . 39 
airy /'* of flitting change. . . Madeline . 7 
all/* Of ihe many-sided mind . Ode to Mem. 115 
other than his/of creed, . . A Character 29 
riles and/'* beforehis burning eyes The Poet . 39 
Fretteth thine enshrouded/ . A Dirge . 10 

'Is this the/' she made her moan, Mariana in theS.33 
The reflex of a beauteous/ . . Miller's D. . 77 
her rounded/ Between the shadows CEnone . 176 
as God holding no/ of creed, . Pal. of Art 211 
/'* that pass'd at windows . . D.ofF. Worn. 23 
fair/ may stand and shine l OJ 'old 'sat Freedom ,' etc. 21 
Matures the individual/ ' Love thou thy laud,'elc. 40 
Phantoms of other/'* of rule, . 11 -59 

decks were dense with stately/'* M. d' Arthur 196 
play with flying/'* and images, . Gardener'sD. 59 
fair new/'* That float about . Golden Year 15 

Cursed be the sickly/'* . . Locksley H. 61 
loosely settled into/ . . . Day-Dtn. . 12 
cither side her tranced/ . . ir .81 

A perfect/in perfect rest. 11 . 100 

blessed/'* in whistling storms . Sir Galahad 59 
crypt Of darken'd/'* and faces. . Will Hater. 184 
slowly quickening into lower/'* . Vision of Sin 210 
All beauty compass'd in a female/ Princess, ii. 20 
to look on noble/'* Makes noble . m . 72 

Of faded/and haughtiest lineaments, 11 _ . 425 

a loftier/Than female, . . " iv. 196 

I saw the/'*: I knew not where . " vii. 118 

clear away the parasitic/'* . . "' . 253 

A hollow/with empty hands.' . In Mem. iii. 12 
A late-lost/ that sleep reveals, . 11 xiii. a 

knows no more of transient/ . 11 ivi, 7 

Nor cares to fix itself to/ . . " xxxiii. 4 
faith thro'/is pure as thine . . " .9 

Eternal/shall still divide . . o jrjvi 6 
thy first/ was made a man : . « be. 10 

same sweet/'* in either mind. . " Ixxviii. 8 
changes wrought on/and face ; . 11 Ixxxi. a 



154 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

O sacred essence, other./; . InMemAxxxW. 35 

seem to lift the/, and glow . . m lxxxvi. 37 

merge' he said 'in/ and gloss . 11 lxxxviii. 41 

wear the/by which I know . . 11 xc. 5 

beauteous in thine after/ . . it . 15 

matter-moulded/' .r of speech, . n xciv. 46 

who would keep an ancient/ . 11 civ. 19 

ancient/'j of party strife ; . . 11 cv. 14 

want in f's for fashion's sake, . 11 ex. 6 

grew to seeming-random/'i, . ir cxvii. 10 

flow From/ to/ and nothing stands; 11 exxii. 6 

tho' faith and/ Be sunder'd . . " exxvi. 1 

other/'i of life than ours, . . Ode on Well. 264 

Conjectureoftheplumageandthe/; Enid . . 333 

dreamt herself was such a faded/ 11 . . 654 

imperial-moulded/ . . . Guinevere . 544 
The/ the/alone is eloquent ! . Coquette, ii. 1 

form (bench.) 
sat along the f's, like morning doves Princess, ii. 87 

form (verb.) 
rainbow/'s and flies on the land . Sea-Fairies _ 25 
Slowly/'s the firmer mind, . . luMem.xvm. 18 

formal. 

O, I see thee old and/. . . Locksley H. 93 

formed. 
his picture/And grew between Elaine . 986 

forming. 

The lucid outline/ round thee ; . Tithonus . 53 

formless. 
wrapt thee/ in the fold. . . In Mem. xxii. 15 

forsake. 
Ah yet, tho' all the world/ . . Will Water. 49 

fort. 

that new/ to overawe my friends, Enid . . 460 
Welcome her, thunders of/ and . W.toAlexan. 6 

Forth. 
And I forgot the clouded F, . . The Daisy . 101 

fortitude. 
stately flower of female/ . . Isabel. . 11 

fortress. 

The/ and the mountain ridge, . In Mem. Ixx. 14 

The/crashes from on high . . 11 exxvi. 14 
deathful-grinning mouths of the/ vl/Vzz^III.vi. 52 

White from the mason's hand, a/ rose ; Enid . 244 

onward to the/rode the three, . 11 . 251 

into that new/ by your town, . 11 . 407 

fortune. 
rode sublime On F's neck : . . D.ofF. Worn. 142 
Tho'/ clip my wings, . . . Will Water. 50 

1 am but as my f's are : . . Lady Clare 70 
Drink to F, drink to Chance, . Vision of Sin 191 
ally Your/' s, justlier balanced, . Princess, ii. 52 
Becomes on F's crowning slope . In Mem. Ixiii. 14 
affluent F emptied all her horn. . Ode on Well. 197 
loved her in a state Of broken/'.?, Enid . . 13 
was one Of F and her wheel, . 11 . . 346 
Turn, F, turn thy wheel (rep. ) . 11 . . 347 
since our/slipt from sun to shade ir . . 714 
better fits Our mended/'i 11 718 
good/ I will strike him dead, . Elaine 1065 
mark me ! for your/'s are to make. Ayhner's F. 300 
Name, /too : the world should ring ir . 395 
a few, by wit or/led, ... 11 . 438 
besides Their slender household/'s Sea Dreams 9 

forum. 
Titanic shapes, they cramm'd The/ Princess,vu. no 

fonvard-creeping. 
f-c tides Began to foam, . . In Mem. cii. 37 

forward-flowing. 
The f-f tide of time ; . . . Arabian N's. 4 

fossil. 
lark and leveret lay, Like f's of the rock, AudleyCt. 24 



POEM. LINE. 

Guinevere . 586 



foster. 
guard and/her for evermore. 

fostered. 
F the callow eaglet — . . . CEnone . 208 
once she/ up with care ; . . In Mem. viii. 16 
that was Arthur ; and they/ him Guinevere . 293 

fought. 
the Palmyrene That/Aurelian, . Princess, 11. 70 
nursed by those for whom you/ . ir vi. 79 

I and mine have/Your battle : . if . 207 

/his doubts and gather'd strength, In Mem. xcv. 13 
Like Paul with beasts, I/with Death ; 11 cxix. 4 
the feet of those he/ for, . . Ode on Well. 11 
great men who/ and kept it ours. 11 . 158 

Than when he/at Waterloo, . ir . 257 

They that had/ so well . . Lt. Brigade 45 

twice they/ and twice they breathed, Enid . 567 
one a king, had met And/together ; Elaine . 41 
if\ went and if\f t» . 216 

' you have/ O tell us — tr . 283 

half-miracle To those he/ with — ir . 497 

greatest knight ? 1/ for it, . . 11 1404 

Annie/against his will : . . En. Arden . 158 
comrades having/ their last below, Ay Inter's F. 227 
F with what seem'd my own . Sea Dreams 73 

may be met and/ with outright, . Grandmother 31 
the babe had/ for his life. . 11 .64 

foul. 
where you are : you are/ with sin ; Poet's Mind 36 
as false and/As the poach'd filth Vivien . 646 

frequent interchange of/ and fair, En. Arden . 529 

foully. 
phantom husks of something/ done Lucretius . 160 

foulness. 
of the horrid/ that he wrought, . Vivien . 598 
To all the/ that they work. . ir . 634 

found (pret. and part, of find. ) 
Down she came and/a boat . L.ofShalott,iv. 6 
Have I not/a happy earth? . Miller's D. 25 
I/the blue Forget-me-not. 11 . 202 

The comfort, I have/ in thee: . 11 . 234 

' I have/A new land, but I die.' Pal. of Art 283 
The Roman soldier/Me lying dead, D.ofF. Worn. 161 
woke, and/ him settled down . The Epic . 17 
would have spoken, but he/not words, M.d' A rthurij-z 
ere he/ Empire for life? . . Gardener's D. 19 
I/it in a volume, all of songs, . Audley Ct.. 56 
They/you out? James. Not they. WalA.t0theM.g3 
witness, if I could have/a way . StS. Stylites 54 
1/ him garrulously given, . . Talking 0.. 23 

/ and kiss'd the name she/ . 11 . 159 

She had not/ me so remiss ; . u . 193 

love that never/his earthly close, LoveandDuty 1 
Sin itself be/The cloudy porch .11 .8 

/him in Llanberris : 

/him, where he strode About the 
there she/her palfrey trapt 

/him when my years were few ; . 
It may be that no life is/ 

/My spirits in the golden age. 
F a still place, and pluck'd her 
in the imperial palace/ the king. 

/her there At point to move, 
not/among them all One anatomic' 
iron laws, in the end F golden : . 
Nor/ my friends ; but push'd 

/at length The garden portals. 

/that you had gone Ridd'n to the 
in you I/My boyish dream involved 
F the gray kings at parle : . 

/He thrice had sent a herald 
/fair peace once more among the 
she/a small Sweet Idyl, 
Thy creature, whom I/so fair, 
/thee lying in the port ; 
/him all in all the same, 
I/a wood with thorny boughs : 
I/an angel of the night ; 
My Arthur/ your shadows fair, 



Golden Year 
Godiva 



Two Voices 



To E. L. 
Princess, 



5 

16 

Si 

271 

346 

n 

91 
112 
114 



58 
. 178 
. 181 

• 3=3 

• 4 2 9 
no 

. 3* T 
29 

11 . 17s 

In Mem. Pro. 38 
ii xiv. 4 
11 . 19 

11 lxviii. 6 
14 
6 



vn. 



11 lxxxviii. 



TEXiVYSON'S WORKS. 



155 



POEM. LINE. 

JnMem. cxxiii. 5 

Hand, I. i. . 5 

» ii. . 3 

11 iii. . 13 



1/ Him not in world or sun, 

pit long since a body was./, 

as [/when her carriage past, 
/The shining daffodil dead, . 11 iii. 

What, has he/my jewel out? . 11 x. 

life has./" What some have/ so . m xi. 

in this stormy gulf have./ a pearl . 11 xviii. 

This garden-rose that If, . . » xxi. 
/ the bailiff riding by the farm, . The Brook 
/the sun of sweet content Re-risen 



If tho' crush'd to hard and dry, . The Daisy 

/and loved her in a state . . Enid 
being/, Then will I fight him, . >i 
F every' hostel full, ... 11 

/ an ancient dame in dim brocade . n 

/Half disarray*d as to her rest, . " 

1, and ever fail'd to draw . 11 

Prince had/her in herancient home ; 11 

/the sack and plunder of our house 11 

/"And took it, and array 'd herself . 11 

when he/all empty, was amazed ; n 

F Knid with the comer of his eye, 11 

_ arm'd he/the host . . 11 

/his own dear bride propping his 11 

/A damsel drooping in a corner . 11 
rr.y dear lord/ me first, . . 11 

moving out they/ the stately horse, 11 

/, Instead of scornful pity . . 11 
He look'd and/them wanting ; . 11 

/a little boat, and stept into it ; . Vivien 
my Master, have you/your voice? 11 

/a fair young squire who sat alone, if 
being/ take heed of Vivien. . 11 

they/— his foragers for charms— . 11 
011 returning/Not two but three : 11 
He brought, not/it therefore : . 11 

/a door And darkling felt . . 11 
had she/a dagger there . . 11 
Should have/in him a greater heart. " 

n, gray boulder and black . Elaine 
/"the Lord of Astolat . 11 

/it true, and answer'd, ' true, my n 

Until they/the clear-faced King, 11 
till they/The new design . . 11 
Where could be/face daintier? . 11 
1 be/as faithless in the quest . 11 

/no case in turning or in rest : . 11 

/her in among the garden yews . 11 
Until we/ the palace of the king. 11 
Would track her guilt until he/ . Guinevere 

/a naked child upon the sands . 11 

in her anguish/The casement : . 11 

warmth and colour which I/In Lancelot ■■ 
I h'd with his mill, they/; . En. Arden . 364 
The two remaining/ a fallen stem ; 11 . 568 

swoon and tumble and be/ . 11 . 775 

flying with his urns and ornaments Aylmer's F. 4 
Slipt into ashes and was/no more. 11 . 6 

written as she/ Or made occasion, n . 477 

F for himself a bitter treasure-trove ; 11 . 515 

/the girl And flung her down . 11 . 573 

1 i 111 .11, a letter edged with n . 595 

in moving on I/Only the landward Sea Dreams 93 

/a hard friend in his Incise accounts, 11 . 158 

ii wasclose beside) 11 . 276 

' the mother sitting still ; . The Victim 32 

I r master cold ; Lucretius 1 

/a witch Who brew'd the philtre . 11 . 15 

found 'to establish.) 
All wild to/an University . . Princess, i. 149 

foundation. 
for fear This whole/ ruin, . . Princess, ii. 320 

foundation-stone. 

V/hereof the strong/-*'.! were laid . Pal. of Art 235 

founded. 

I/; they must build. . Princess, ii. 119 

good King Arthur/ . . Guinevere . 21 9 

founder, 

statues, kingorsdnt, or/illl ; . Sec. Dreams 217 



23 

3 

4 2 

3 
'53 

168 

97 
. 12 
. 220 

• 255 

• 3 6 3 

• 5'5 
- 53« 

• 644 

• 694 
. 848 

1065 

J130 

1256 

'43* 

14 

1546 

1600 

1706 

1783 

• 47 
. 118 
. 322 

• 379 
. 469 

• 558 

• 569 

• S83 
. 700 
. 722 

• 37 

• '73 

• 369 

• 43' 

• 439 
. 638 
■ 757 

• 897 

• 9'9 
1038 

. 60 

. 291 

. 580 

640 



founding. poem. line. 

About the/of a Table Round, . Vivien . 261 

the great Table — at the/ of it; . Guinevere . 233 

foundress. 
The/of the Babylonian wall, . Princess, ii. C6 
the third — the authentic/ you. . 11 iii. 142 

fount. 
Ancient/'* of inspiration well . Locksley H. 188 
There while we stoud beside the/ Princess, iii. 7 
The very source and/of Day . /// Mem. xxiv. 3 
dabbling in the/of fictive tears, . The Brook . 93 
burst away In search of stream or/ Kit. Arden 636 
the living/of pity in Heaven, . Aylmer's F, 75 j 

fountain. 
Down from the central/* flow . Arabian .V*. 50 
fire, From the/'* of the past, . Ode to Mem. 2 
In the middle leaps a/ . . Poet's Mind 24 

to the billow the/calls : . . Sea-Fairies. 9 
I should look like a/of gold . 'J 'he Mermaid 18 

Rise like a/ for me night and day M. d' Arthur 249 
The/ to his place returns . . Day-Dm. . 31 
sixty feet the/leapt. ..." . 140 

Beside its native/. . . . Amphion . 96 

Against its/upward runs . . Will Water. 35 
Expecting when a/ should arise : . Vision of Sin 8 
the/ spouted, showering wide . n .21 

The/of the moment, playing now Princess, Pro. 61 
splash and stir Of/'* spouted up . 11 i. 215 

Enring'd a billowing/in the midst : 11 ii. 14 

Knowledge is now no more a/ seal'd : 11 . 75 

and race By all the/'* / n iv. z; t / f 

tears that at their/ freeze : . . In M em. XX. 12 
show'd him in the/ fresh . . » Ixxxiv. c5 

household/* never dry ; 11 cviii. 2 

/* of sweet water in the sea, . En. Arden . Cc; 
Spout from the maiden/in her heart. Lucretius . 537 

fountain-flood. 
sonorous flow Of spouted//'*. . Pal. of Art c3 

fountain-foam. 
dragons spouted forth A flood of// Pat. of Art 24 

fottn ta in -head. 
Full-welling//;'* of change, . Pal. of Art i"> 

The murmur of the//; — . . Tivo Voices . z : j 

fountain-jets. 
others tost a ball Above the//', . Princess, ii. 43) 

fountain-urns. 
Gods at random thrown By/-«; . To E. L. . 16 

fourfield. 
The/system, and the price of grain ; AudleyCt. 33 

four-in-hand. 
as quaint af-i-h As you shall see — Walk. tothe.M. 103 

foursquare. 
build some plan F to opposition.' . Princess, v. 222 
/to all the winds that blew I . Ode on Well. 39 

four-yea r-old. 
' That was the f-y-o I sold the Squire.' The Brook 1 37 

fowl. 
To scare the/ from fruit : . . Princess, ii. 210 

/«•*• 

whole hill-side was redder than a/ II atk. to the M. 3 

Ami lighter-footed than the/ . Day-Dm. . 108 
Then of the latest/— where started — Aylmer'sF. 253 

foxglove . 

The/cluster dappled bells." . . Two Voices 7a 

Bring orchis, bring the/spire, . In Mem. lxxxu.g 

foxlike. 

Or/in the vine, .... Princess, \\\. 188 



fraction. 
Some niggard/of an hour, . 



Aylmer's F. 450 



fragment. 
leaning on a/twined with vine, . (F.ttoue . 10 

the/'* tumbled from the glens, . \> . :ij 

/* of her mighty voice 'OfoldsatFrcct.'o:n,'elc. 7 



i 5 6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

silvery '.r of a broken voice, . . Gardener sD.22g 
cram him with they's of the grave, Princess, iii. 294 
Among t\\ef's of the golden day. Yl/rt7<^,I.xviii. 70 
heard butyV of her later words, . Enid . . 113 
Among the tumbled./'.? of the hills.' Elaine 1417 

fragra?ice. 
With song and flame andy . . Lucretius . 134 

fragrant. 
gardens of that rival rose Yety . Aylmers F. 456 

frail. 
mortal eyes arey to judge of fair . CEnone . 155 
y at first And feeble, all unconscious Princess, vii. 101 
Rapt from the fickle and they . In Mem. xxx. 25 

life a futile, then, zsf! . . ir lv. 25 
P, but a work divine, . . . Maud t II. ii. 4 
F, but of force to withstand, n .24 

frailty. 
Nor human/do me wrong. . . /;/ Mem, li. 8 
the crimes a.ndf?-ailties of the court, Guinevere 135 

frame (s. ) 
Thro' all my veins to all myy . Eleanore . 131 
Shiver'd in my narrowy . . Fatiina . 18 
into my empty soul andy . . D.ofF. Worn. 78 
A healthyy a quiet mind.' . . Two Voices 99 
Consolidate in mind andy- . m . 366 

The morals, something of they . Princess, ii. 360 
not as we, But suffers change ofy 11 v. 453 

No hint of death in all hisy . InMem.xiv. 18 

Deep-seated in our mysticy . tr xxxvi. 2 

thro' they that binds him in . . 11 xliv. 11 
near me when the sensuousy . m xlix. 5 
mixt with all this mysticy . . n lxxvii. 18 

feeds thy breath Throughout myy 11 lxxxv. 11 
in this blindness of they . . 11 xcn. 15 
Remade the bloodand changed they if Con. 11 

1 steal, a wastedy . . . Maud, II. iv. 69 
A man of well-attemper'dy . Ode on Well. 74 
Dust are oury's ; and, gilded dust, Aylmers F. 1 
Another and anothery of things . Lucretius . 42 

frame (verb. ) 
Vague words! but ah, how hard toffuMem.xciv.45 

framed. 
Neither modell'd, glazed, ory.* . Vision of Sin 188 

frame-work. 
With royaiy-za of wrought gold ; . Ode to Mem. 82 
with such ay scarce could be. . Princes, Gou. 22 
all they of the land ; . . I?iMem. lxxxvi. 24 

France. 
A light of ancient F: . . . D.ofF. Wom.268 
more than seen, the skirts of F. . Princess, Con. 48 
In which we went thro' summer F. InMem. lxx. 4 
foaming grape of eastern F. . 11 Con. 80 

Back to i^her banded swarms, . Ode on Well, no 
Back to F with countless blows, . it .111 

That cursed F with her egalities ! Aylmer's F. 265 
golden hopes for F and all mankind, " . 464 

ever-murder'd F, By shores that darken 11 766 

Rose a ship of F. . . . . The Captain 28 

Francis (see Allen, Hale.) 
F, laughing, clapt his hand . . The Epic . 21 
F, muttering like a man ill-used, M.d' A rt/i?tr,Ep, 12 
F, with a basket on his arm, . Audley Ct. . 5 

F, just alighted from the boat, .11 .6 

Fluid A damask napkin . 11 . 19 

frankincense. 

sweet I spikenard, and balm, andy StS. StyliteszoS 

frankly. 
asy theirs As dues of Nature. . Princess, v. 195 

fraught. 
wheny With a passion so intense . Maud, II. ii. 58 

free. 
to have been Joyful andyfrom blame. D.ofF. Wom.So 
change which comes bey 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 45 



POEM. LINE. 

* King, you arey/ Wedidbutkeep Princess, v. 23 
Knowledge in our own land make hery t» . 409 

dwarf d or godlike, bond ory.* . ir vii. 244 

jest among his friends isy . . InMemAxv. 10 
The starry clearness of they? . ir lxxxiv. 86 
I feel soy and so clear . . . Maud,\. xix. 98 
His foes were thine ; he kept usy Ode on Well. 91 
all tooy For such a wise humility 11 . 248 

yto stretch his limbs in lawful fight, Enid . 1602 

'Let love bey;yiove is for the best: Elaine 1372 

always bound to you, but you arey En. Arden . 447 
— y of alms her hand — . . . Aylmers F. 6gy 
peace, so it bey from pain, . . Grandmother 07 

freedom. 
make The bounds of/" wider yet . To the Queen 32 
F rear'd in that august sunrise . TJie Poet . 37 
pure law, Commeasure perfecty CEnone . 164 
sober-suited F chose, . 'You ask me why,' etc. 6 
^broadens slowly down 11 .11 

individuaiymute ; _ . . .11 .20 

Of old sat j^on the heights, 'OJ 'old 'sat Freedom ,' 'etc. 1 
shout For some blind glimpse ofy Lovea7idDuty 6 
F, gaily doth she tread ; . . Vision of Sin 136 
Embrace our aims: work out youry Princess, ii. 75 
song Is duer untoy ... it iv. 123 

shower the fiery grain Ofybroadcast ir v. 412 

the yoke, I wish it Gentle asy* — m vi. 188 

A love ofy rarely felt, . . . I?iMem,w\\\. 13 
save the one true seed ofy sown . Ode on Well. 162 
sobery out of which there springs 11 . 164 

freemen. 
It is the land thaty till, i Yo7taskmewhy,' etc. 5 

English natures, y friends, 'Love thou thy land,' etc.? 
Gallant sons of Englishy . . The Captain 7 

freer. 
leave theey till thou wake . . Love and Duty '94 
noble thought bey under the sun, Maud,lll.vi. 48 

freest. 
1 Free love, so bound, werey . Elaine 1371 

freeze, 
tears that at their fountainy,- . In Mem. xx. in 
eighty wintersy with one rebuke . Ode on Well. i£5 

freight. 
lovelyyOf overflowing blooms, . Ode to Mem. 16 
thy darky a vanish'd life. . . In RIem. x. . G 

frequeJice. 
Notinthisycan I lend full tongue, Princess, iv. 422 

freqtient. 
Soy on its hinge before. . . Deserted II. 8 

fresh. 
Aphrodite beautiful/^ as the foam, CEnone . 171 

All the valley, mother, 'ill bey . May Queen,!. 37 
Howy the meadows look . . Walk, to the M. 1 
flit To make the greenswardy . Talking 0. . 90 
Oh, nature first wasy to men, . Amphion . 57 
F as the first beam glittering . Princess, iv. 26 
soy the days that are no more. . 11 -3° 

all our path wasy with dew, . . InMem.\xv'ii. 6 
If not soy with love as true, . 11 lxxxiv. 101 

pleased him, f from brawling courts 11 lxxxviii. n 
'Too happy, y and fair, Tooy . The Brook . 217 
Soy they rose in shadow'd swells ; The Letters 46 
howy the colours look, . . . Enid . . 680 
this cut isy; That ten years back : Elaine . 21 
F from the burial of her little one, En. Arden. 280 
Howy was every sight and sound . TJie Voyage 5 

freshen. 
Theyy the silvery-crimson shells, . Sea-Fairies 13 

fresher. 
Bright Phosphor,y for the night, . In Mem. cxx. 9 

fresltest. 
Looksyin the fashion of the day : The Epic . 32 

fresh ly-flowered. 
lay Upon they/ slope. . . Miller's D. . 112 



T£XXVSOX'S WORK'S. 



157 



Freshmen. poem. line. 
Ererard's college fame When we were F : The Epic 47 

freshness. 
Delighted with they and the sound. Ed. Morris 99 
increased Withyin the dawning east. Two Voices 405 
so did I let my/die. . . . Maud, I. xix. it 

fresh-washed, 
f-u/ in coolest dew, . . . D. ofF. Worn. 54 

fret (a.) 
Love is hurt with jar and./ . . Miller's D. 209 
(ally* Hut dialing me on fire . Princess, i. 163 

fret verb.) 
should not/for me, mother, . MayQueen, ii. 36 

kind word, and tell him not toy,* . it iii. 45 

Toy the summer jenneting. . . The Blackbirds 
Wef iwfume, wouldshift our skins, Will lVater.225 
not, like an idle girl, . . In Mem. Ii. 13 
that a matter to make mef? . Maud, I. xiii. 2 

With many a curve my banks If. The Brook . 43 
'/'not yourself, dear brother, . Elaine. 1068 

fretful. 
yas the wind Pent in a crevice : . Princess, iii. 64 

fretted. 
y all to dust and bitterness.' . Princess, vi. 247 

fretteth. 
p thine enshrouded form. . . A Dirge . jo 

fretwork. 
holds a statelyytothe Sun, . . Princess, v;. 70 

Friday. 
Whose /'fare was Enoch's ministering. En.Ardcn 100 

friend. 
Clear-headcdy whose ' Clear-headed friend,' etc. 1 
My./', with you to live alone, . Ode to Mem. 119 

/** to man, Living . To .WithPal.ofArtw 

<■-,/, Where is Mark Antony 1 D.ofF. Worn. 139 

favc me ay, and a true true-love, D.oftheO. Year it, 
[e was ay to me. ... 11 .23 

Alack, ouryis gone. ... 11 -47 

he too was ay to me: Both are my fs, To f. S. 61 
vhcrc girt with/'* or foes 'You ask me why,' 7 
natures, freemen, fs, ' Love thou thy land' etc. 7 
and those who call themy? . M.if Arthur 253 

who lived across the bay, My/; . Audley Ct. . 75 
tit, and meets a/who hails Walk, to the M. 34 
ah I my y, the days were brief . Talking 0. . 185 
Come, mvy*. "I'is not too late . Ulysses . 56 
teems to near a Heavenly F, . Two Voices 295 
. (lcarcsty,* . Day-Dm. . 210 
r-lcep with all one's Fs ; . 11 . 216 

f nnrccordingy'x, ' You might Juivc won'etc] 
lady,/** From neighbour scats : . Princess, Pro. 97 
they betted ; made a hundredy*, 11 . 162 

md with Florian, my twofs: m i. 51 

■ forth again with both my fs. 11 . 165 

■ fs, none closer, elm and vine : if ii. 316 

bruits out f's up from the underworld, it iv. 27 
1 Hind my f's; but push'd alone 11 . 178 

Then came your new/; 11 . 279 

I yourol l/and tried, she new in all? n . 299 

'myf— Parted from her — . . n v. 72 

— and ours shall sec us/'j. 11 . 219 

Truestyand noblest foe ; . . tt . 538 

a world Of traitorousyand broken 11 vi. 178 

1 were f's : I go to mine own 11 . 199 

'of your own age, . it . 234 

ins drops on her sad/ - . . 11 . 266 

.. like children, being chid ! . 11 . 271 

'••ver man lies wounded, yor foe, tt . 316 

< > my / I will not have thee die ! 11 . 371 

ru» burial talk'd of by hUy 1 /, 11 vii. 137 
.■■11!' said iny collcgey . 11 Con. 49 

■ hat ' < Ithcry'i remain, In Mem. vi. 1 
unto me no second/ . . 11 44 

Myy, the brother of my love ; . ■■ ix. 16 

ines he tints, myf? . 11 xii. 13 

it once, myy. to thee : . . 11 xl. 12 

Metlunks m>y is richly shrined ; . 11 hi. 7 



rOEM. LINT. 

'Does my oldy remember me?' In Mem. Ixiii. 28 
Since we deserved the name oCfs, n lxiv. 9 
Whose jest among his/'.? is free, 11 l.\v. 10 

Thy blood, myy and partly mine ; 11 Ixxxiii, 9 
othery'i that once 1 met ; . . 11 lxxxiv. 5S 
I crave your pardon, O myy,' . it . 100 

held debate, a band Of youthfuiy'f, 11 Ixxxvi. 22 
yfromy Is oftener parted, . 11 xcvii. 14 

Some gracious memory of myf; . 11 xcix. 4 
thy lost/among the bowers, . 11 ci. 15 

O.y who earnest to thy goal . n cxiii. 23 
To hear the tidings of myy . it exxv. 3 

Deary, far off, my lost desire, . 11 exxviii. 1 
Dear heavenly f that canst not die, tt . 7 

Strange y, past, present, and to be ; n 9 

Thatyof mine who lives in God, . it Con. 140 
led her home, my love, my onlyy Maud, 1. xviii. 1 
To bey$ for her sake, to be . . tt xix. 50-6 
To me. hery of the years before ; 11 . 64 

Should I fear to greet myy . 11 II. iv. 85 

To catch a/of mine one stormy day; 11 v. 85 

F, to be struck by the public foe, 11 . 89 

those, hisy's, for whom they were : The Brook 131 
She told me all hery'j had said ; The Letters 25 
Of's, our chief state-oracle is mute : Ode on U 'ell. 23 
Thunder ' Anathema, ' f, at you ; To F. D.MauriceS 
'Of, I seek a harbourage for the Enid . . 299 
' Thanks, venerabley,' replied . 11 303 

suspends his converse with ay it . 340 

that new fort to overawe my f's, tt 460 

how should Enid find A no\Acrf? it . . 793 
Embraced her with all welcome as a/5 11 . . 834 
Call in what men soever were hisf's, 11 . 1135 

of one mind and all right-honest f'sl tt . *333 

what they long for, good inyor foe, n . 1724 

great O uecnon cc more embraced hery tt . 179S 

the Table Round, my f's of old ; Vivien . 665 

were I glad of you as guide andy," Elaine . 226 
his king and most famiiiary . . 11 . 590 

Marr'd heryV point with pale . 11 . 729 

call hery and sister, sweet Elaine, 11 . £6x 

like a f's voice from a distant field 11 . 993 

makes no/ who never made a foe. it 1083 

To this I call my f's in testimony, 11 1291 

Nay.y for we have taken our . Guinevere . 116 
most disloyaiy in all the world.' . n . 338 

saps The fealty of ouryV, . 11 . 517 

warhorse neigh'd As at ay** voice, 11 . 527 

his, had been his father's, f: . Aylmer'sF. 344 

his nearery would say ' Screw not 11 . 468 

F's, I was bid to speak of such a one n . 677 

their guest, their host, their ancienty tt . 790 

'My dearest y Have faith, have . Sea Dreams 152 
a hardyin his loose accounts, . 11 . 158 

he that wrongs hisy Wrongs himself tt .. 168 

painting some deadyfrom memory.' Coquette, iii. 4 
by those who mourn ayin vain, . Lucretius . 142 

friendly-warm. 
Only such cups as left usf-w, . Lucretius . 212 

friendship. 
ay so complete Portion'd in halves Gardener's D. 4 
Sly collcgey'i glimmer. . . Will Water. 40 
F!—io be two in one — . . Visionof 'Sin 107 

Oy equal-poised control, . /« Mem. lxxxiv. 33 
such Ay as had master'd Time ; . 11 .64 

Ay for the years to come. . it .80 

First love, firsty equal powers, . it . 107 

Less yearning for they fled, . » cxv. 15 

bright they of thine eye ; . . " cxviii. 10 

So vanish/V only made in wine. Enid ' 1328 

frieze. 
boss'd with lengths Of classicy . Princess, ii. 11 

fright (s.) 
died Ofyin far apartments. . Princess, vi. 351 

dead weight trail d, by a whispcr"dy Maud, I. i. 14 
call'd him dear protector in hery . Vivien . 795 

Nor yet forgot her practice in hery 11 . 796 

fright 1 verb.) 
breed with him, cany my faith. . InMemAxxxi. 4 



158 



CONCORDANCE TO 



frighted. poem. line. 

had added ' get thee hence' Fled./! Guinevere . 365 
half amazed half/all his flock; . Ay Inters F. 631 

frill. 
door Of his house in a rainbow./? Maud, II. ii. 17 

fringe. 
Burnt like a/ of fire. . . . Pal. of Art 48 
Torn from they of spray. . . D. ofF. Worn. 40 
tagg'd with \cyfs in the moon, . St S. Stylites 31 
Fromy\y of the faded eve, * Move eastward,' etc. 3 
the skirt and/" of our fair land, . Princess, v. 210 
close Her crimson_/\y to the shower ; InMem.hati. 12 

fringed. 
knightly growth thatyhis lips. . M.d' Arthur 220 
A looming bastion./ with fire. . hi Mem. xv. 20 

frith. 
o'er the f's that branch and spread In Mem. Con. 115 

frock. 
Or they and gipsy bonnet . . Maud, I. xx. 19 

frolic (s.) 
Cyril, howe'er He deal in_/", . . Princess, iv. 231 

frolic (verb.) 
come hither andy and play ; . Sea-Fairies 18 

front. 
ashbuds in they of March.' . . Gardener's D. 28 
discern They of Sumner-place. . Talking O. 248 
some inscription ran along they . Princess, i. 209 
terrace ranged along the Northern f, n iii. 102 
And ridersytoy until they closed n v. 479 

Betwixt the blacky^ long-withdrawn InMem. cxviii. 6 
ftof'm an hour we stood, . . Maud, II. i. 23 
thicker down they With jewels . Enid . 1537 

white star upon his noble f, ir 1605 

Ayof timber-crost antiquity, . En. Arden . 693 

huge cathedraiy's of every age . Sea Dreams 211 

front (verb.) 
the crag thaty's the Even, . . Eleanore . 40 
rarely could sheyin Hall, . . Guinevere . 62 

fronted. 
daily/him In some fresh splendour ; Enid . . 13 
Philip's dwellingy on the street, . En. Arden . 732 
when first iyhim, Said ' trust him not ;' Sea Dreamsjo 

frontier. 
flying reach'd they.* . . . Princess, i. 108 
Hard by your father'sy.* tr . 147 

fronting. 
F the dawn he moved ; . . CEnone . 57 

frost. 
There isyin your breath . . Poet's Mind 17 
they is on the pane : . . . May Queen, ii. 13 
sparkled keen withy against the hilt : M.d' Arthur 55 
Rain, wind f heat, hail, . . St S. Stylites 16 
stiff with crackling/! ... ti 113 

one wide chasm of time andy . Princess, Pro. 93 
grief hath shaken intoy/ . . In Mem. iv. 12 
streets were black with smoke andy if Ixvin. 3 
yule-log sparkled keen withy . if lxxvii. 5 

'My suddeny was sudden gain, . ir lxxx. 10 
toward the longyand longest night, A Dedication 11 
yis here, And fuel is dear, (rep.) . The Window 43 

Bite,y bite! 11 49, 55 

frost-like. 
tipt withy/ spires. . . . Pal. of Art 52 

froth. 
Upon the topmostyof thought. . In Mem. Ii. 4 

frothed. 
Hey his bumpers to the brim; D.oftheO. Year 19 
is your spleeny out, or have ye more? Vivien . 617 

' frothfly. 
Sweeping they from the fescue . Ay liner's F. 530 

frown (s. ) 
Whether smile orybe fleeter? frep.) Madeline . 12 
F's perfect-sweet along the brow . 11 . 15 

smile andyare not aloof . u . 19 

drops down A sudden-curved/(rep.) 11 . 35 



POEM. LINE. 

He had darken'd into a./ . . Maud, I. xix. 62 
turn thy wheel with smile ory,' . Enid . . 350 
Met his fully timidly firm, ir 920 

othery's than those That knit . Ay Inter's F. 723 

frown (verb.) 
F and we smile, the lords of our . Enid . . 354 

frowned. 
The seldom-frowning King y . Elaine . 711 

frowning. 
Smiling,y evermore, (rep.) . . Madeline . 8 
Florian nodded at him, If; . Princess, iv. 142 

Vivien, yin true anger, said : . Vivien . 541 

Vivien answer' dy wrathfully. . tr 554, 618 

froze. 
with surprise F my swift speech : . D. ofF. Worn. 90 
To me youy.' this was my meed . Princess, iv. 2C3 

frozen. 
Till her blood wasy slowly, L. o/Shalolt,iv. to 

Be fix'd andy to permanence: . Two Voices 237 
stood Stiff as a vipei-y; . . Vivien . 694 

fruit. 
giving safe pledge ofy s, . . Ode to Mem. i3 
ayof pure Hesperian gold, . . CE?to?ie . 65 
Behold thisy whose gleaming rind. ir . 70 

Paris held the costly,/ Out at . ir . 133 

cast the goldenyupon the board . " . 222 

stem, Laden with flowerandy . Lotos-E's. . 29 
ere my flower toy Changed, . D. 0fF.JV0m.20y 

f's and cream Served in the . Gardener sD. 190 

we stole hisy His hens, his eggs; Walk, to the M '.76 
bring me offerings ofy and flowers : St S. Stylites 126 
Thisy of thine by Love is blest, . Talking O. 249 
fairery of Love may rest n . 251 

flower of knowledge changed toy Love and Duty 24 
andy j, and spices, clear of toll, . Golden Year 45 
that which bears but bittery? . Locksley H. 65 
babies roll'd about Like tumbled f Princess, Pro. 83 
land Of promise ;f would follow. if ii. 124 

To scare the fowl fromy." if . 210 

F, blossom, viand, amber wine, . ir iv. 17 

breadth Of Autumn, droppingy^ if vi. 39 

A life that bears immortaiy . In Mem.xxxix.xS 

I'll rather take whaty may be . n evil. 13 

Of what in them is flower andy,' . 11 Con. 136 
It is only flowers, they had no f's, Maud, II. v. 77 
threefold to show they within. . The Brook 73,208 
little pitted speck in garner'dy . Vivien . 244 
sure I think thisy is hung too high Elaine . 770 
not idle, but they Of loyal nature, Guinevere . 333 
be manners such fairy?. . . u . 335 

by the children, garden-herbs andy En. Arden . 335 
The redy of an old idolatry — . Aylmer'sF. 762 
With naked limbsandflowersandy, The Voyage 55 
we nor paused fory nor flowers. . 11 '5°" 

his wisdom lightly, like they . A Dedicatiott 12 

fruitage. 
ygolden-rinded On golden salvers, Eleanore . 33 
Softy mighty nuts, and nourishing En. Arden . 556 

fru it-hunches. 
richy^ leaning on each other — . Isabel . . 37 

fruitful. 
F of further thought and deed, . Two Voices 144 

fruitless. 
Which else werey of their due, . In Mem. xliv. 14 

frustration. 
out of longyof her care, . . Princess, vii. 86 

fuel. 
Secret wrath like smother' dyBurnt The Captain 15 
frost is here, Andy is dear, . . The Window 44 
Theyis all the dearer, ... n -57 

fulfil. 
Gody\? himself in many ways, . M.d' 'Arthur 241 
discerning toyThis labour, . . Ulysses . 35 
would but ask you toy yourself: . Princess, vii. 131 
eachy'j Defect in each, 11 . 285 

To strive, to fashion, toy— . . In Mem. cxii. 7 



TE.Y.vysavs works. 



159 



fulfilled. POEM. LINE. 

By its own energy./ itself, . . Gardener 's D '.233 

ally hope/ to rise again . Ed. Morris . 38 

My father ' that our compact bey. - Princess, v. m 

fulfilment. 
to rise again Revolving toward / Ed. Morris . 39 

full-accomplislied. 
hers by right of/-« i'ate ; . . Pal. 0/ Art 207 

full-blown. 
sail'd, F-b, before us into rooms . Princess, i. . 226 

full-breasted, 
f-b swan That, fluting a wild carol M. d' Arthur 266 

full-busted. 
f-b figure-head Stared o'er the ripple En. Arden. 539 

full-celled. 
Afc honeycomb of eloquence . Ed. Morris 26 

fullest. 

his children, ever at its best Andf; Elaine . 336 

full-faced. 

all the// presence of the Gods . CEnone . 78 

\c the valley stood themoon; Lotos-E' s. . 7 

glowing/;/ "welcome, she Uegan . Princess, ii. 166 

full-fed. 
iff river winding slow . . Pal. of Art 73 

one warm gust, //with perfume, . Gardener" sD .wz 
What dare the//liars say of me? Vivien . 542 

full-flowing. 
//harmony Of thy swan-like . Eleiinore . 46 
the// river of speech Came down CEnone . 67 

full-foliaged. 
Rock'd the//elms, and swung . ftiMem.xciv. 58 

full-gro7vn. 
ill, Circled thro' allexperienccs, CEnone . 162 
I '=/-£ energies of heaven. . I nMem.yaoax.20 
full-Juiced. 
The// apple, waxing over-mellow, Lotos-E 1 s. . 78 

full-limbed. 
those whom God has made/-/ and tall, Guinevere 43 

fullness. 

rees to/ wrought, 'You ash me why' etc. 14 

. ' 1 The/of her face — 'OfoldsatFreedom'etc.m 

Nes with the/ of the Spring. Locksley H. 36 

T the pensive mind ; . . Day-Dm. . 260 

I the /of my life I leave . Will Water. 163 

weep the/ from the mind : . .InMem.xx. 6 

i lad reach'd a thunderous/; . Sea Dreams 207 

full-sailed. 

mnyf-s verse express, . . Eleiinore . 44 

full-summed. 
«ide by side,/* in all their powers, Princess, vii. 272 

full-summer. 
thro' the field, that shone /'-j, .Elaine 1135 

full-tided. 
at Caerleonthe/-/L',k, .Enid. .965 

full-toned. 
over the/-/ sea : . . Sea-Fairies 15 

full-tuned. 
ill syllable*, to keep My own//— Love and Duty 40 

full-welling. 
^■-w fountain-heads of change, . Pal. of Art 166 

fulminated. 
/Against the scarlet woman . . Sea Dreams 22 

////; 

her (corn of laws Snlique . Princess, ii. 117 

/v 

1'iulJ have clung tu /'/waist, D.ofF. If'oui.tso 

ftlltir 

ry U the/of little hearts. . Guincere . 626 



fume (verb.) poem. line. 
We fret, ««•/ would shift our skins, Will Water. 225 



/w« found.) 
/un theer a-laaid on 'is faiice 



-V. Farmer 33 



function. 
plies His/of the woodland :. .Lucretius . 4,6 



. L.ofShalott,\\.ii 
. En. Arden . 91O 



funeral. 
Af, with plumes and lights, . 
Had seldom seen a costlier/ 

fur. 
My fathersentambassadorswith/\r Princess, i. iji 

Ay liner's F. 3/0 



77« /Vxr/ 



Princess, iv. 2:S 



furiously. 
/Down thro' the bright lawns 

/«r/. 
come hither and/ your sails, . Sea-Fairiesi6,zi 

furled. 
battle-flags were/in the Parliament Locksley H. 127 
And never sail of ours was/. . The Voyage Cx 

furlough. 
To yield us farther/: ' . . . Princess, iii. 53 

furnace. 
all the/ of the light Struck up Mariana in the S. 55 

furnished. 
bravely/ all abroad to fling . 

furred. 

Tho' smock'd, or/ and purpled, 

furrow. 
smite The sounding/'j; . . Ulysses . 59 
in the/broke the ploughman's head, Princess, v. 212 
reddening in the/'i of his chin, . 11 vi. 21 1 

meteor on, and leaves A shining/^ •' vii. 170 

Or in the/ musing stands : . . InMem.\xm. 27 
down in a/ scathed with flame : . The Victim 22 

fit rrow-cloven. 
huddling slant wf-c falls . . Princess, vii. 192 

furrenving. 

/into light the mounded rack, LoveandDuty 97 

/all the orient into gold. . . Princess, iii. 2 

struck, F a giant oak, . . . Vivien . 785 

fury. 
such warbling/thro' the words . Princess, iv. 563 
'How then? who then?' a/ seized, Elaine . 475 

Fury 'a deity.) 
Like to Furies, like to Graces, . Vision of Sin 41 
And Life, a /•' slinging flame. . InMem. xlix. 8 
household F sprinkled with blood Maud.l.x'ix. 32 
numbs the F's ringlet-snake, . Lucretius . 258 

furze. 
on these dews that drench the/ . InMem. xi. 6 

fuse. 
Whose fancy/'* old and new, 



fused. 
manhood/with female grace 

fusing. 
/all The skirts of self again, 
futile. 
O life as/, then, as frail I 



. In Mem. xvi. 18 

. /w.l/f<«.cviii. 17 

. fuMem.xWi. 2 

. fit Mem. Iv. 25 



future. 
When I dipt into the / . . Locksley ff. IS, "9 
wind of prophecy Dilating on the/; Princess, u. 15s 
ik from a darken' d/ 11 vl 1 I 

kept Thro' all his/; . . £* Arden . 236 



futurity. 
cope Of the half-attain'd/ . 
/;,ei. 
Xowt at all but bracken an'/. 



. Ode to Mem. 33 
. N. Farmer . 38 



i6o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Nothing but idiot g! 



G 

gabble, 
gable. 



POEM. LINE. 

. Maud, II. v. 41 



half A score of g's. . . Walk, to the M. 10 

overhead Fantastic gs, crowding, Godiva . 61 

gable-ends. 
burn'd On the blossom'd^ . . Maud, I. vi. 9 

Gabriel. 
Whose Titan angels, G, Abdiel, . Milton . 5 

gad-fly. m 
sungto, when, this^/"brush'daside, Princess, v. 404 

Gaffer. 

Ran G, stumbled Gammer. . . The Goose . 34 

gagelike. 
flung defiance down G to man, . Princess, v. 170 

gaiety. 
G without eclipse Wearieth me, . Lilian . 20 

gain (s.) 

I can but count thee perfect ^; . Pal. of Art 198 
gen tie words are always gl l Love thou thy la?id> ' etc. 23 

foreheads, vacant of our glorious^, Locksley H. 175 

find in loss a g to match ? .In Mem. i. . 6 

Or but subserves another's £", . 11 liii. 12 

turns his burthen into g. . . 11 lxxix. 12 

1 My sudden frost was sudden g, . u lxxx. 10 

fuller g of after bliss ; . . w cxvi. 4 

lust of,f, in the spirit of Cain, . Maud, I. i. . 23 

Ours the pain, be his the g! . . Ode on Well. 241 

g Of glory, and has added wound Elaine . 565 

my pretext, asfor^-Of purerglory.' ir . . 585 

his g's were dock'd, however small : Sea Dreams 7 

Small werehis i §-\r, andhard his work, 11 . 8 

His g is loss; for he that wrongs . 11 . 168 

never naming God except for g, . ?i . 184 

gain (verb.) 
And g her for my bride. . . Talking O. . 284 

seas, that daily g upon the shore, . Golden Year 29 
help my prince to £"His rightful bride, Princess,iii. 144 
play the slave to^the tyranny : . 11 iv. 114 

g in sweetness and in moral height, ir vii. 265 
g The praise that comes to constancy.' In 3fe7u.xxi. n 
How g in life, as life advances, To F. D. Maurice 39 
could I g her, our kind Queen, , Enid . . 787 
to g Him, the most famous man . Vivien . 21 
In hope to £"upon her flight. . The Voyage 60 

man may £- Letting his own life go. Lucretius . 112 

gained. 

even then she g Her bower ; . Godiva . 76 

hast not g a real height, . . Two Voices . 91 
g a laurel for your brow ' You might ha7>e won, 1 etc. 3 

gtht mother-city thick with towers, Princess, i. in 

g A little street half garden tr . 210 

we paced, and g The terrace . if iii. ioi 

thus much, nor more I g.' . tr . 151 

grasping down the boughs I g the shore.if iv. 171 

cross'd the street and g a petty mound if . 535 

on they moved and g the hall, . h vi. 332 

In such discourse we g the garden rails,u Con. 80 

A wretched vote may be^". . . Maud, I. vi. 56 

He that g a hundred fights, . . Ode on Well. 96 

forded Usk, and g the wood ; . Enid . . 161 
Of honour, where no honour can be g:*' . 1552 

leaving Arthur's court he g the beach ; Vivien . 46 

g the cell in which he slept, . . Elai?ie . 807 

G for her own a scanty sustenance, En. Arden . 258 

Philip £■ As Enoch lost ; ir . 351 
seaward-bound for health they ga. coast, SeaDreamsi6 

Galahad. 
Not even Lancelot brave, nor G clean. Vivien . 654 
pure Sir G to uplift the maid ; . Elaine 1258 

Galaxy „ 
Hung in the golden G. . L. of Shalott,\\\. 12 



gale. POEM. LINE, 

merrily, merrily carol the g's . Sea-Fairies. 23 
Sweet g's, as from deep gardens, blow Fatima. 24 
strong g's Hold swollen clouds from D. ofF. Worn. 10 
the last night's g had caught, Gardener's D. 123 

Stormed in orbs of song, a growing^; Vision oj Sin 25 
drank the g That blown about the Princess, iii. 104 
Who changest not in any£", . . In Mem. \\. 10 
Caught and cuffd by the^-; . Maud, I. vi. 5 

with a thousand winter^ . . En. Arden . 95 
Caught the shrill salt, and sheer'dthe^-. TheVoyagei2 

Galilee. 
still'd the rolling wave of G I . Aylmer's F. yog 

galingale. 
meadow, set with slender £-; . Lotos-E's . 23 

gall {bile, etc.) 
changed a wholesome heart tog. L.C. V.de Vere^ 
the last drop in the cup of^-. Walk, to theM. 61 

Unto me my maudlin g . . Vision of Sin 201 

gall (oak-apple.) 
insects prick Each leaf into a g) . Talking O. 70 

gallery. 
in thy various g Place it, . . Ode to Mem. 84 
By garden-wall and g, . . L. ofShalott,\v.?fi 

round the roofs a gilded g . . Pal. of Art 29 
light aerial g, golden-rail'd, . " -47 

long-laid galleries past a hundred Princess, vi. 354 
golden hours, In those long galleries The Daisy 42 
let his eyes Run thro' the peopled g Elaine . 429 
armed feet Thro' the long g . . Guinevere . 410 

gallopaded. 
willows two and two By rivers £: . AmJ>hion . 40 

galloped. 
and so g up the knoll. . . . Enid . . 168 
as he g up To join them, . ir . 171 

galloping, 
g hoofs bare on the ridge of spears Princess, v. 478 

Gama. 

His name was G; crack'd and small Princess, i. 113 

Then G turn'd tome : 'We fear, indeed, u v. 115 

This Gswamp'd in lazy tolerance. . ti . 433 

can this be he From G's dwarfish loins? if . 495 

gambol. 
For these your dainty g's: . . Vivien . 158 
mother he had never known In g's; Aylmer's F. 691 

gambolled. 

when she g on the greens . . Talking O. 77 

We g, making vain pretence Of In Mein. xxx. 6 

Glanced at the doors or g down . Enid . . 665 

game (animals.) 
touch'd upon the g, how scarce it -wzsAudley Ct. 31 
Man is the hunter ; woman is his g ; Princess, v. 147 
No, there is fatter^ on the moor; Ma?id, I. i. 74 
He bore but little g in hand ; . The Victim 44 

game (pastime.) 
The g of forfeits done — . . The Epic . 2 
some odd£"\s In some odd nooks . * ?i .8 

She remember'd that : Apleasant^- Princess, Pro. 191 
Quoit, tennis, ball — no g's ? . . n iii, 199 

dance and song and g and jest. In Mem. xxix. 8 
Again our ancient g's had place, . 11 Ixxvii. 10 
Poor rivals in a losing g, . . 11 ci. 19 

Be neither song, nor^-, nor feast ; tr civ. 21 

moved by an unseen hand at a£- . Maud, I. iv. 26 
play the g of the despot kings, . if x. 39 

At civic revel and pomp and g, Ode on Well. 147,227 

gamesome. 
Then ran she, g as a colt, . , Talking O. 121 

Gam?ner. 
Ran Gaffer, stumbled G. . . T/ie Goose . 34 

gamut. 

their shrieks Ran highest up the g, Sea Dreams 226 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



Ganymede. poem. li:;e. 

flush'dC, his rosy thigh Half-buried Pal. of Art ii\ 
I think he came like G, . . Will Water. 119 

' they mounted, Gs,To tumble, Vulcans/V/«c«.j,iii.55 

gap. 

from the g's and chasms ol ruin left Sea Dreams 218 

gape. 
A gulf that ever shuts and g's, . In Mem, Ixix. 6 
any mouth to g for save a Queen's — Elaine . 771 

gaped. 
Lavaine.fupon him . . . Elaine . 451 
tier over tier, Were added mouths that;,", 11 1242 

gaping. 
The passive oxen g, . . . Amphion . 72 
fool, Who was g and grinning by : Maud, II. i. 20 

gap-tooth'd. 
A grey and g-t man as lean as death, Vision of Sin 60 

garden. 
High-wall'd g's green and old ; . Arabian N's. 8 
Thence thro' the g I was drawn— 11 . 100 

in the g of the mind, . . Ode to Mem. 26 
g bowcr'd close With plaited alleys m . 105 

the world Like one great jfshow'd, The Poet . 34 
In the heart of the ^the merry bird Poet's Mind 22 
whitest honey in fairy g's cull'd — Eleiinore . 26 

;ales, as from deep ^5, blow Fatima . 24 

^full of flowering weeds Jo With Pal. of Art 4 

the g'i and the halls Of Camelot, M. a" Arthur 20 

the g that I love. . . Gardener's D. 34 
between it and the^r lies A league n . 39 

The g stretches southward. " . 114 

One after one, thro' that still g pass'd : ir . 196 

> the g to the gardener's lodge, A udlcy Ct. 16 
A breeze thro' all the g swept, . Day-Dm. . 138 

I with scarce a tree, . . Amphion- . 3 
at the end of all A little £• blossom. n . 104 

Parks and order'd^'j great, . . L. of Burleigh 30 
A little street half yand half house ; Princess, 1. 211 
grace Concluded, and we sought the g's: 11 ii. 429 

re the g's glowing blossom-belts, 11 v. 353 

there, ag!' said my college 11 Con. 49 

Adam left his g yet. . luMem.xxiv. 8 

i still g of the souls . . 11 xlii. 10 

that round the g flew, . . 11 lxxxviii. 19 

'fill from the g and the wild . . 11 c. 17 

ke the sultan of old in a £- of spice. Maud, I. iv. 42 

Maud has a ^of roses ii xiv. 1 

great Forefathers of the thornless^, tt xviii. 27 

into the g, Maud, (rep.) . 11 xxii. 1 

Queen rose of the rosebud^ of girls, 11 . 53 

f he turrets Of the old manorial 11 II. iv. 79 
know where a g grows, . . i» v. 72 

All round a carefess-order'd ,? To F.D.Maurice 15 
this w.i, in the, {-of a king; . . Enid . . 656 
little g square and . En. Arden . 735 
arranged Her^, sow'd her name . Aylmers F. 88 
fann'd the g'i of that rival rose . n . 455 

now, and grove of . 11 . 550 

in the g snared Picus and Faunus, Lucretius . 181 

garden (verb.) 
! never g more : . . . May Queen, ii. 46 

garden-lower. 
'.tand grots . .Arabian N's 78 
id fru they went Thro' my g-b, The Flower 6 

gardener. 
md old 1.' and his wife /,. C. V. deVere 51 
the Gt Daughter ; . Gardener's D. 3 
liter: . 11 .30 

• ■ '<tcr? 11 . 51 

■ ' itl ■■;'.! lodge, AudleyCt. 16 

'/ now To pick the . Enid . . 670 

1 '. putting in a graff, . Vivien . 329 

g's hand I'n lewort . Guinevere . 32 

■■■gate. 

. Maud, I. xiv. 6 

■•wng-g: . 11 16 

puih'tlat Philip's g-g. . . . T/u- Brook '. 83 



garden-glass. poem. line. 
The g-g'cs shone, and momently . Gardener 'sD.116 

garden-herbs. 

Gifts by the children, g-h and fruit, En. A rden . 335 

gardening. 
Botanic Treatises, And Works on G A mphion . 78 

garden-isles. 
meadowy holms, And alders, g-t; Ed. Morris 96 

garden-rose. 
This g-r that I found. . . . Maud, I. xxi. 3 
outredden All voluptuous g-r's. . Ode on Well. 208 

garden-square. 
And in the sultry g-s's, . . T/te Blackbird 17 

garden-squirt. 

Half-conscious of the g-s, . . Amphion . 91 

garden-tools, 
my g-t upon the granary floor : . May Queen, ii. 45 

garden-wall. 
That held the pear to the g-zu . Mariana . 4 
By g-w and gallery, . . L.ofShatott,\w. 38 
ran the field Flat to the g-w : . Princess, v. 352 
(Jlimb'd to the high top of the g-w Guinevere . 26 
feeling all along the g-w, . . En. Arden . 774 

garden-walks. 
As down the g-w I move, . . In Mem. ci. 6 

Gargarus. 
topmost G Stands up and takes . QZnone . to 

garland. 
Do make a, % for the heart : . . Miller' 'sD. 198 
knots of flowers, and buds and g's May Queen, i. 1 1 
spears That soon should wear theg; Aylmers F. 112 

garlanded. 
Each g with her peculiar flower . Gardeuer'sD.z^j 

garlanding, 
g the gnarled boughs With bunch CEnone . c-) 

garment. 
eddying of her g's caught from thee Ode to Mem. 3; 
woman's £• hid the woman's heart.' Princess, v. 205 

garner. 

wrath that g's in my heart ; . 

garnet. 
F.ach like a g or a turkis in it ; 

garrulity. 
Shame on her own g garrulously, Guinevere 



. InMem.lxxxi. z\ 
. Enid . . CCz 
310 



garrulous. 
G under a roof of pine : . To F. D. Maurice 20 
Miriam Lane was good and,f, . En. Arden . 701 

garrulously. 
To whom the little novice g. . Guinevere 229-74 

garth. 

in a clapper clapping in a g, . Princess, ii. 209 

past into the little g beyond. .En. Arden. 326 

I climb'd to the top of the g, . Grandmother 38 

gash. 

' G thyself, priest, and honour . Aylmers F. 644 

wilt not g thy flesh for him; . 11 .658 

gas-light. 
The g-l wavers dimmer ; 



gasp. 



Will Water. 38 
cheating the sick of a few last g' s, Maud, I. i. , 43 
. Elaine 



510 



_ _ gasping. 

G to Sir Lavaine, draw 

gut*. 

'] hro the open g s of the city afar, Dying Swan 34 
look in at the i,' With his large calm The Mermaid 26 
The lion on your old stone g's L.C. I '. de I '.re . 1 
Are there no beggars at your g t . » -67 

along From Mizpeh's tower'd g . D.o/P.Wt 

pass'd his father's g, Heart-broken, Dora . . 48 



162 



CONCORDANCE TO 



St Agnes Eve 29 
. L. of Burleigh 44 
. Vision of Sin 23 
58 



11 vn. 341 

11 Con. 36 

InMem.\xxx\v.2-$ 

ti xciii. 15 

Maud, I. i. . 15 

ti xviii. 12 

" xxii. 



POEM. LINE. 

we reach'd The griffin-guarded ^.r, Audley Ct. . 14 
Battering the g's of heaven with . StS.Stylites 7 
Once more the g behind me falls ; Talking O. . 1 
Her mother trundled to the g . 11 . in 

Every g is throng'd with suitors . Locksley H. 101 
Saw distant g's of Eden gleam, . Two Voices 212 
ta'en my fiddle to the g, (rep.) . Amphion 
One. g's Roll back, and far within 
And beneath the g she turns ; 
music touch'd the g's and died ; 
cold vapour touch'd the palace g, 
wind blew from them's of the sun, Poet's Song 3 
thro' the g, Had beat her foes . Princess, Pro. 33 
with a blast of trumpets from the g, 11 __. 42 

saw you not the inscription on the g, 11 ii. 177 

bury me beside the g, ... 11 ___. 189 

urged the fierce inscription on the g, 11 iii. 125 

paint the g's of Hell with Paradise, if iv. 113 

at top, and grimly spiked the g's. . 11 . 188 

Here, push them out at g's.' . . 11 . 527 

with grim laughter thrust us out at,f'i. n . 534 

thrice had sent a herald to the g's, u v. 322 

Came sallying thro' the g's, and caught 11 . 330 

thro' those dark g's across the wild 
the g's were closed At sunset, 
In circle round the blessed g, 
They can but listen at the g's, 
My pulses closed their g's 
g's of Heaven are closed, and she is 
I am here at the g alone . . . » xxii. 4 

From the pajsion-flower at the g. . u . 60 

her brother ran in his rage to the g, u II. i. 12 
The g, Half-parted from a weak . T lie Brook . 83 
descending met them at the g' s, . Enid . . 833 
should moulder on the city g's. . Vivien . 444 

Then made a sudden step to the g, Elaine . 390 

and under the strong-statued g, . ir . 796 

beneath the wildly-sculptured g's 11 . . 840 
small g that open'd on the waste, . En. Arden . 734 
Crept to the g, and open'd it, and. ti . 776 

Stands at thy g for thee to grovel. Aylmer's F. 652 
nevermore did either pass the g . 11 . 826 

stood by the road at the g. . . Grandmotlier 38 
there past by the g of the farm, . ir .41 

Burst the g's, and burn the palaces, Boddicea . 64 

gateway. 

at the g's of the day. . . . Locksley H. 158 

until she reach'd The g; . . Godiva . 51 

Or in the g's of of the morn. . Two Voices 183 

Till a g she discerns . . . L. of Burleigh 42 

Right in the g of the bandit hold, Enid . 1622 

in the g, standing by the shield . Elaine . 393 

gatlier. 
words did g thunder as they ran . The Poet . 49 
I must g knots of flowers, . . May Queen, i. ir 
To g and tell o'er Each little sound D.ofF. Worn. 276 
Where faction seldom g's head 'You ask me why, 'etc. 13 
Rise in the heart, and g to the eyes, Princess, iv. 23 
she not fair, began To g light, . n vii. 9 

as he grows he g's much, . . InMem.xWv. 5 
g dust and chaff, and call . . it liv. 18 

Shall g in the cycled times. . . ir lxxxiv. 28 
Unloved, that beech will g brown, tr c. 3 

Should licensed boldness^" force, . 11 cxii. 13 

' 1 sit and phoney ; . . . Vivien . 451 

Sigh' d, and began to g heart again, Guinevere . 366 

gatliered. 
A cloud that g shape : . 
When I am g to the glorious sain 
Have suck'd and g into one The 
Whose wrinkles g on his face, 
Grave faces g in a ring. 
Till they be g up ; 
The topmost elmtree g green 
Easily g either guilt, 
of half the maids G together : 
the heavy dews G by night and 
such as g colour day by day. 



. CEnone . 41 

ts. StS. Stylites 194 

life Talking O. 191 

. Two Voices 329 

. Day-Dm. . 58 

. Will Water. 170 

SirL. a?idQ. G. 8 

. Princess, iv. 2T7 

ti . 456 

11 v. 234 

ir vii. 103 



Abide : thy wealth is g in, . 
fought his doubts and g strength, 
The maidens g strength and grace 
g the bones for his o'ergrown 
this she g from the people's eyes : 
g trickling dropwise from the cleft, 
again When burr and bine were g ; 
G the blossom that rebloom'd, 

gathering (part. ) 
the mighty moon was g light 
Proserpine in Enna, g flowers : 
G up from all the lower ground ; . 
And g freshlier overhead, 
G woodland lilies, Myriads blow 
Vivien £" somewhat of his mood, . 
^■at the base Re-makes itself, 



LINE. 

• 15 



POEM. 

In Mem. Ii. 
ir xcv. 
ir cii. 

Maud, II. v. 
Enid . 
Vivieji 

Aylmer's F. 113 
ir . 142 



13 
27 
55 
61 
123 



gatlier ing (s.) 



Love and Death 1 
Ed. Morris 112 
Vision of Sin 15 
In Mem. xciv. 57 
Maud, I. xii. 7 
Vivien . 691 

Guinevere . 603 

Maud, I. xx. 33 

Enid . . CiC 



A g of the Tory, 

gaudy-day. 
Amends hereafter by some g-d, 

gaunt. 
G as it were the skeleton of himself, Elaine "jCz, C12 

gauntlet. 
maiden fancies dead In iron g's: . Princess, i. . C3 

gauze. 

dried his wings : like g they grew : Two Voices 13 

Purple g's, golden hazes, liquid . VisionofSin 31 

Half-lapt in glowing g and golden Princess, vi. 11S 

gave. 
God g her peace ; her land . . To the Queen 26 
the foolish song 1 g you, Alice, . Miller's D. 162 
look, mother, I g him yesterday — May Queen, i. 15 
and fruit, whereof they g To each Lotos-E's. . 29 
my bliss of life, that Nature £", . D. ofF. Worn. 210 
the kiss he g me, ere I fell, 11 . 235 

g you on your natal day. . . Margaret . 42 
gme a friend, and a true . D. oj 'the O. Year '13 

perform'd my mission which I g? . M.d' Arthur 67 
yielding, g into a grassy walk . Gardener 1 sD. no 
Kissing the rose she g me o'er and if . 172 

G utterance by the yearning of an Love and Duty ti 
g him mind, the lordliest . . Two Voices . 19 
£"the people of his best ' You might liave won,' 25 
worst he kept, his best he g. . 11 .26 

G his broad lawns until the set of Princess, Pro. 2 



93 



200 
226 



. 241 
.v. 162 

• 449 
v. 102 



Con. 



they g The park, the crowd, the . 

said no, Yet being an easy man, g it : 

ga. costly bribe To guerdon silence, 

rooms which g Upon a pillar'd porch, 

g the letter to be sent with dawn ; 

a glance I g, No more ; 

On one knee Kneeling, 1 git, 

Who g me back my child ?' . 

Let out so much as g us leave to go. 

Was it for this we g our palace up, 

Refuse her proffer, lastly g his hand. 

the men, the women : I g assent : 

The Danube to the Severn g . In Mem. xix 

g all ripeness to the grain . . 11 Ixxx. 11 

Received and g him welcome there; it lxxxiv. 24 

him to whom her hand I g. . . 11 Con. 70 

He fiercely g me the lie, . . Maud,\\.\. 16 

By the home that g me birth, . 11 iv. 7 

the matter hung ; fie g them line The Brook 145, 150 

g my letters back to me. . . The Letters 20 

And g the trinkets and the rings, . ti .21 

I pluck'd a daisy, I^it you. . The Daisy . 88 

good king g order to let blow . Enid . 

g command that all which once was ti 

he but g a wrathful groan, 11 

cousin, slay not him who £"you life.' 11 

all-shamed, hating the life }ie g me, " 

knew no more, nor g me one poor Vivien 

Use g me Fame at first, . . 11 

Fame again Increasing £■ me use. 11 

brother's ; which he g to Lancelot, Elaine 

g A marvellous great shriek . . 11 



227 

3 2 7 

7 



. 152 
. 696 
1247 
1631 
1701 
. 126 
• 343 
- 344 
■ 379 
•514 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



163 



POEM. LINE. 

he took, And g, the diamond : . Elaine . 550 
g, And slightly kiss'd the hand to 

which he g, ir . 697 

I g the diamond : she will render it ; 11 . 709 

off the case, and g the naked shield ; n . 973 

Then g a languid hand to each, . 11 1026 

that I g No cause, not willingly, . 11 1289 

and he^-them charge about the Queen, Guinevere 585 
dipt A tiny curl, and.? - it : . . En. Arden . 235 
,\ 1 what she g in buying . 11 . 255 

he paused and g his hand, ir . 444 

clothes they g him and free passage 11 .651 

Pitying the lonely man, and g him it. ir . 665 

the woman g A half-incredulous . ir . 853 

she cut it off and j? it, ... 11 . 895 

scared with threats of jail and halter^ Ay liner' sF. $20 
dagger which himself G Edith, . it . 597 

rse ' Behold Your house . ir . 628 

and he g the ringers a crown. . Grandmother 58 
She that .g-you's bought and sold, The Ringlet 33 
g you me, and said, ' Come, kiss it, ir . 40 

gave ivay. 

trance g w To those caresses, . Love and Dutyb^ 

everything G to before him : . Princess, v. 519 

to them the doors g w Groaning, 11 vi. 329 

Gawaiu. 

G, rise, My nephew, and ride forth, Elaine . 535 

G, surnamed The Courteous, fair and n . 554 

G the while thro' all the region round t» .612 

Sir Lancelot's azure lions, . ir . 659 

there the fine G will wonder at me, ti 1048 

G, who bad a thousand farewells 11 1050 

came the fine G and wonder'd at her, 11 1260 

you were g With bridal tlowcrs — Miller s D. 164 

g, or grave, or sweet, or stern, . Pal. 0/ Art 91 

never a one so g, . ■ . . Poet's Song 14 

,_-ainst the wall As £• as any. Princess, Pro. 100 

Jad ; her note is^, . . InMem.xxX. 25 

To find me g among the g, . . » lxv. 3 

all is g with lamps, and loud . » xcvii. 27 

I. ike things of the season g, . . Maud, i. iv. 3 

if I cannot be g let a passionless peace 11 . 50 

.-. that I felt so g, . . 11 xx. 1 

With whom she has heart to be g. << xxii. 20 

Seeing one so g in purple silks, . Enid . . 284 

ragwas^-withwildingflowers: ir . . 319 

with my gift, and g among the g.' 11 . . 753 

od mother, making Enid g 11 . . 757 

all that week was old Caerleon^, 11 . . 837 

How,f, how suited to the house of 11 . 1531 

gay-furred. 
Her gf cats a painted fantasy, . Princess, iii. 170 

gaze (s. ) 
Than that the earth should stand s.tg Lock-sley II.180 
her ardent g Roves from the living In Mem. xxxii. 6 

gaze (verb.) 

•tiring thou dost g . . Ode to Mem. 93 

I while we g on it, . . . Eleanore . 90 

fupon My palace with tinblindcd eyes, Pal. of Art ,|t 

on the silent dead : . . Day-Dm. . 113 

Evermore she seems to g . . L. of Burleigh 34 

climbs a peak tn j; O'er land and main, Princess,vu.20 

I, who g with temperate eyes . In Mem. cxi. 2 

fully, or all-silcnt^upon him Vivien . 38 

in g upon the Sun in heaven 1 Elaine . 124 

fain would g upon him to the last : Lucretius . 140 

~ ■ ■ K« ze(l . 

G on the Persian girl alone, . Arabian .Vs. 134 

below; . . Pal. of Art 162 

h his eyes were M.cT Arthur 58 

it satiated at length Princess, Pro. 90 

near ; \ g. . . . 11 iii. 167 

I, ' V these rude 11 . 278 

ipon her came a little stir 11 iv. 354 

lone for hours >• vii. 17 

Where fir.it we g upon the sky ; . In Mem. ci. 2 



POEM. LINE. 

kept her off and g upon her face, . Enid . . 519 
g upon her blankly and gone by : . Vivien . 17 

never g upon it but I dreamt . 11 . 361 

G at the heaving shoulder, 11 , 745 

while he^wonderingly at her, came Elaine . 623 

Averill went and g upon his death. Aylmer's F. 599 

gazer. 
With lifted hand the g in the street. Ode on Well. 22 

gazest. 
When thou g at the skies ? . .Adeline . 50 

gazing. 
G where the lilies blow . . L.ofShalott,\.y 

G on thee for evermore, . . Eletinore . 80 

with most intensity G, I seem to see it . 83 

sense Of Passion g upon thee. . it .116 

Kg on divinity disrobed . . Osnone . 154 
dim with g on the pilot-stars. . Lotos-Es. . 132 

From her isle-altare'down, l OJ 'old 'sat Freedom* 'etc. 14 
In g up an Alpine height, . . Two Voices . 362 
stood, so rapt, weg, came a voice, . Princess, ii. 297 
murmur'd Florian g after her, . 11 iii. 81 

All open-mouth'd, all g to the light, 11 iv. 462 

Ida spoke not, g on the ground, . 11 vi. 210 

so fared she g there ; ti vii. 26 

g on thee, sullen tree, . , .In Mem. ii. 13 
sadly g on her bridle-reins, . . Enid . 1343 

There he sat down g on all below ; En. Arden . 724 
His g in on Annie, his resolve . 11 . 864 

gear. 
sent mine host to purchase female g; Princess, i. 196 

gem. 
In hollow'd moons of g's. . . Pal. of Art 18S 
lest the g's Should blind my purpose, M.d' 'Arthur 152 
Airing a snowy hand and signet g, Princess, i. 120 
rainbow robes, and g's and gemlike eyes, 11 iv. 459 

like sunny g's on an English green . Maud, I. v. 14 
How like a g, beneath, the city . The Daisy . 7 
In crimsons and inpurplesand in.g-'s. Enid . 10 
wont to glance and sparkle like a g ti . 1143 

so thickly shone the g's. . . « . 1541 

had the g's Pluck'd from the crown, Elaine . 57 
Received at once and laid aside the^i it 1196 

Gemini. 
starry G hang like glorious crowns . Maud, III. vi. 7 

gem-like. 
a fire-balloon Rose g-l up . . Princess, Pro. 75 
rainbow robes, and gems and g eyes, 11 iv. 459 
Luminous, g, ghostlike, deathlike, Maud, I. iii. 8 
a meadow £■ chased In the brown wild, Enid 1047 

gemm'd. 
a coppice g with green and red, . Enid . . 339 

generation. 
mould a g strong to move . . Princess, v. 406 
knit The g's each with each ; In Mem. xxxix. 16 

generous. 
All brave, and many^-, and some chaste. Vivien . 666 

genial. 
and shone :so g was the hearth: . En. Arden . 744 

genius. 
thou nearest The first-born of thy g. Ode to Mem. 92 
A fairy shield your G made . . Margaret . 41 

Geno7iese. 
The grave, severe G of old. . . Tlie Daisy . 40 

gentle. 
I-can'd on him, faithful,,?, good, . Two Voices . 416 
the yoke, I wish it G as freedom'— Princess, vi. 189 
So_?, so employ'd. should close in love, »i vii. 52 
&3g; liberal-minded, great, . In Mem. Con. 38 

My mother, who was sog and good \Moua\ I. vi. 67 
Was it t; to reprove her . . 11 xx. 8 

much too g, have not used my power : Enid . 467 
Pray you be g, pray you let me be : 11 I5s<> 

to be g than ungentle with you ; 11 1564 



164 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

thought that he was^-, being great : Vivien . 720 
Unbound as yet, and j", as 1 know' Elaine 1377 

gentle-he a rted. 
T\itg-h wife Sat shuddering . Sea Dreams 29 

gentleman. 
King Arthur, like a modern £- M. d , Art/tur,EJ>.22 
watch' d by silent gentlemen, 
a g of broken means 
three gallant gentlemen to death.' 
* You have done well and like a g, 
The grand old name of g, 
O selfless man and stainless g, 

gentleness. 
Winning its way with extreme £* . 
More soluble is this knot, By^- . 
this firebrand — g To such as her ! . 
The g he seem'd to be, . 
Yea, God, I pray you of your g, . 
Subdued me somewhat to that^ . 

ge?itler-born. 
The g-b the maiden, the more bound Elaine . 762 

gen tlewoman. 
hammer at this reverend £-. . . Princess, iii. 113 

not one among my gentlewomen . Enid . 1470 

see you not my gentlewomen here u . 1530 

one among his gentlewomen . . it . 1534 

stood A;virtuous ^deeply wrong'd, Vivien . 760 

gent Her. 

Music that g on the spirit lies, . Lotos-Ks, . 50 



Will Water 
Princess, i. 


231 
52 


11 

In Me 771. 
Vivie7i 


11. 

v. 
ex. 


314 
506-9 

22 
64I 


Isabel . 
Pri7tcess J 

hi Mem. 

E7iid . 
it 


V. 

ex 


23 

I30 

l6o 

12 

T558 

i7 x 5 



Now hawking at G and schism ; . Th 

Gemini. 
The brave G, a knight of Arthur's E. 
loved G To make her beauty vary 
Grateful to Prince G for service . 
in their common love rejoiced G. . 
Not less G believed it ; . 
day by day she thought to tell G, 
Prince G, Late also, wearing 
G Exclaiming, ' Surely I will learn 
Prince G, now thinking that he heard 
thither came G, and underneath . 
G flash'd into sudden spleen 
rode G, a little spleenful yet, 
rode G into the castle court, 
the sweet voice of Enid moved G ; 
So fared it with G, who 
thought G, * Here by God's rood . 
G, from utter courtesy, forbore. . 
G had longing in him evermore 
after all had eaten, then G, . 
— I am G Of Devon — . 
G, a name far-sounded among men 
G with eyes all bright replied, 
"waited there for Yniol and G. 
when G Beheld her first in field, . 
Increased G's, who heaved his blade 
No later than last eve to Prince G — 
She look'd on ere the coming of G. 
G Woke where he slept in the high 
G to greet her thus attired ; . 
at the midmost charging. Prince G 
lance err'd ; but G's, A little 
G, dismounting, pick'd the lance 
G had ruth again on Enid . 
G Ate all the mowers' victual 
Her suitor in old years before G, 
Greeted G full face, but stealthily, 
cried G for wine and goodly cheer 
Enid left alone with Prince G, 
G look'd and was not satisfied 
G Waving an angry hand 
uttering a dry shriek, Dash'd on G, 
like a stormy sunlight smiled G, 
heard G, and grasping at his sword, 
then G upon the horse Mounted, 
' My lord G, I greet you with all 



e Epic . 16 



343 



857, 



• 15 

• 23 
. 28 
. 65 
. 164 
. 202 
. 232 
. 241 

■ 2 73 

• 293 
. 312 

• 334 
.1349 

■ 3 6 7 
. 381 

• 394 

• 397 

• 409 

■ 427 

• 494 

• 538 

■ 539 

• 572 
. 603 
. 614 

• 754 

• 77 2 

• 934 
1006 

t028 

105 1 
1063 
1125 

1128 
1132 

1214 

1284 

1292 

1311 
1329 
1573 

1606 

1633 



TOEM. LINE. 

while G lay healing of his hurt, Enid . 1779 

when G was whole again, they past n . 1793 

tho' G could never take again . 11 . 1797 

Enids and G's Of times to be ; . tr . 1813 

after Lancelot, Tristram, and G . Elaine . 555 

germ. 

in it is the g of all That grows . Amphion . 7 

gemia?ider. 
that her clear g eye Droopt . . Sea Dreams .;. 



gewgaw. 
Seeing his g castle shine 



Maud, I. x. 1 3 



. MayQ?teen,\. 
. JLotos-Es. . 
Walk, to the M. 

Will Water. 



Maud, I. ii 

Elaine 

Guinevere 



*7 

119 

28 

35 

29 

17 

469 

165 

166 

15 

36 



34 
219 

479 
914 



S45 
5S9 



ghastly, 
g thro' the drizzling rain . . In Mem. vii. 

ghost. 
He thought I was a g, mother 
come like g's to trouble joy. . 
Was haunted with a jolly g . 
'Yes, we're flitting,' says the^- 
Old wishes, g's of broken plans, 
move' among a world of g' s, (iv. 539) Princess, 
doing battle with forgotten g's, . ti v. 

droops the milkwhite peacock like a g, n vii. 
like a g she glimmers on to me. . tr 

in the dark church like a g . . InMem.lxvi. 
O solemn g, O crowned soul ! . ri lxxxiv. 
Spirit to Spirit, G to G. . . tr xcii. 

My G may feel that thine is near. 11 
desire, like a glorious g to glide, . Maud, I. xiv. 
A disease, a hard mechanic g . 11 II. ii, 
the g of one who bore your name . The Brook . 
sunders £\rand shadow-casting men Vivien 
like a g she lifted up her face, . Elai?ie 
like ag without the power to speak. 
Monotonous and hollow like a G's Guinevere . 
A got passion that no smiles restore Coquette, ii. 

ghost-like. 
Luminous, gemlike, g, deathlike. 
In either twilight^-/ to and fro 
moving g to his doom. . 

giant. 
that you made About my ' g bole ;' Talking 0. . 136 
g's living, each, a thousand years Princess, iii. 252 
those three stars of the airy G' s zone, n v. 250 

The genial £", Arac, roll'd himself . it , 264 

From Arac's arm, as from a g's flail, tr . 489 

The g labouring in his youth ; . In Mem. cxvii. 2 
tho' the G Ages heave the hill . Ode on Well. 259 
g answer'd merrily, 'Yea, but one ? Enid . . 977 
seem'd the phantom of a G in it, . Guinevere . 596 

giant-factoried. 
Droopt in the ^/'city-gloom, . Sea Dreams 5 

gibe. 
solemn g did Eustace banter me. . Gardener's D. 164 

gied (gave.) 
toithe were due, an' I^it inhond; A 7 '. Farmer. 11 

gift. 
God's great g of speech abused 
Love thesis Love the debt. 
' I woo thee not with g's. 

soul possess'd of many g's, To 

met With interchange of g. . 
knew your g that way At College 
holy Elders with the g of myrrh. 
Requiringat her hand the greatest. 
And yet it was a graceful g — 
eagles of her belt, The grim Earl's,; 
He owns the fatal g of eyes, 
jewels, g's, to fetch her : 
g's of grace, that might express 
take the imperfect g I bring, 
She keeps the g of years before, 
g's, when£-\s of mine could please 
flower' d with gold, a costly £• 
'Yea, I know it ; your good^", 
Your own good g ! ' ' Yea, surely,' 



. A Dirge . 44 
. Miller's D. . 207 
. QZnone . 150 
With Pal. oj 'Art 3 
. Pal. of Art 144 
: 77(i? Epic . 24 
. M.d' Arthur 233 
X, Gardener 1 'sD '.224 
. Talking O. . 233 
,7 Godiva . 44 
. Two Voices 286 
. Princess, i. . 42 
. InMem. lxxxiv. 46 
. t. _. 117 

11 xcvi. 25 
; The Letters 22 
. Enid . . 631 

it . . 688 
. 690 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



i6q 



POEM. LINE. 

Clothed with my g, and gay .Enid . .753 

from her limbs the costly-broider'd,f, 11 . . 769 

fair child shall wear your costly £" 11 . .819 

Who knows? another^of the high God.n . . 821 

take it as freef, then,' said the boy, » . 1071 

months' babe had been a truer g. . Vivien . 561 

pearls, Some gentle maiden's £•.' . Elaine . 603 

should ask some goodly g of him 11 908 

price of half a realm, his costly g, 11 . 1158 

thrice their worth Being your g, . ti . 1207 

value of all g's Must vary as the . ir . 1208 

I guard as God's high g . . Guinevere . 490 
the children, garden-herbs, En. Arden . 335 

icntal g's on everyone .Aylmer'sF. 214 

Among the g's he left her . . 11 217 

■ <us£-to give a lady, this!' u . 240 

e I to give this g of his to one tr . 242 

'Take it,' she added sweetly, ' tho' his^-; 11 . 246 
Nor deeds o(g, butg's of grace he. Sea Dreams 1S8 

Let me go: take back thy g: . Tithouus . 27 

Gods themselves cannot recall their g's.' 11 . 49 

gifted. 
As some divinely £* man, . . In Mem. Ixiii. 2 

gigantesque. 
The sort of mock-heroic g, . . Princess, Can. 11 

gild. 
g's the straitcn'd forehead of the fool ! Locksley II. 62 

gilded. 
nature f by the gracious gleam . Ded. of Idylls 38 

Gileadite. 
The daughter of the warrior G, . D.ifF.lVom.jgj 

gillyflowers. 
a rosy sea oig About it : . . Aylmer's F. 159 

g by the touch of a millionaire ; . Maud, I. i. 66 

gilt-head. 
court-Galen poised his g-h cane, . Princess, i. 19 

g'psy- 
Or the frock and g bonnet 

gird. 

minds did g their orbs with beams, The Poet . 29 

Uncared for, g the windy grove, . In Mem. c. 13 

licver had I g his harness on him, Enid . . 93 

girdle. 
And I would be the g . . Miller's D. . 173 

iusf tight, and pat The girls Talking O. . 43 

girdled, 
g with the gleaming world : .. Lolos-E's. . 158 

And g her with music. . . . Princess, vW. 308 

girl. 
Gazed on the Persian g alone, . Arabian N's. 134 
the red cloaks of market g's, L. of Shalott, ii. 17 

g^s all kiss'd Beneath the sacred bush The Epic 2 
Tike a >f Valuing the giddy pleasure;'/. d'Arthuri2j 

, I love you well ; . . Dora . . 40 
'Go ! — G, get you in !' . . Ed. Morris . 125 

.'■.g's upon the check, . Talking O. . 44 

for whom your heart is sick, .. . 71 

|i of g's In circle waited, . Princess, Pro. 68 
many £""1— Sick for the hollies 11 . 184 

lengths of yellow ringlets, like a g, 11 i. 3 

Cs, Knowli- qo more . 11 ii. 75 

Cs * more like men I ' . . . 11 iii. 27 

Men I g's, like men ! why, if they m . 33 

nurse a blind ideal like a g , , . 11 . 201 

he seems no better than a j.'; i> . 202 

A* g's were once, as we ourself . 11 . 203 

children die : and let me tell you,g, 11 . 236 

G after g was call'd to trial : .. iv. 209 

like enough. Og 's. To unfurl the maiden 11 . 481 

and they will beat my g . . 11 v. 85 
Itormy time With our strange g: . n . 117 

" . 1. )4 

II g's Hit, Till the Jtonn die 1 11 vi. 317 



Maud, I. xx. 19 



POEM. LINE. 

ill counsel had misled the g . Princess, vii. 226 
yet was she but a g — ..." . 227 

' So fret not, like an idle g, . . In Mem. Ii. 13 
Like some poor g whose heart is set 11 lix. 3 

1 play'd with thef when a child ; . Maud, 1. i. 68 
' Well if it prove a g, the boy . 11 vii. 7, 15 

soften as if to a g, ... 11 x. 16 

from some slight shame one simple g 11 xviii. 45 
Queen rose of the rosebud garden of g's, 11 xxii. 53 
disarray* d as to her rest, t\\&g; . Enir! . . 516 
all in charge of whom ; a g: , 11 . . 974 

shall share my earldom with me, g, 11 . 1474 

' G, for I see you scorn my courtesies," . 1519 

fixt his heart On that one g; . En. Arden . 40 

the g Seem'd kinder unto Philip . 11 . 41 

be back, my g, before you know it. 1 11 . 193 

as the village^ - Who sets her pitcher 11 . 206 

'Annie, my g, cheer up, 11 . 2i3 

let me put the boy and g to school : 11 ;ii-23 
o'er her second father stoopt a g, . 11 . 748 

the g So like her mother, 11 . 791 

once with Leolin at her side the g, Aylmer'sF. 184 
be more gracious,' asked the g . 11 . 241 

g might be entangled ere she knew. 11 . 272 

sandboy, Sir, know their differences!' 11 . 274 

twenty boys and g's should marry on it, 11 . 371 

found the g And ilung her down . h . 573 

Born of a village.^, carpenter's son, 11 . 668 

a lad may wink, and a.^" may hint, The Kinglet 17 
g's, Hetairai, curious in their art, Lucretius . 52 

girl-gradua ies. 
sweet g-g in their golden hair. . Princess, Pro. 142 

girt. 
g round With blackness as a solid wall,/W. of 'Art '27 '3 
where g with friends or foes, ' You ask meivhy, 'etc. 7 
g with doubtful light ' love thou thy laud,' etc. 16 
g the region with high cliff . . Vision of Sin 47 
the King Came g with knights : . Elaine 1254 

Enoch's golden ring had g Herfinger, I'n.Ardem^j 
G by half the tribes of Britain, . Boadicea . 5 
g With song and flame and fragrance, Lucretius 133 

girth. 
Alas, I was so broad off, 
grown a bulk Of spanless g, . 

give. 
Could g the warrior kings of old, . To the Queen 4 
Complaining, 'Mother^ me grace Mariana intheS.ia. 
fill my glass :/me one kiss: . Miller's D. 17 

would she g me vow for vow, . 11 .119 
' O Paris, G it to Pallas ! ' . . (Fnone . 166 
G us long rest or death, . . Lotos-Es. . 98 
Failing; \o g the bitter of the sweet, D. of /■'. Il'om. 2&6 

God g's us love To f. .S". . 1 3 

g to light on such a dream?' . Ed. Morris 58 

•G? Call thou art' ... 11 .59 

the daughters of the horseleech, '67, Golden Year 12 
in the rights that name may g, . Day-Din. . 266 
To g his cousin, Lady Clare. . Lady Clare 4 

g one kiss to your mother dear I . it . 49 

Little can I g my wife. . . L. of Burleigh 14 

or a song To g us breathing-space.' PrincessJ'ro. 235 
here I g the story and the songs. . 11 . 239 

1 can g you letters to her ; . ir i. 158 
' We g you welcome : not without 11 ii. 28 
Ig thee to the death My brother I " .287 
g three gallant gentlemen to^cleaih.' 11 . 314 
we g you, being strange, A license : 11 iii. 188 
g them surer, quicker proof — . n • 265 
gt the manners of your countrywomen t n ' 

g him your hand : Cleave to your " . 389 

g's the battle to his hands : ■ . " • 557 

G us, then, your mind at large : . 11 v. 118 

G's her harsh groom for bridal-gift •' • 368 

not yours, but mine ; g me the child." n vi 1 

f her the child I .... » 152, 163-7 

(.' me it : / will g it her.' . . 11 

what answer should Igt " 

make herself her own log or keep, " vii. 257 



. Talking P. 139 
. Princess, vi. 20 



i6i 



CONCORDANCE TO 



In Mem. iv. 
xxxviii. 
xliii. 
Hi. 
Ixxiv. 
cxv. 

CXX1V. 

Con. 



• 371 

• 585 
. 761 

1271 
1300 
- 223 
■ 346 
. 219 
. 689 

• 756 

• 769 
1065 

"57 



POEM. LINE. 

£-you all The random scheme . Princess,Con. 3 

required that I should g throughout 

yet to g the story as it rose, 

G it time To learn its limbs : 

these great Sirs G up their parks 

To Sleep I g my powers away : 

No joy the blowing season g's, 

the hoarding sense G s out at times 

dare we to this fancy g , 

Hath power to g thee as thou wert ? 

meets the year, and g's and takes 

bitter notes my harp would g, 

I must g away the bride ; . . «i Con. 42 

To g him the grasp of fellowship ; Maud, I, xiii. 16 

sullen-seeming Death may g More life n xviii. 46 

g A grand political dinner . . 11 xx. 24 

Could g it a clumsy name . . ir II. ii. 10 

g him welcome, this is he . . Ode on Well. 92 
Who £• the Fiend himself his due, To F.D. Maurice 6 
one lay-hearth would g you welcome " .11 
Take him to stall, and g him corn, Enid . 
g back their earldom to thy kin. 11 
Albeit I g no reason but my wish, 11 
not to g you warning, that seems 11 
to g him warning, for he rode . 11 

1 will not yield to g you power . Vivien 
wish'd to g them greater minds : . n 
father g me leave, an if he will, . Elaine 
if you love, it will be sweet to^-it ; 11 
■with mine own hand g his diamond 11 
yea, and you must^- it — . . 11 
G me good fortune, I will strike . 11 
^at last The price of half a realm, tf 
£-his child a better bringing-up En. Arden 87, 298 
— a month — G her a month — . ir . 459 
^me strength Not to tell her, . 11 . 786 
g\vox this, for it may comfort her: 11 . 900 

* A gracious gift to^-a lady, this!* Ay Inzer's F. 240 
c Were I to g this gift of his to one ti . 242 
G me my fling, and let me say my say.' ir . 399 
G me your prayers, for he is past . n . 751 
a weant niver^- it to Joanes, . N. Fanner . 59 
I ask'd thee, ' Give me immortality.' Tithonus . 15 
wealthy men who care not how they£". 11 . 17 
If you will g me one, but one, . The Ringlet 3 

* We g you his life.' . . . Tfie Victim 16 
Take you his dearest, Gusa life. 11 .29 
*0, Father Odin, We g you a life. ?r . 80 
We g them the wife ! ' ... n .84 
G her the glory of going on, . Wages 5, 10 

given. 
difference, reconcilement.pledges^, Gardener 'sV '.252 
I found him garrulously^-, . . Talking O. . 23 
Achieving calm, to whom was g . Tivo Voices 209 
to me is g Such hope, I know not Sir Galahad 61 
A man had g all other bliss, SirL. andQ. G. 42 

g to starts and bursts Of revel ; . Princess, i. 53 
king,' he said, ' Had g us letters, 11 . 179 

with mutual pardon asked and g . tf v. 44 

G back to life, to life indeed, . n vii. 324 

Is^in outline and no more. . In Me?n. v. 12 

shock, so harshly £", Confused me 11 xvi. 11 

isgA life that bears immortal fruit nxxxix. 17 

His who had g me life — ; . Maud, I. i. 6 
g her word to a thing so low ? . • 11 xvi. 27 
g false death her hand, . . w xviii. 68 

For the prophecy g of old . . n II. v. 42 
wholly g to brawls and wine, . Enid . . 441 

bethought her of her promise £• 11 602 

not leave her, till her promise g — ir . . 605 
g her on the night Before her ?r 632 

gladly^ again this happy morn. ir 691 

(No reason^- her) she could cast aside n . . 807 
his command of silence £-, . . " 1215-39 

thanks than might a goat have^* . Vivien . 127 

promised more than ever king has g, n . 436 

deem this prize of ours is rashly £*: Elaine . 540 

Sweet iy true love iho* g in vain, . 11 1001 

if I do not there is penance £■ — . Guinevere . 185 
with a month's leave g them, . Sea Dreams 6 



POEM. LINE. 

before thine answer ^Departest, . Titho?ius . 44 
Has g all my faith a turn? . . The Ringlet 52 

giver. 

Render thanks to the G, (rep.) . Odeo?i Well. 44 

of all gifts Must vary as the^. . Elai7ie 1209 

giving. 

flight To read those laws; . . Isabel . 18 

g safe pledge of fruits . . . Ode to Mem. 18 
of the glance That graced the^* — Gardener's D. 174 

part it, g half to him. . . . In Me?n. xxv. 12 

G you power upon me thro' this . Vivien . 364 

glacier. 
with tears By some cold morning^ - ; Princess, vii. 101 

glad. 

So full of summer warmth, so g, . Miller's D. 14 

heart is g Of the full harvest . Dora . . 66 

and we were g at heart. . . Audley Ct. . 87 

I'm^- 1 walk'd. How fresh Walk, to the M. 1 
I am sad and^"To seeyou, Florian. Princess, ii. 286 

gto find thyself so fair. . . .In Mew. vi. 27 

one is g; her note is gay, . . n xxi. 25 

gat heart from May to May : . ti xxii. 8 

Beg, because his bones are laid . Ode on J Veil. 141 

Eat and be g, for I account you . Enid . 1495 

' How should I be g Henceforth . 11 . 1496 

star upon his noble front, G also ; " . 1606 

g of you as guide and friend ; . Elaine . 225 

so g were spirits and men . . Guinevere . 267 

( Were they so g? ill prophets . 11 . 270 

I was g at first To think . . Sea Dreams 124 

light is large and lambs are g . Lttcretius . 99 

gladden. 
and the Shepherd g's in his heart : Spec, of Iliad 16 

glade. 
With breezes from our oaken g's, . Elednore . 10 
His wonted glebe, or lops the^V; In Mem. c. 22 
thro' many a grassy g And valley, Enid . . 236 
winding g's high up like ways . En. Arden . 574 

gladlier. 
Forsureno^doesthestranded wreck-ZTw.^r*/.?/* . 829 

gladness. 

I grew in g till I found . . . To E. L. . 11 

Makes former,^ loom so great? . InMem.xxiv. 10 

making vain pretence Of g, . . 11 xxx. 7 

A solemn g even crown'd . . 11 xxxi. 11 

Borne down by^so complete, . 11 xxxii. 10 

Neigh'd with all g as they came, . Enid . 1603 

cloudy ^-lighten'd In the eyes . The Captain 31 

glai7iour. 
Gwydion made by g out of flowers, Enid . . 743 

glance. 

not a^-so keen as thine : 'Clear-headed friend* etc. 7 
Sudden^, sweet and strange . Madeline . 5 
O'erflows thy calmer g's, . u -33 

Every turn and g of thine, . . Elednore . 52 
shaping faithful record of the g . Gardener 'sD '.17 -3 
a g I gave, No more ; . . . Princess, iv. 162 
one g he caught Thro* open doors n v. 332 

striking with her g The mother, . ti vi. 136 

sidelong g's at my father's grief, . it vii. 92 

fixt A showery g upon her aunt, . " Con. 33 

^"and smile, and clasp and kiss. . /KTI/Vw.lxxxiii. 7 
upon him A piteous g, and vanish*d--4> , /w<?r'.y F. 284 
and rolling^.? lioness-like, . . Boadicea . 71 

glance (verb.) 
In crystal eddies g and poise, . Millers D. % 52 
'ill merrily £" and play, . . . Jl fay Queen, \. 39 
fall down and g From tone to tone, D.ofF. Worn. 166 
made them g Like those three stars Princess, v. 249 
g about the approaching sails, . In Mem. xiii. 18 
Let random influences^ . . ir xlviii. 2 
And every eye but mine will^- . Maud, I. xx. 36 
I slip, I slide, I gloom, I g. . . The Brook . 174 
not to g at her good mother's face, Enid . . 766 
sideways he let them g At Enid, . ir . 1095 



TExVNYSO.V'S WORKS. 



167 



LINE. 

III7 
II43 



stare at open space, nor g The one Enid . 

wont to £• and sparkle like a gem . m . 1143 

pure heart, nor seem to g at thee ? Guinevere . 498 

here he g's on an eye new-born, . Lucretius . 137 

glanced. 
rathwart the glooming Hats. . Mariana . 20 

The damned arrowy aside, . . Oriana . 41 
She ^across the plain ; . . . Talking O. . 166 
We sat: the Ladyg - : . . . Princess, ii. 96 
G at the legendary Amazon . . 11 .110 

G like a touch of sunshine . . 11 iii. 339 

g aside, and saw the palace-front . ti v. 497 

struck out and shouted ; the blade gv 11 . 529 

light of healing, g about the couch, 11 vii. 44 

glided forth, Nor £■ behind her, . ir . 156 

10m theme to theme, . InMem.\xxxvm. 33 
(, at the doors or gambol'd down . Enid . . 665 
the King G first at him, then her . Elaine . 96 

lot, when they^at Guinevere, n . . 270 
G at, and cried ' What news 11 . .617 
g not up, nor waved his hand, 11 980 

g at him, thought him cold . . Guinevere . 402 

glancing. 
G with black-b-aded eyes, . . Lilian . 15 

g thence, discussed the farm, . Audley Ct. . 32 
g like a dragon-fly In summer suit Enid . . 172 
g all at once r.s keenly at her, . " . . 773 
g round the paste she fear'd 11 899 

g for a minute, till he saw her Pass ir . 1734 

slander, g lure and grazing there ; Vivien . 29 

g up beheld the holy nuns . . Guinevere . 658 
Philips up Beheld the dead flame En. Arden . 437 
mother g often toward her babe, . 11 -755 

glare (s. ) 
steady^Shrank one sick willow Mariana in tlieS. 52 
n, but a wannish g . . Maud, l.vi. 2 
in change of g and gloom Her eyes Vivien . 808 

glare (verb.) 
Cs at one that nods and winks . Locksley II. 136 
the crimson-rolling eye Cs ruin, . Princess, iv. 474 
But the broad light g's and beats, Maud, II. iv. 89 

glared. 
amazed They g upon the women, Princess, vi. 341 

glaring. 

old lion, g with his whelpless eye, Princess, vi. 83 

g, by his own stale devil spurr'd, Aylmer's F. 290 

their eyes G, and passionate looks, Sea Dreams 229 

glass (substance. ) 
fires your narrow casement g. 
The fblew in, the fire blew out, . 
>f water, sheets of summer £*, 
Athwart a plane of molten g, 
fleet ofg, That seem'd a fleet 
my poor venture but a fleet ofg- . 

glass (mirror.) 

■ as 'twere in a g, 

1: in any .^ and say, . 

per to your.i. 1 '. and say, 
having left the g, she turns . 
in the g of some prcsageful mood 

glass 'drinking-vessel.) 
fill my g: give me one kiss : . Miller's D. 17 

prisms in every carven g, . Day-Dtn. . 55 

I my empty £• reversed), . Will Water. 159 

It is but yonder empty g . 11 , 207 

whom the bell-moutn'd^ had wrought Prinetss,vr.iyi 

and heat the floor : In Mem. lxxxvi. 

■• the board and brim the. 1.-; 11 CVL id 

g with little M dicine Sea Dreams 138 

came but from the breaking of a g, 11 240 

glass 'telescope.) 

?i a seaman' . En. Arden . 115 

• M a g. but all in vain: . 11 . 239 

not fix the g to suit her eye : . n . 240 



Miller's D. 


241 


The Goose . 


49 


To EL. . 


2 


In .Mem. XV. 


n 


Sea Dreams 


118 


11 


134 


A Character 


10 


Day-Dm. . 


199 


11 


271 


In Mem. vi. 


35 


Vivien 


144 



glass (verb.) poem. line. 
To g herself in dewy eyes ' Move eastward,' etc. 7 

glased. 
coming wave G in the slippery sand Vivien . 142 

glasses. 
Get me my g, Annie : . . Grandmother 106 

glassy-headed. 
A little g-h hairless man, . . Vivien . 470 

glazed. 
staring eye^o'er with sapless days, Love and Dutyi6 
think not they are g with wine. . Locksley H. 51 
Neither modell'd, g, or framed : Vision 0/ Sin 188 
A full sea g with muffled moonlight Princess, i. 244 

gleam (s.) 
g's of mellow light Float by you . Margaret . 30 
Would love iheg's of good 'Love thou thy land, ' rtc.Sg 
Dreary g's about the moorland . Locksley II. 4 
Beyond the polar g forlorn, . . Two Voices 182 
touches me with mystic g's, . 11 . 380 

Thou battcnest by the greasy g . Will Water. 221 
green g of the dewy-tassell'd trees : Princess, i. 93 
A doubtful g of solace lives. . //;.!/<•»/. xxxviii. 8 
dives In yonder greening^, . «i cxiv. 14 

makes a hoary eyebrow for the g. The Brook . 80 
gilded by the gracious g Of letters, Ded. oj Idylls 38 
sallows in the windy gs of March : Vivien . 74 
strike it, and awake her with the g; Elaine . 6 

gleam (verb.) 
wherethro' Cs that untravell'd world, Ulysses . 20 
G thro' the Gothic archways . Godiva . 64 

Saw distant gates of Eden g, . Two Voids 212 
Fair g's the snowy altar-cloth, . Sir Galahad 33 
g's On Lethe in the eyes of Death. In Mem. xc\'u. 7 

gleamed. 
G to the flying moon by fits. . Miller's D. . 116 

We parted : sweetly f" the stars. . The Letters 41 
sweetly £■ her eyes behind her tears Vivien . 252 

g a vague suspicion in his eyes : . Elaine . 128 
A bill of sale f thro' the drizzle) . En. Arden . 689 
g a kindlier hope On Enoch ... . 834 

now we lust her, now she^ - . . The Voyage 65 

glean. 
And g your scattcrM sapience.' . Princess, ii. 241 

glebe. 
Flood with full daylight fand town? Two Voices 87 
horn-handed breakers of the g, . Princess, ii. 143 
the labourer tills His wonted g, . In Mem. c. 22 
Sons of the g, with other frowns . Aylmer's F. 723 

glee mirth.) 
the tyrant's cruel g Forces on the Vision 0/ Sin 129 

glee (part-music.) 
Again the feast, the speech, the g, In Mem. Con. ios 

Clem. 
the white mouth of the violent G; Elaine . 288 

glen. 
runlets babbling down theg. Mariana intheS.44 
vapour slopes athwart the^-, . iEiioue . 3 

the piney sides Of this long g. . tt . 92 

the fragments tumbled from the ffs, 11 . 218 

from the darken'd.f, Saw God divide D. o/F. fVom.334 
watch me from the g below. ' Move eastward,' etc. 8 
And snared the squirrel of the g?. Princess, ii. 231 
let us hear the purple g's replying : n iii. 358 
g's are drown'd in azure gloom . 11 iv. 504 

Follow' d up in valley and g . Ode on Well. 114 

a g, gray boulder and black tarn. . Elaine . 37 
they fell and made the g abhorr'd : » .43 

glide 
g a sunbeam by the blasted Pine, . Princess, vii. 181 
g, I. ike a beam of the seventh Heaven, Maud. I.xiv. 20 
shadow still wouhl.cfroni room toroom. Gui'tez'ere$oo 
would she g between your wraths, Aylmer's F. 706 
broad water sweetly slowly g's. . Reguiescat . 2 
glided. 

Cthro' all change Of liveliest . D. of F.Wom.ifj 

ut mute she g forth, . . . Princess, vii. 155 



IuO 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

We g under winding ranks Of iris, In Mem. cii. 23 
Then g out of the joyous wood . Maud, II. i. 31 
£-out Among the heavy breathings Enid . 1250 

rose Elaine and g thro' the fields, . Elaine . 839 

gliding. 
ghost-like to and fro G, . . Elaine , 846 

glimmer (s. ) 
tearful g of the languid dawn . D. o/F. Worn. 74 
Across a hazy g of the west . . Gardener' sD.2.t.\ 
in a wintry wind by a ghastly^, . Maud, I. ill- 13 
gloss of satin and g of pearls, . 11 xxii. 34 

the old mysterious g steals . . Tithonus . 55 

glimmer (verb. ) 

A third would g on her neck . Talking O. . 221 

My college friendships g. . . Will Water, 40 

G in thy rheumy eyes. . . . Vision of Sin 154 

like a ghost she g's on to me. . Princess, vii. 166 

Shall g on the dewy decks. . . In Mem. ix. 12 

Thy tablet g's to the dawn. . . ir Ixvi. 16 

by a red rock, g's the Hall ; . . Maud, I. iv. 10 

G away to the lonely deep . To F.D. Maurice 28 

glijnmered. 
Old faces g thro' the doors, . . Mariana . 66 
April's crescent g cold, ' . . Miller's D. . 107 
Her taper^ in the lake below : . Ed. Morris . 135 
The white kine^-, and the trees In Mem. xciv. 15, 51 
g on his armour in the room. . Enid . 1235 

In Arthur's casement £- chastely down, Vivien . 590 

glimmering (part. ) 
Came g thro' the laurels . . Maud, II. iv. 77 

glimmering (s.) 
greenish £•'£ thro' the lancets, — . Aylmer's F. 622 

glimpse (s.) 
For some blind g of freedom . LoveaudDuty 6 

Like g's of forgotten dreams — . Two Voices . 381 
Yet g's of the true. . . . Will Water. 60 

The shimmering g's of a stream ; . Princess, Con. 46 
Last year, I caught a.g of his face, Maud, I. 13 27 
never had a g of mine untruth, . Elaine . 126 

g of that dark world where I was Tithonus . 33 
never a g of her window-pane ! . T/i? Window 108 

glijnpse (verb.) 
lift the hidden ore That g' s, . . D. of F.JVom. 275 

glimpsing, 
gover these, just seen, . . . Day-Dm. . 67 

glisten (s.) 
oft we saw the g Of ice, . . Tlie Daisy . 35 

glisten (verb.) 
O listen, listen, your eyes shall g . Sea-Fairies 35 
dews Began to g and to fall : . Princess, ii. 296 

glistened. 
torrent ever pour'd And g — . . To E. L. . 14 
His eyes g: she fancied ' is it for Elaine . 818 

glistening. 

Were g to the breezy blue ; . . Miller's D. . 61 

glitter. 

G like a swarm of fire-flies . " LocksleyH. 10 

His mantle g's on the rocks — . Day-Dm. . 106 

Began to £- firefly-like in copse . Princess, i. 205 

g burnish'd by the frosty dark ; . ir v. 251 

glittered. 
The gemmy bridle g free, . L.ofShalott, iii. 10 
Large Hesper^on her tears,. Mariana in the S. 90 
long hall g like a bed of flowers. . Princess, ii. 416 
city g Thro' cypress avenues, . Tlie Daisy . 47 

glittering. 
Gold g thro' lamplight dim, . . Arabian N 's. 18 
the first beam g on a sail, . . Princess, iv. 26 
eyes and neck g went and came ; Vivie?i . 809 

Whom g in enamell'd arms the maid Elaine . 616 

globe. 
circles of the g's Of her keen eyes The Poet . 43 
Thro' the shadow of thug we sweep Locksley H. 183 



POEM. LINE. 

spirit should fail from off the g; luMem.lxxxiii. 36 
As thro' the slumber of the g . The Voyage 23 

globed. 
stars that g themselves in Heaven, En. Arden . 598 

gloom (s.) 
Flinging the g of yesternight . Ode to Mem. 9 
over-vaulted grateful g, . . Pal. of Art. 54 

Floods all the deep-blue g . . D.ofF.lVom.i&6 
motion toiling in the g — ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 54 
her perfect features in the g, . Gardener's D.iji 

The g of ten Decembers. . . Will Water. 104 
shoulder under £■ Of cavern pillars ; To E. L. . i-j 
Dropt thro' the ambrosial g . . Princess, iv. 6 
Out I sprang from glow to g : . 11 . 160 

moving thro' the uncertain g, . tt . 197 

all the glens are drown'd in azure g 11 . 504 

touch thy thousand years of g: . In Mem. ii. 12 
Thro' all its intervital g . . tr xlii. 3 
When on the g I strive to paint . tt lxix. 2 
Recalls, in change of light or g, . tt lxxxiv. 74 
rollest from the gorgeous g . . tt lxxxv. 2 
suck'd from out the distant £• . it xciv. 53 
touch'd with no ascetic^; . . it cviii. 10 
iron dug from central g, u cxvii. 21 

yearn'd to burst the folded g, . tt cxxi. 3 
With tender g the roof, the wall ; if Con. 118 

star-sweet on a g profound . . Maud, 1. in. 4 
laying his trams in a poison'd g . 11 x. 8 

Set in the heart of the carven g, . it x'w. 11 
in the fragrant £■ Of foreign churches — 11 xix. 53 
The height, the space, the g, . The Daisy . 59 

The g that saddens Heaven and Earth, 11 . 102 

Commingledwith the^of imminent Ded.o' Idylls, 12 
a g of stubborn-shafted oaks, . Enid . . 969 

thro' the green g of the wood . 11 . 1044 

That three-days-long presageful g Vivien . 169 
shone white-listed thro' the g. it 788 

in change of glare and g Her eyes 11 . . 808 
sallow-rifted^ Of evening . . Elaine . 996 

lying thus inactive, doubt and£-. . En. Arden . 113 
the drizzle grew, deeper the g; . tt . 680 

To find a deeper in the narrow £- . Aylmer's F. 840 
cheek begins to redden thro' the g, Tithonus . 37 
from utters stood out the breasts, Eucretius . 60 

gloom (verb. ) 
There g the dark broad seas. . Ulysses . 45 

I slip, I slide, I g, I glance, . . The Brook . 174 

gloomed. 

twilight g; and broader-grown the Princess, vii. 33 

black yew g the stagnant air, ■ . The Letters 2 

that, which lately g Your fancy . Vivien . 174 

G the low coast and quivering brine The Voyage 42 

glooming. 
while the balmy g, crescent-lit, . Gardeuer'sD.2^ 

glorify. 
fountains of the past, To^the present; Ode to Mem. 3 

glorifying. 
sparkles on a sty, G clown and satyr; Princess, v. 179 

glorious. 
So g in his beauty and thy choice, Tithonus . 12 

glory. 
In marvel whence that g came . A rabian ATs. 94 
' G to God,' she sang, and past afar, D.ofF. Worn. 242 
long glories of the winter moon. . M.d' Arthur 192 
God's g smote him on the face.' . Two Voices 225 
down dark tides the g slides, . Sir Galahad 47 

o'er the dark a g spreads, . it .55 

as they are, But thro' a kind of g. Will Water. 72 
dropsat Crtemple-gates ' Voumighthavewon,'elc.3$ 
redound Of use and g to yourselves Princess, ii. 29 
wild cataract leaps in g. it iii. 351 

Like a Saint's g up in heaven : 11 v. 503 

win A g from its being far ; . . InMem.xxW. 14 
There comes a g on the walls : . 11 lxvi. 4 

The mystic g swims away ; it .9 

He reach'd the ^" of a hand, . . tt lxviii. 27 



TENNYSO-VS WORKS. 



169 



POEM. LINE. 

Vhc g of the sum of things . In Mem.ixxxv'd. 11 
r.ttnuutes of woe hike glories . 11 c.wii. 19 

■ id dimmer, and a g done : . 11 cxx. 4 

man of science himself is fonder off, Maud, 1. iv. 37 

A g I shall not find v. 22 

glance At Maud in all her g. . 11 xx. 37 

true lover may see Your g also, u • 4<> 

£ of manhood stand on his ancient m III. vi. 21 

1 duty was the way to g: Ode on Well. 202-10-24 
height, the space, the gloom, the g .' The-Daisy . 59 

-;an their g fade t . . Lt. Brigade 50 

fwas, redressing human wrong ; . Ded. 0/ Idylls 8 
orgetful of his £■ and his name, . Enid . . 53 
\nd all its dangerous glories: 11 . . £04 

ing that her g would be great Vivien . C6 

crying I have made his g mine,' . ti . . 820 
pretext, O my knight, As alt for g: Elaine . 154 

No keener hunter after g breathes, it . . 156 
need to speak Of Lancelot in his g: u . . 463 
Lancelot, and a g one with theirs. 11 . . 477 
spake of, all for gain Ofg, . .11. . 566 
pretext, as for gain Of purer g.' 11 586 

: > have loved One peerless, 11 . 1084 

Born to the g of thy name . u 1363 

glows And glories of the broad belt En. Arden . 580 
between the less And greater £■ . Aytmer's F. 73 

^Ut glories of the world, . The Voyage 83 
Thine the liberty, thine the g, . Boiidicea . 41 
Yet he hoped to purchase £■, . . TIte Captain 17 
Cof warrior, g of orator, g of song, Wages . 1 
C of Virtue, to fight, to struggle, . 11 . ,3 
sim'd not at g, no lover of g she : . 11 . .4 

her the g of going on, . 11 .5 

Thy^-lly along the Italian field, .Lucretius . 71 

glory-crown d. 
Hi: own vast shadow g-c; . . InMem. xcvi. 3 

glorying. 
upon the bridge of war Sat g; 

gloss. 
of the flowers Stole all the golden g Gardener" 'sD. 1 29 
darkness keep her raven g: . . in Mem. i. . 10 
merge' he said 'in form and g . " lxxxviii. 41 
of satin and glimmer of pearls, . Maud. I. xxii. 55 
r In g and hue the chesilut, . The Brook 72,207 

glove. 
her empty g upon the tomb . 
Come sliding out of her sacred g, . 
fit tD wear your slipper for a g 
blots of it about them, ribbon, g , 



Spec. 0/ Iliad 10 



go 

haii 



Princess, iv. 573 

Mnud, 1. vi. 85 

Enid . 1471 
Aytmer's F. 620 

Eleanore . 55 

May Queen,\\\. 49 

Will Water. 194 

Princess, iv. 160 

In Mem. ii. 9 

11 xii. 10 

11 lxxxiii. 3 

Maud, I. xviii.78 

En. Arden . 579 

Aylmer's F. 411 

Tit linn us . 56 

. The Islet . 13 

glow (verb.) 

vines that g Beneath the battled D. o/F. IVom.ng 

■ -fchadowM arm Day- Dm. . 89 

the forest g's, Sir Galahad 27 

vorld, ' Move eastward,' etc. 5 

d ik 67 like a . . Princess, Pro. 105 

now her father 1 ! chimney g's . hvMem. vi. 29 

ure orl.its hca\ciily-wise ; . 11 lxxxvi. 37 

The wizard Ii , , ti cxxL 1 . 

felt my blood G with the glow . Tithonus . 56 

cltnv'd. 

broad clear brow in sunlight g; I,. o/Shalott, iii. 28 

liquid mirror g . Mariana, in th, 

1 look d at her. . I> o/F. Worn. 240 
b.f^re us a' I'ruit, blossom, . . Princess, iv. 16 



glow (s.) 
sunset fThat stays upon thee? 
the heavens arc in a.g: . 
et their native £ .* 
Out 1 sprang from g to gloom : 
not for thee the g, the bloom, 
reach the g of southern skies, 
fix my thoughts on all l]*eg . 
the g Of your soft splendours 
g's And glories of the broad belt 
kindlier g Faded with morning 
with the g that slowly crimson d 
With a satin sail of a ruby g, 



POEM. LINE. 

g like a ruddy shield . . . Maud, ill. vi. 14 
city Of little Monaco, basking, g. The Daisy . 8 
face G like the heart of a great tire En id . . 559 
G for a moment as we past. . . The Voyage 48 

glowing, 

g full-faced welcome, she Began . Princess, ii. 166 

g round her dewy eyes . . 11 iii. 10 

rose G all over noble shame ; . 11 vii. 143 

g like the moon Of iiden . . In Mem. Con. 27 

g on him, like a bride's . . Vivien . 4C6 

glow-worm. 

the g^w of the grave Glimmer . J r isionofSiu 153 

No bigger than a.g<u shone the . Princess, iv. 7 

Now poring on the g, now the . 11 . 193 

lapt in wreaths of g light , ti . <:j 

glutted, 
g all night long breast-deep in corn Princess, ii. ; '5 



luMem.xcv'u. 17 



gnarr. 
thousand wants G at the heels 

gnat. 
Not even of a g that sings. . . Day-Dm. . 41 
well could wish a cobweb for the g, Vivien . 220 
tiny-trumpeting g can break . Elaine . 130 

chased away the still-recurring g, Coquette, i. . 7 

gnawed, 
g his under, now his upper lip, . Enid . 1527 

gnawing. 
lays his foot upon it, G . . Enid . 1411 

fo (see come and go.) 
goes round, (rep.) The Owl, i. 4 
A weary, weary way I g, . . Oriana . Co 
up and down the people g, . . L. o/Shalott, i. 6 
Goes by to tower'd Camelot ; . " ii. 23 

dry and dewlcss. Let us^f. . Miller's D. 246 

will rise ami g Down into 1'roy, . (Enone . 257 

let the foolish yeoman g. . L.C. V. deVere 72 
Little Effie shall g with me . May Queen, i. 25 

forgive me ere lg; . . . " ii. 34 

than life to me that long to g. . 11 iii. C 

seem'd to g right up to Heaven . 11 . e t o 

way my soul will have to g. . " • •:- 

care not if I g to-day. ... » • 43 

veils of thinnest lawn, did g; . Lotos-E"s. . 11 
Old year, you must not.f ; ;rep.) D.o/theO. Yearly 
I charge thee, quickly g again . M. d' Arthur 79 
my lord Arthur, whither shall \g? 11 . 227 

I, the last, g forth companionlcss 11 . 236 

these thou scest — if indeed I g — . " . 237 

g you hence, and never see me . Dora . . 58 
will g. And I will have my boy, 11 119 

I g to-night : I come to-morrow . Audley Ct. . 69 
I g, but I return : I would I were n . 70 

let him g; his devil goes with him, Walk, to/A 
G ? (shrilled the cottonspinning cboruaJiit.Morris 122 
'G! — Girl, get you in 1 ' . . n . 1 . 1 

Power goes forth from me. . . St S.Styli/es 143 
G to him: it is thy duty: . . Lockslcy II. 53 
roaring seaward, and I g. " • '94 

G, vexed Spirit, sleep in trust ; . Two Voices 115 
[ will g forward, sayest thou, . " . 10° 

I g, weak from suffering here ; . 11 . 238 

Naked I g, and void of cheer: . 11 . 239 

breath to heaven like vapour goes:. St . Agnes' Pre 3 
down the stormy crescent goes, . Sir Galahad 25 
Thro' dreaming towns lg, • ■ " ■ 5° 

Love may came, and love may g, . Ed. Gray . 29 
And all the worlds by them. . Hill Hater. 48 
But whither would my fancy gt ■ " • '45 

' lis gone, and let it (.'.••• " • '"° 

G, therefore, thou ! thy betters went 11 . 18s 

C down among the pots ; . . •■ . 220 

bl me, mother, ere I go.' . . Lady Clare 56 
So she jfo« by him attended, . L. qfBttrl 
1 fl her thirst she slakes . V, ision oSSim 143 

But thou, £ by I . .'Com* not, when, eh 6, la 
o, happy planet, eastward e; ' Move eastward,' Stt 4 



170 



CONCORDANCE TO 



And the stately ships g on 
I spoke. ' My father, let me . 



POEM. LINE. 

' Break, break? etc. 9 
. Princess) i. 67 



against all rules Forany man to g: 11 . 177 

I shudder at the sequel, but I g.' . it ii. 218 

'Thanks, ' she answered ( g: we have if . 336 

turn'd to g, but Cyril took the child if . 341 

the bell For dinner, let us gl ' . 11 . 411 

Over the rolling waters ,f, if . 460 

goes to inform The Princess : - ?r iii. 46 

heal me with yourpardon ere youg.' it . 49 

I must^"." I dare not tarry' . it . 79 

Would we g with her? we should find it ^ . 155 

goes, like glittering bergs of ice, . it iv. 53 

oath is broken ; we dismiss you : g. it . 341 

' Stand.who^t?.??' 'Two from the palace'tr v. 3 

G: Cyril told us all.' ... ti -35 

will take her up and g my way, . 11 -99 

smoke g up thro' which 1 loom to her ti . 124 

so much as gave us leave to^-. . it . 225 

* All good g with thee ! take it Sir' n vi. 190 

I g to mine own land For ever : . 11 . 199 

I g to plant it on his tomb, . In Mem. viii. 22 

Like her I g ; I cannot stay ; . if xii, 5 

Week after week : the days g by: ir xvii. 7 

path by which we twain did g, . » xxii. 1 

Vet^-, and while the holly boughs if xxix. 9 

G down beside thy native rill, . iixxxvii. 5 

look thy look, and g thy way, . it xlviii. 9 

I care for nothing, all shall g. . if lv. 4 

let us g. Come ; let us^: . . ir lvi. 4 

Will flash along the chords and^". 1 iixxxvii. 12 

g By summer belts of wheat and vine if xcvii. 4 

We g, but ere we g from home, . ir ci. 3 

I turn tog : my feet are set , h .21 

when they learnt that I must g . ti cli. 17 

'Enter likewise ye And g with us :' » . 52 

The year is going, let him g; . ir cv. 7 

clouds they shape themselves and g. if cxxii. 8 

they must^, the time draws on, . 11 Con. 



ttlll.vi. 38 

The Brook . 13 
11 33> e t pass. 
34 et pass. 



Veil. 



nine months g to the shaping an infant M^aud, Li v. 

G not, happy day, ... v xvii. 

G in and out as if at merry play, . it xviii. 

It is but for a little space \g: . n 

brief night goes In babble and revel ti xxii. 

me and my passionate love g by, . m II, ii. 

me and my harmful love g by ; v 

And the wheels £* over my head, 

Let it g or stay, so I wake . 

such a time as goes before the leaf, 

men may come and men may^, 

But I g on for ever. ir 

Let the long long procession^, . Ode on 

in, ^in ; for save yourself desire it, Enid 

wheel we gnot up or down ; . 11 

G to the town and buy us flesh . it 

G thou to rest, but ere thou g to rest 11 

Ymo\ goes, and I full oft shall dream ti 

* I will g back a little to my lord, if 
into no Earl's palace will I g. . 11 
love that beauty should ^beautifully if 

* Yea,' said Enid, ' let us g.' . if 
' If you will not g To Arthur, then 11 
I will weed this land before I g. 11 
not worth the keeping : let it g: . Vivien 
let his wisdom g For ease of heart, 11 
reckon worth the taking? I will g. 11 
Why g you not to these fair jousts 1 Elaine 
hear my words : g to the jousts : . 11 
g down before your spear at a touch tt 
hide it therefore ; ^ unknown : . ti 
since I g to joust as one unknown 11 
so sullen, vext he could notg: . ti 
own side she felt the sharp lance g; ti 
shall g no more On quest of mine, it 
Being so very wilful you must^.' if 
your wish, Seeing I must g to-day : ' ti 
what force is yours to g, So far, . ti 
I g in state to court, to meet the n 
dumb old man alone G with me, ti 
let the younger and unskill'd g by 11 
Now — ere he goes to the great Battle ? Guinevere 645 



15 
- 310 

• 35i 

• 372 
. 512 
. 75i 
. 914 

1084 
1529-32 

1599 
1662 
1755 
. 246 
. 741 
. 766 

• 99 
. i37 
. 149 

• 151 
. 190 
. 210 
. 621 
. 712 

773-7 
. 921 
1057 
1118 
1122 
1352 



FOEM. LINE. 

used Enoch at times to g by land En. A rde?i . 104 
yet a boatswain. Would he^? . 11 . 123 

g This voyage more than once? . ti . 141 

her or his dear children, not to g. tt . 164 

come, cheer up before I g* . ?r . 200 

everything shipshape, for I must g. tt . 220 

Can I g from Him? ... it . 225 

wherefore did he g this weary way, 11 . 295 

Annie's children longM To^with others tt . 360 

Annie would g with them ; if . 361 

children pluck' d at him to g, . if . 366 

' See your bairns before you g! . " . 871 

would g, Labour for his own Edith, Aylmer'sF. 419 
' Let not the sun g down upon . Sea Dreams 44 
Patter she goes, my own little Annie, Grandmother 78 
I, too, shall g in a minute. . 11 104 

Let me^: take back thy gift : . Tithonns . 27 
O whither love shall we g, . . The Islet . 1,5 
O thither, love, let us g.' . 11 .24 

mock me not ! love, let us g.' . m 30 

that deep grave to which I g: ' My life is full' etc. 7 
if I g my work is left Unfinish'd — 

if\g. . . . . . Lucretius . 103 

man may gain Letting his own life^-. if . 113 

Shall I write to her? shall I g? . The Window 90 
west wind and the world will g on. n 111,-17-23 

goad. 
prick'd with g's and stings ; . . Pal. of Art 150 
His own thought drove him like ag. MI. d 'Arthur 185 

goal. 

Making for one sure^-. . . Pal. of Art 248 

progress falter to the woman's ^.' Princess, vi. in 

moves with him to one g, it vii. 247 

good Will be the finals of ill, . In Mem. liii. 2 

Touch thy dull g of joyless gray, it lxxi. 27 

Arrive at last the blessed £- . . ti Ixxxiii. 41 

earnest to thy g So early, . . ti cxiii. 23 

pass beyond the g of ordinance, . Tithouus . 30 

goat. 
Leading a jet-black ^white-horn d, CEnone . 50 
men better than sheep ox g's . M. d 3 Arthur 250 

Catch the wild g by the hair . Locksley H. 170 

beard-blown g Hang on the shaft, Princess, iv. 60 
no more thanks than might ag . Vivien . 127 

goatfoot. 
Catch her, g: nay, Hide, hide them, Lucretius 200 

goatskin. 
wear an undress'd g on my back ; StS. Stylites 114 

go-Between. 

To play their g-b as heretofore . Aylmer'sF. 523 

goblin. 
did but come asg's in the night, . Princess, v. 211 

go-cart. 

is but a child Yet in the g-c. 



Princess, Con. 70 



God. 



G gave her peace ; her land reposed ; To the Queen 26 
thou of G in thy great charity) . Isabel . . 40 
not the^-V More purely, . . A Character 13 
G's great gift of speech abused . A Dirge . 44 
Half G's good sabbath, . . .ToJ.M.K.^ 11 
G in his mercy lend her grace, L.ofShaloti,W. 53 
Would G renew me from my birth Aimer's D. . 27 
But that G bless thee, dear — . it . 235 

about his temples like a G's ; . CEnone . 59 

all the full-faced presence of the G's it -78 

see thy Paris judge of G's.' . . if .88 

the G's Rise up for reverence. it . 107 

likest ^-'.s-, who have attained Rest . h . . 128 
strike within thy pulses, like a G's, u . . 159 
presence, hated both of G's and men. 11 . . 225 

Moulded by G, and To -With Pal. of Art 1% 

My G's, with whom I dwell ! . Pal. of Art 196 

as G holding no form of creed, . n . 211 

G, before whom ever lie bare . 11 . 222 

exiled from eternal G, . it . 263 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



171 



POEM. LINE. 

To lie within the light of c7, . . MaxQueen t m. 59 
The G's are hard to reconcile : . Lotos-E's. . 126 
On the hills like G's together, . it . 155 

A daughter of them's, divinely tall, D.o/F. Worn. 87 
we sat as G by G : . ... \t 142 

My G s my land, my father — . ir . 209 

Saw G divide the night . it 225 

to die For G and for my sire ! 11 232 

1 Glory to G,' she sang, and past afar, 11 . 242 

G gives us love To J. S. . 13 

not say ' G's ordinance Of Death tt . 45 

G forget the stranger !' . . . The Goose . 56 

G knows: he has a mint of reasons: The Epic . 33 

G fulfils himself in many ways, . M. d' Arthur 241 

knowing G, they lift not hands of 11 . 252 

by gold chains about the feet of G. it . 255 

Breath'd, like the covenant of a G, Gardener 'sD '.204 

broke out in praise To G, . . Dora . .111 

* G bless him !' he said, 'and may he ti . . 146 

May G forgive me ! — I have been it . . 158 

G made the woman for the man, Ed. Morris 43, 50,91 

was a G, and is a lawyer's clerk, . it . 102 

just, dreadful, mighty G, . . StS.Stylites 9 

had not stinted practice, O my G. tt . 58 

in your looking you may kneel to G. n . 139 

G reaps a harvest in me (rep.) . 11 . 146 

G hath now Sponged and made blank tt . 155 

G only thro' his bounty hath thought it . 183 

a priest, a man of G, Among you . h .211 

for a man is not as G, . . Love andDirfy y> 

Glove us, as if the seedsman, rapt Golden Year 6g 

Meetadorationto my household,^, Ulysses . 42 

unbecoming men that strove with G's. it -53 

Would to G — for I had loved thee Locksley H. 64 

G's glory smote him on the face. . Two Voices 225 

On to Gs house the people prest : ti . 409 

Ah, blessed vision ! blood of G I . Sir Galahad 45 

just and faithful knight of G I . 11 

Sipt wine from silver, praising G, . Will Water. 

broad-limb'd Gs at random thrown To E. L. 

Gs blessing on the day .' . . Lady Clare 

G be thank'd ! ' said Alice the nurse, ti 

'As Gs above,' said Alice the nurse, 11 

G made himself an awful rose of Vision oj Sin 50-224 

Lo ! Gs likeness — the ground-plan — 11 

(G help her) she was wedded to a. fool; Princess, iii 

tho' your Prince's love were like a Gs, it 

old G of war himself were dead, . tt v. 

Interpreter between the G's and men tt vii. 

G bless the narrow sea . 

Strong Son of G, immortal Love, 

O mother, praying G will save 

The chalice of the grapes of G ; 

What then were G to such as I ? 

G shut the doorways of his head. 

Ye watch, like G, the rolling hours 

When G hath made the pile complete 

The likest G within the soul ? 

Are G and Nature then at strife, . 

slope thro' darkness up to G, 

Who trusted G was love indeed . 

In endless age? It rests with G . 

stay'd in peace with G and man : . 

Gs finger touch'd him, and he slept. 

G within him light his face, . 

With g's in unconjectur'd bliss, . 

Israel made their g's of gold, 

Where G and Nature met in light : 

mix'd with G and Nature thou, 

That friend of mine who lives in G, 

That G, which ever lives and loves, 

One G, one law, one element, 

O father ! O G ! was it well ?— 

ah G, as he used to rave. 

G grant I may find it at last ! 

how G will bring them about? 

Ah G, for a man with heart, . 

May G make me more wretched 

Arise, my G, and strike, 

as long, O G y as she Have a grain 

Britain's one sole G be the millionaire : it III. 



°7 

- 231 

v. 139 

vu. 303 

Con. 51,70 

InMem.Pro. 1 

tt vi. 13 

11 x. 16 

9 

4 

14 

8 

4 

5 

16 



XXX IV. 

xliii. 

1. 

liii. 

liv. 



lv. 

lxxii. 

lxxix. 

lxxxiv. 

lxxxiv. 

xcii. 

xcv. 

ex. 

exxix. 

Con. 



Maud, I. 



XIX. 

II. i. 



36 



2 3 



POEM. 

Gs just wrath shall be wreak'd Maud, III 

I embrace the purpose of G, . rr 

ours, O G, from brute control ; . Ode on Well. 

palter'd with Eternal G for power ; 11 

our G himself is moon and sun. . u 

On G and Godlike men we build . n 

G accept him, Christ receive him. v 

Dear to the man that is dearto G ; To F. D.Maurice 36 

Gs love set Thee at his side again \ Ded. of Idylls, 53 



LINE. 
45 

59 
159 
180 
217 
266 
281 



by Gs grace, is the one voice for me.' Enid 
by G's rood is the one maid for me,' 11 
Who knows? another gift of the high G, 11 
I know, c7knows,too much of palaces! ti 
Gs curse, it makes me mad tt 

hot, Gs curse, with anger — . ti 

Yea, G, I pray you of your gentleness, 11 
by Gs rood, I trusted you too much.' Vivien 
love of G and men And noble deeds, ?t 
Her G, her Merlin, the one passionate 11 
Gs mercy what a stroke was there ! Elaine 
G Broke the strong lance, . . 11 
the land Hereafter, which G hinder.' rr 
his own word, As if it were his Gs V \\ 
G wot, his shield is blank enough. ir 
the fire of G Fills him : it 

Rapt on his face as if it were a Gs. 11 
for Gs love, a little air ! . . 11 
1 Yea, by Gs death,' said he, ' you love » 
having loved Gs best And greatest, ti 
would to G, For the wild people say it 
may G, I pray him, send a sudden " 
those whom G had made full-limbed Guinevere 
Would G, that thou could'st hide 11 

I guard as Gs high gift . . 11 

Lo ! I forgive thee, as Eternal G 11 

We two may meet before high G, it 

in the heavens Before high G. . it 

my G, What might I not have made 11 
this voyage by the grace of G . En. Ardeu 
G bless him, he shall sit upon my n 

Cast all your cares on G; . . it 

might be still as happy as G grants tt 
have been as Gs good angel . ti 

G bless you for it, G reward you . n 

for G's sake,' he answer'd, 'both our ti 
he read Gs warning 'wait.' . . tr 

G Almighty, blessed Saviour, . tt 
' My G has bow'd me down . . 11 
that almighty man, The county G — Aylmer^s F. 
sons of men Daughters of G ; . ir 
' Bless, G bless 'em: marriages are made it 
all but those who knew the living G — rr 
coarse and blockish G of acreage . n 
Thy G is far diffused in noble groves 11 
shape dost thou behold thy G. 
Prince of Peace, the Mighty G, 
* O pray G that he hold up' 
rushing tempest of the wrath of G 
made Their own traditions G, 
neither G nor man can well forgive Sea-Dreams 
never naming G except for gain, 

1 wish'd it had been Gs will . 
G, not man, is the Judge of us 
thank G that I keep my eyes, 
great heart none other than a G ! 
Gs themselves cannot recall their 
G help me ! save I take my part 
Hear it, Gs ! the Gs have heard it 
Doubt not ye the Gs have . 
thine the battle-thunder of G' 
Imitates G, and turns her face 
Virtue, like a household g. . 
Gs are moved against the land.' 
holy Gs, they must be appeased, 
Gs y he said, ' would have chosen 
The Gs have answered : 
ye holy Gs, what dreams ! . 
aught they fable of the quiet Gs. 
Rather, O ye Gs, Poet-like . 
appear the work of mighty Gs. 
The Gs I and if I go viy work 



344 
368 
821 
1085 
1464 
1509 
3553 
226 
262 



• 67 

• MS 

• 197 

• 315 

• 355 

• 5°4 
. 676 

1087 
1355 
.1413 
■ 43 

• "7 

• 490 

• 540 
. 560 

• 631 

• 647 
. 190 

• 197 
. 223 

• 413 
. / r co 
. 421 

• 5°5 

• 572 

• 783 
857 

14 
45 
188 

637 
651 

6 53 
657 
669 

733 
757 
795 
6n 



Grandmother 



3 
95 
ic6 



Tit/wnits 

11 
Sailor Boy . 
Boadicea 



11 . 44 

On a Mourner 2 



The Victim 



L ucretius 



3° 
6 

49 
62 
83 
33 
55 
92 
102 
103 



172 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

The Gs, who haunt The lucid . Lucretius . 104 
The G's, the G's! If all be atoms, how 

then should the G's Being atomic 11 . 113 

My master held That G's there are, n .117 

G's there are, and deathless. . 11 . 121 

another of our G's, the Sun, . u . 124 

quit the post Allotted by the Gs: 11 . 149 

he that holds The G's are careless, 11 . 150 

Picus and Faunus, rustic Gs ? . it . 182 

O ye G's, I know you careless, . 11 , 204 

godamoigh ty. 
g an' parson 'ud nobbut let ma . N. Farmer 43 
Do ^"knaw what a's doing . 11 - 45 

gz. moost taake mea ... 11 -5* 

God-bless-you. 
Sneeze out a full G-b-y right and . Ed. Morris So 
Gript my hand hard, and with G-b-y Sea Dreams 156 
A curse in his G-b-y : tr . 160 

goddess. 
presented Maid Or Nymph, or G, Princess, i. 194 
if thou can'st, O G, like ourselves Lucretius . 80 

God-father. 
G-f, come and see your boy : ToF. D. Maurice 2 

God-fearing. 
Altho' a grave and staid Gfma.n . En. Arden . 112 
Enoch as a brave G-f man ir . 185 

God-gifted. 
G-g organ-voice of England, . Milton . 3 

God-in-man. 
G-i-m is one with man-in-God, . En. Arde?z . 187 

Godiva. 
G, wife to that grim Earl, 



. Godiva 



Godless. 
tumbled in the G deep ; . . In Mem. cxxiii.12 
craft of kindred and the Ghosts . Guinevere . 424 

Godlike. 
then most G being most a man. . Lovea?idD?ity 31 
Together, dwarf 'd or g, bond or . Princess, vii. 244 

goest. 
whither £" thou, tell me where?' . Day-Din. . 190 

going (part.) see coining and going. 

heard the steeds to battle £•, . . Oriajia . 15 

I am g a long way With these . M. d' Arthur 256 

They by parks and lodges^" . L.of Burleigh 17 

thinner, clearer, farther £• . . Princess, hi. 355 

The year is g, let him go ; . In Mem. cv. 7 

g to the king, He made this . . E?iid . . 32 

bent he seem'd on g the third day, it . 604-25 

Enid in their g had two fears, . n . 1665 

* G ? and we shall never see you . Elaine . 922 

of an avenue, G we know not . Eji. Arden . 356 

On a day when they were^f . The Cafitai?i 25 

G before to some far shrine, . . 0?i a Mourner 17 

Give her the glory of £■ on, . . Wages . 5 

Give her the wages oi g on, n .10 

going out. 
Narrow* d her^-\? and comings in; Aylmer's F. 501 

gold (see cloth of gold.) 
laws of marriage character'd mg Isabel . . 16 
Bagdat's shrines of fretted^, . Arabian N's. 7 

G glittering thro' lamplight dim, . tr .18 

royal frame-work of wrought^,* . Ode to Mem. 82 
grew A flower all g, The Poet . 24 

bosoms prest To little harps of g; . Sea-Fairies 4 
with cymbals, and harps of g, . Dying Swan 32 
With a crown of g On a throne ? . The Mer?nan 6 
I should look like a fountain oi g . The Mermaid iB 
Slowly, as from a cloud of g, . Elea?iore . 73 

a fruit of pure Hesperian £-, . GZnone . 65 

Brow-bound with burning^-. D.ofF. Worn. 128 

from lust of^, or like a girl . . M. d* Arthur z^j 
Three Queens with crowns of g — 11 . 198 

Cursed be the g that gilds the . Locksley H. 62 
Every door is barred with g, . 11 . 100 



POEM. I.INZ. 

purple blazon'd with armorial g. . Godiva . 52 
Pull off, pull off, the broach of g, . Lady Clare 39 
silken hood to each, And zoned with g; Princess, il. 4 
furrowing all the orient into g. . tr iii. 2 

viand, amber wine, and g. . . u iv. 17 

gemlike eyes, And g and golden heads; tr . 460 

all the g That veins the world . it . 521 

single band of ^about her hair . tr v. 502 

twinkle into green and g: . . In Mem.' xi. 8 
Israel made their gods of^", . tr xcv. 23 

Ring out the narrowing lust of g; 11 cv. 26 

flying o-oftheruin'd woodlands . Maud, I. i. 12 
left his coal all turn'dinto^ - . tr x. 11 

lost for a little her lust of g, . u Ill.vi. 39 

Under the cross of g . . . Ode on Well 49 
Whose crying is a cry for^-.* . The Daisy . 94 
swung an apple of the purest g. . Enid . . 170 
Affirming that his father left him g, tr . . 451 
All branch'd and flower' d with g, . tr . . 631 
fish at all Let them be g; . tr . 670 

strown With g and scatter' d coinage, it . . 875 
A twist of g was round her hair ; . Vivien . 70 

The snake of g slid from her hair, 11 . 737 

down his robe the dragon writhed in^-, Elaine . 434 
azure lions, crown'd with g, . tr 660 

a manelike mass of rollings, . Aylmer's F. 68 
g that branch'd itself Fine as ice-ferns it . 221 

the baits Of g and beauty, tt . 487 

heaps of livings that daily grow, tt . 655 

Not by the temple but the g, . w . 794 

a gulf of ruin, swallowing g, . Sea Dreams 79 

longreef of g, Or what seem'd^ - : it . 123 

Still so much g was left ; . . tt . 126 

Wreck'd on a reef of visionary g* tt . 135 

then shall I know it is all true g . The Ringlet 7 
I that took you for true g, . ir 32 

face was ruddy, his hair wasg, . The Victim 36 
And you with g for hair. . . The Window 65 
you my wren with a crown of g, . 11 . So 

golden. 
Grow g all about the sky; . . Eleanore . 101 
£■ round her lucid throat . . CEnone . 174 

iron laws, in the end Founder . Princess, iv. 58 

Golden Fleece. 
met the bailiff at the G F, . . The Brook . 146 

golden-gay. 
your ringlets, That look so g-g, . The Ringlet 2, 14 
O Ringlet, You still are _£--£-, . 11 .28 

golden-hilted. 
Nor weapon, save a g-h brand, . Enid . . 1C6 

golden-netted. 
heart entanglest In a g-n smile ; . Madeline . 41 

golden-ra tied. 
The light aerial gallery, g-r, . Pal. of Art 47 

golden-rinded. 
with fruitage g-r On golden salvers, Eleanore . 33 

golden -sh of ted. 
The Head of all the g-s firm, . Princess, ii. 383 

gold-eyed. 
The g-e kingcups fine ; . . A Dirge . 36 

gold-fringed. 
upswells The g-f pillow light] y prest, Day-Dm. 98 

gold-green. 
Flush'd all the leaves with richg-g, A rabian N's. 82 

gold-lily. 
While the g-l blows, . . . Ed. Morns . 146 

gold-mine. 
from the deep G-m's of thought D. ofF. Worn. 274 

gone. 
Life and Thought have g away . Deserted H. 1 
now those vivid hours are g, . Miller's D. . 195 

when I'm g, to train the rose-bush MayQ?teen,'n. 47 
Alack! our friend is g. . . D.oJ 'the O. Year 47 
honour had from Christmas G, Org, The Epic . 7 



TEXXY.SO.VS WORKS. 



173 



POEM. LINK 

M.d' Arthur 163 

Dora . 60-8, 92 
» .75 

11 . . 147 

StS.Styhtes 99 



Two Voices 



'tis time that I were g. . 
for the sake of him that's g, . 
would have risen and g to him, 
The troubles I have g thro' ! ' 

. I cannot have g thro', 
Christ! "tag: 'tis here again , . .. . ^ ui 

household [gods, When I am g. Ulysses . 43 
spirit leaps within him to beg . Locks! ey If. 
I said, ' When I am g away, 

Hand bitter voice was g. . 
my pleasant hour, 'tis g, Tis,f, . 
a thousand such have siipt 
Well I know, when 1 am^, . 
you had?' to her, She told, perforce; Princess, iv. 310 

1 .C. . l 1 _ 15!JJ»_ »~ .u~ .. __^ 

2 :. ,J 

322 

4< 

4 



loo 

•I-' 1 

179 
181 

Vision of Sin 109 



/ra? ;Krt/«.-r. 



" VII. 

In Afem.viii. 
.' 11 xx. 

" xxix, 
11 xxxviiL 
11 Iv. 

11 Ixxxiv. 
11 civ. 

11 Con. 

Maud, I. i. 



xvi. 

xviii. 



xxn. 
11. i. 



The Brook 



found that you had^, Ridd'n to the 
many a plea -ant hour with her that's^* 
brook no further insult but are^.' 
Blanche had.v, but left Her child 
learns her g and far from home ; . 
' How good ! how kind ! and he \sg 
Old sisters of a day gby, 
My prospect and horizon g. . 

lusand types are g: 
Quite in the love of what hg, 

.let comes, but we are g. . 
Farewell, we kiss, and they are g. 
and slurring the days g by, . 
many a million of ages h.ive^ - 
In a moment they were g: . 
lately died, G to a blacker pit, 
some of the simple great onesg . 
a year who has g for a week: 
L-n are closed, and she is g. 
whole earth g nearer to the glow . 
half to the setting moon are g, 
1 ' my pulses beat — 

. and the heavens fall in a . 
our tithes in the days that are g, 
and these arc g, All g. . 
in coir. All areg. 

X who seem'd so great. — G; Ode on Well. 271 
We have 1 -st him : he is g: . . Ded. ofldyllsoi^ 
a prince whose manhood was all g, Enid . 

j all your force is g? 

the morning all the court were g. 11 : 
fourth part of the day was g t . 11 

man's love once g never returns. . 11 
gazed upon her blankly and g by : Vivien 
such a beard as youth g out . .11 . 
in a language that has long g by. . 11 
le year g, and on returning " 
ner g than suddenly she . Elaine 
Dow the trustful king is gV . .11. 
g sore wounded, and hath left his 11 
mean nothing : so then, get you g, 11 
from which her sleeve had g. 11 
ry shield was (,-; . . 11 

the ghostly in. in had come and g, 11 
1.' from out my heart,. . 11 

g he i 1 in war . . Guinevere 

fore ; and on again. 11 

i*tcning till those armed steps were g, 11 
v lord ! G thro' my sin . 11 

rd the King, My own true 11 

children— . En. Ardcn 
keep the house while he was g. . 11 

Lei;.'' . . 11 

' she thought 'he is happy, 11 
After he was g. The two remaining 11 
; but he was,?- 11 
I hen may she Icani 11 

1 ake, give her this, 11 

i mr after he was g, . Avlmcr's F. 234 
\\ illy, my eldest horn, is p, Grand'ntotlier 1, 8, 101 
1 lit to have r before him : 
all my children have g before me 

at things thai have long 1,' by. 

for an hour ; 
C for a minute, my son, 

me and g, 
<■■ : o till the end of the year 



• 59 
. 88 
. 156 

• ■■ I 
1:82 

• 17 

• 91 

• 524 

■ 558 

• 97 
. 102 

• 529 

• 772 

■ 976 

• 984 
1095 
mo 

. 190 

• 393 

• 579 

• 605 

. ( o J 

• 132 

. 140 

• 4S7 

. 498 
. 567 

• 695 

835 

8 19 



II 


'4 


II 


'•■• 


. II 


11 .-■ 


• II 

. The Window 


103 

14 


11 


J5 



G and the light g with her . 

G — flitted away, . 

G, and a cloud in my heart . 

grass will grow when I am g, 

when 1 am there and dead and g, 

Blow, then, blow, and when 1 am^, 



fOKM. LINT. 

Tile Winders 17 

• 3* 
11 . 40 

11 . no 

. 1.0 

. 122 

goo (g°-) 
Parson a comes an' a g's . . N. Farmer . 25 

good. 
WTOUght her people lasting.;,'; . To the Queen 24 
thro' life and death, thro' ^and ill, The Poet . 5 
if G, G only for its beauty To — . With Pal. of Art 8 
Beauty, G. and Knowledge are . n .10 

'Tis only noble to be g. . L.C. V.de Vert 54 

love the gleams of g ' Love thou thy land,' e, 
What ^-should follow this. . . M.d' Arthur 92 
waked with silence, grunted ' G !' 11 E/>. 4 

drowsy hours, dispensers of all g. Gardener's D.1S1 
the ,f and increase of the world. Ed. Morris 44, 51,92 
then why not ill for g? . Love and Duty 17 

all men's e Be each man's rule, . Golden Year 47 
them to the useful and tbeg. . i r lysses . 38 

not to lose the g of life — . . Two Voices 132 
said the voice, ' thy dream was g, 11 . 157 

Lean'd on him, faithful, gentle, g, 11 . 416 

' 1 see the end, and know the g.' . " . 432 

But for some true result of g . Will Water. 55 
I hold it g, g things should pass : ■■ . 205 

Wine is g for shrivell'd lips, . Vision of Sin 79 

Virtue! — to beg and just — . . 11 . in 

for the common g of womankind . Princess, ii. 192 
'G: Your oath is broken : . . 11 iv. 340 
all we would be, great and g.' . << ■ 576 

ourselves but half as g, as kind, . " v. 193 
'All ggo with thee I take it Sir' . n vi. 190 
Embrace her as my natural g; . In Mem. iii. 14 
what to me remains of g t . . >> vi. 42 
' Howgl how kind ! and he is gone n XX. 20 

all we met was fair and g, . . >• xxiii. 17 
If all was jf and fair we met, . 11 *x] v .- 5 

Her hands are quicker into g: . <• xxxiii. 10 
Knjoying each the other's g: . 11 xlvi. id 

Hold thou the g: define it well : . 11 lii. ?-■ 

g Will be the final goal of ill, . 11 liii. 1 

can but trust that g shall fall . n . IA 

If thou wilt have me wise and g, ■ 11 lviii. o 
see thee sitting crown'd with g, . 11 lxxxili. 5 
sang of what is wise and g . . " cii. 10 
The closing cycle rich in g. . . 11 civ. 2G 
King in the common love otg. . n cv. :.} 

High nature amorous of the g, . 11 cviii. 
Yet O ye mysteries of;', . 11 CXXvii. 3 

Behold, I dream a dream ofg, . 11 cwviii. 11 
grows For ever, and as fair as g, . •* Con. jj 
mother, who was so gentle oaagt Maua\\. vi. (7 
close on the promised g. . . 11 xviii. 6 
any man think : for the public g . " 11. v. 45 
blow by night, when the season h g, 11 . 7J 

It is better to fight for the g, . 11 III. vi. 57 

Who].; in himself, a common g. . Ode on Hell. :6 
needs must disobey him for his g. Enid . . 984 
what they long for, ,^-in friend or foe, 11 . 1724 

I hi . is in it, whatsoe'er of ill, . Elaine l» 1 

Right heavy am 1 ; for g she was 11 1 1 

my tears have brought me g: . Girintvcrt . 200 

Miriam Lane was jf and garrulous, En. Ardcn . 701 

never meant us anything but g. . » 

' G! my lady's kinsman ! g '.' . Aylmer's . 

sell her, these f parents, for her g. 1. . 483 

contriving their dearilaugliler's.i.- — 1. 

work together for the g Of those' .S'.v: Drtamt 154 

Good Fortune 
prosperously sail'd The ship ' CI',' En. Arden . 524 
by baffling winds, Like the G F . 11 . 6;o 

roadman, 

her small j- Shrinks in his arm-chair Princess, v. 443 

gootl.tnorrau'. 
Speaking a still g-m with her eyes. Elaine 10:7 



174 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

hi Me?n. xxvi. 6 



goodness* 

eye which watches guilt And g, 

goodnight. 
G,g, when I have said gfor evermore May Queen^\\.^\ 
G, sweet mother : call me . n -49 

stout Prince bade him a loud g. . Enid . 1210 

goods. 
with what she brought "Buy g . En. Arden . 138 
Bought Annie g and stores, 11 . 169 

shelf and corner for the g and stores it . 171 

goodwill. 
an( ii r ) £*and peace, Peace and^", In Mem. xxviii. 11 



The Goose 5, 



goose. 
g upon his arm, 

take the^-, and keep you warm, . if 

caught the white g by the leg, A g — 11 
g let fall a golden egg ... n 

dropt the^, and caught the pelf, . 11 

ah ! the more the white g laid . ft 

take the^, and wring her throat, it 

g flew this way and flew that, . 11 

Quoth she, 'The Devil take the.f, 11 

From, the long-neck'd^tv^ of the world Maud, I, 
his hens, his geese, his guinea-hens T/ie Brook 



: 55 
iv. 52 
. 126 



gorge. 
The^ opening wide apart, reveal (Encue . 12 
High over the blue g, ... it . 206 

golden g of dragons spouted forth Pal. of Art 23 
Thro' the long g to the far light . Odeo?i Well. 213 
Sat often in the seaward -gazing g, En. Arden . 590 
Downward from his mountain g . 11 . 637 

gorged. 
We issued £" with knowledge, . Princess, li. 366 
Dropt offg from scheme that . JSIaud, I. i. 20 
snakelike slimed his victim ere h.eg; Sea-Dreams 189 

gorgonised. 
G me from head to foot . . Maud, I. xiii. 21 

Gorlols. 
call'd him the false son of G: . Guinevere . 286 



gossamer. 
To trip a tigress with a g, 
all the silvery g's That twinkle 



Princess, v. 163 
In Mem. xi, 7 

gossip (s.) 
sins of emptiness, ^and spite . Princess, ii. 78 
like a city, with^ - , scandal, and spite ; Maud,I.iv. 8 
Fearing the lazy g of the port, . En. A rden . 332 
By this the lazy g's of the port . tt . 469 

gossip (verb.) 
only hear the magpie g . To F. D. Maurice 19 

neighbours come and laugh and^, Grandmotlter 91 

got. 
G up betwixt you and the woman there. Dora . 94 

* Sir Ralph has g your colours : . Princess, iv. 571 
g a friend of your own age, . . 11 vi. 234 
At last he g his breath and answer'd Elaine . 421 
up the side, sweating with agony, g, it . 493 
So Lancelot£"her horse, . . Guinevere . 121 
storming a hill-fort of thieves He^it ; Aylmer'sF.226 
all have g the seed. . . . T/ie Flower 20 

Gothic. 
Gleam thro' the G archways in the wall. Godiva 64 
finest G lighter than a fire, . . Princess, Pro. 92 
A G ruin and a Grecian house, . tr . 225 

gotten. 
you have g the wings of love, . The Window 158 

gourd. 
By heaps of g's, and skins of wine, Vision of Sin 13 
In us true growth, in her a Jonah's^, Princess, iv. 292 

gout. 
g and stone, that break Body toward Lucretius 153 

govern. 

have no men to^in this wood : . D.o/F. Wont. 135 

goverfied. 

* I ^-men by change, and so I swa.y'dD.ofF. Wo?u.i^o 



government. poem. line. 
A land of settled g, * You ask me why,* etc. 9 

manners, climates, councils, g's, . Ulysses . 14 
in arts of g Elizabeth and others ; Princess, ii. 145 
low firm voice and tender g. . Enid . 1043 

gown. 
Her cap blew off, her g blew up, . The Goose . 51 
She clad herself in a russet^-, . Lady Clare 57 
A g of grass-green silk she wore, SirL. and Q. G. 24 
should not wear our rusty g's, Princess, Pro. 143 
A rosy blonde, and in a college g, " ii. 302 

In which of old I wore the g ; . In Mem.lxxxvi.2 



739 
1527 
1546 
1548 
1550 
1553 
Grandmother 57 



Gardener's D. 125 

To the Queen 5 

L. o/Slialott, iv.53 



Without a mirror, in the gorgeous £7 Enid 

put off to please me this poor^-, . 

* In this poor g my dear lord 

In thispoor^I rode with him to court, 

I n this poor^- he bade me clothe myself 

this poor g I will not cast aside 

I wore a lilac g ; . 

gowned. 
One arm aloft — G in pure white, 

grace (s.) 
Victoria. — since your royal g 
God in his mercy lend her^ - , 

Complaining, 'Mother give meg Mariana in the S. 29 
I watch xhyg; and in its place . Elednore . 127 
with a silent g Approaching, . Miller's D. 159 

loveliest in all g Of movement, . CEnone . 73 
you have won A tearful g . . Margaret . 12 
all^-Summ'd up and closed in little ; Gardener's D. 12 
shelter'd here Whatever maiden g Talking O. . 38 
looking upward, full of^", . . Two Voices . 223 
So sweet a face, such angel g, . Beggar Maid 13 
tender got a day that is dead ' Break, oreak,' etc. 15 
so much^and power, breathing down Princess, ii. 
arts of g Sappho and others . tt 

At last a solemn g Concluded, . tt 

easy,g-, No doubt, for slight delay, ti iv. 

Come, a g to me ! I am your warrior : tt vi 
mimic picture's breathing g, In MemAxxvii 

With gifts of g, that might express tt lxxxiv. 

with power and g And music . n lxxxvi. 

maidens gather d strength and^" . tt cii. 

manhood fused with female g . n cviii. 

light of her youth and her g, . Maud, I. v. 
Rich in the g all women desire, . tt x. 

Some peculiar mystic g 11 xiii. 

^that, bright and light as the crest it xvi. 
nothing there her maiden £• affright ! n xviii. 



24 

147 



206 



(Claspt hands and that petitionary^ The Brook 112 
all g Of womanhood and queenhood, Enid . . 175 
by God's g, is the one voice for me.' it . . 344 
were but little £" in any of us, ti 624 

might amend it by the g of heaven, ti . . 902 
such a £* Of tenderest courtesy, . tt . 1709 

g and will to pick the vicious quitch it . 1751 

into that rude hall Stept with all.g' Elaine . 263 

half disdain Hid under g, it . 264 

'Do me this^-, my child. ir . 381 

'A^-to me,' She answer'd, . it . 382 

The g and versatility of the man — tt . 471 

g's of the court, and songs, Sighs, tr . 645 

1 Stay a little ! One golden minute's g: it . 681 

ghostly g Beam'd on his fancy, . it . 881 

at least have done her so much g, it 1301 

beauty,£-and power, Wrought as a Guinevere . 142 
see your tender £- and stateliness. 11 . 188 

Had yet that g of courtesy in him it . 433 

this voyage by the^ofGod . . En. Arden . 190 
deeds of gift, but gifts ofghe forged, Sea-Dreamsi&$ 
and there is G to be had ; . . GraJidmother 94 

Grace (deity.) 
Like to Furies, like toGs, . . VisionofSin 41 
Muses and the G's T group'd in threes, Princess, ii. 13 
meet her Gs, where they deck'd her 11 vii. 153 

grace (verb.) 
mossbrmusk, To£ my city-rooms ; Gardener's D.igo 
'So you will^-me,' answer'd Lancelot Elaine . 223 
Calliope to g his golden verse — .Lucretius . 94 



lEX.VYSON'S WORKS. 



175 



graced, poem. line. 

the glance That g the giving — . Gardener 1 sD.in 

grace/Hi. 

What looks so little^: 'men ' . Princess, iii. 37 

what is wise and goud And^". . In Man. cii. 11 

keep So much of what is g: . . Elaine 1213 

gracefulness. 
symmetry Of thy floating £-, . . Elednore . 50 

gracious. 

Sog washer tact and tenderness : Princess, i. 24 

the Lord be g to me ! ... 11 ii. 174 

Maud could be g too, no doubt, . Maud,\. x. 28 

to all ladies, . . . Guinevere . 327 

would it be more g' ask'd the girl Ay liner's F. 241 

' G ? No' said he 'Me? — . . 11 . 243 

gradation. 
Regard .f, lest the soul Of ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 67 



. Gardener 1 'sD .235 
. Two Voices 174 
. In Mem. xl. 11 



Princess, Co>t. 1 1 1 



3»9 



grade. 
g's Beyond all g's develop'd ? 
scaling slow from glog; 
leap liicg's of life and light, . 

gradually, 
g the powers of the night, 

gr«ff- 
made a Gardener putting in a g, . Vivien 

grafted. 
Disrooted, what I am is g here. . Princess, ii. 202 

Grail. 
Three angels bear the holy G: . Sir Galaliad 42 
Until 1 find the holy G. . . 11 .84 

grain (corn.) 
fnurfield system, and the price of g;Audley Ct. 33 
the fiery g Of freedom broadcast . Princess, v. 411 
pamphleteer on guano and on g, . » Con. 89 

1 chaff well meant for g . In Mem. vi. 4 
grown The^by which amanmaylivc.' " lii. 8 

11 ripeness to the,f, . 11 lxxx. 11 

champinggolden^, the horses stood Spec. of Iliad 21 
eating hoary g and pulse the steeds h Note 

grain (fibre.) 
Cut Prejudice against the^ 'Eove thou thy land* 22 
1 irclc in the.f . . . Talking 0. . 83 
r lightning char thy g, . 11 . 277 

the Master, as a rogue in g . . Princess, Pro. 116 
ihe stem Less p- than touchwood, . 11 iv. 314 

twists the g with such a roar . 11 v. 517 

dwelt an iron nature in the g : . •< vi. 34 

prurient for a proof against the g . Vivien . 337 

grain (particle.) 

got conscience made him sour.' . Vision of Sin 218 

A little £• shall not be spilt.' . . In Mem. lxiv. 4 

every g of sand that runs, . . »• cxvi. 9 

1 g of love for me, . . Maud, 11. ii. 53 

city sparkles like a g of salt. . . Will . . 20 

I is added only g by g, . Enid . . 526 



granary. 
garden-tools upon the g floor : 

grand. 
look'd so g when he was dead. 

t high, G, epic, homicidal; 
She luuk'd as .j- as doomsday 

grandchild. 
wish to see My g on my knees 

grandfather. 
Whose old jf-/has lately died, 
I mean your g, Annie : . 

grandsire. 
boy set up betwixt hugs knees, . 
sorcerer, whom a far-off g burnt 
he bestrode my G, when he fell, , 

grandson. 
To a g, first of his noble line, 



May Queen, ii. 45 

The Sisters 32 

Princess, Pro. 21^ 

11 i. 185 

Dora . .11 



Maud, I. x. 5 
Grandmother 23 

Pnra . .128 

Princess, i. 6 

11 ii. 224 

Maud, I. x. 12 



grange. poem. line. 

Upon the lonely moated £-. . . Mariana 8,33 

So pass I hostel, hall, and^-; . Sir Galahad 81 

so by tilth and g, And vines, . Princess, i. 109 

nail me like a weasel on a g . . » ii. 188 

burnt the g, nor buss'd the milking-maid, ■■ v. 213 

ripple round the lonely g; . . In Mem. xc. 12 

No gray old g, or lonely fold, . 11 xcix. 5 

granite. 
shadowy g, in a gleaming pass ; . Lotos-Es. . 49 
faintly lipp'd The flat rcdV; . Audley Ct. . 12 

grant. 
' Good soul ! suppose I g it thee, . Two Voices 38 
But if I g, thou might'st defend . 11 . 337 

You g me license ; might I use it? Princess, iii. 219 
I g in her some sense of shame, . 11 iv. 330 

G me your son, to nurse, . . 11 vi. 279 

g my prayer. Help, father, brother, m . 285 

Godjf 1 may find it at last ! . . Maud, I. ii. 1 
His face, as I g, in spite of spite, t» xiii. 8 

G me pardon for my thoughts : . Enid . . 816 
g me some slight power upon your / ' Ivien . 182 

g my re-reiterated wish, . . 11 . 203 

g my worship of it Words, as we 

g grief tears .... Elaine I1S1 

Only this G me, I pray you : . 11 121 1 

if 1 g the jealousy as of love, . 11 1390 

be still as happy as God g's . . En. Arden . 413 
(Altho' I g but little music there) . Sea Dreams 245 
g mine asking with a smile, . . 'Tithonus . 16 

granted. 
Nor yet refused the rose, outfit, Gardener 's D '.157 
Perfectly beautiful : let it be g her: Maud, 1. ii. 4 
be g which your own gross heart . Vivien . 7C5 

grape, 

g's with bunches red as blood ; . Day-Dm. . 64 

Let there be thistles, there area's; Will Wafer. 57 

skins of wine, and piles of g's. . Vision of Sin 13 
The chalice of the g's of God : . In Mem. x. it- 
bruised the herb and crush'd the £", 11 xxxv. 23 
The foaming g of eastern France. n Con. 80 
when my father dangled the^-'f, . Maud, 1. i. 71 

grape-loaded. 
The valleys o(g-l vines that glow D. o/F. Worn. 219 

grape -th icken 'd. 
in a bower G-l from the light, . Elednore . 36 

grapple. 
And g's with his evil star ; . . In Mem. Ixiii. 8 

grappling. 
airy navies g in the central blue ; . Locksley II. 124 

grasp fs.) 
To give him the^ of fellowship ; . Maud,\. xiii. 16 
Ag Having the warmth and muscle Aylmcr's F. 179 

grasp (verb. ) 
God-like, g's the triple ' Of old sat Freedom. 'etc. 15 
not cease to g the hope I hold . StS. Stylites 5 
g's the skirts of happy chance, . In Mem. Ixiii. 6 
To him who g's a golden ball. . 11 ex. 3 

long arms strctch'd as to g a flyer ; Aylmcr's F. 588 

grasped, 

g The mild bull's golden horn. . Pal. of Art 119 

world-worn Dante,^ his song, . 11 135 

hand G, made her vail her eyes : . Guiueieie . 655 

graspest. 
Old Yew, which g at the stones . In Mem. ii. 1 

grasping. 
g down the boughs I gain d the . Princess, iv. 171 
In! it was her msthcr^f her . . Enid . . 676 
heard Geraint, and g at his sword, " . 1573 
deathly-pale Stood g what was . Elaine .961 
g the pews. rVnd oaken I'mi. ds . Aylmcr's F, 822 

grass. 
the dull Saw no divinity in if, . A Character 8 
scem'd knee-deep in mountain C". Marianain theS.l.? 
the bearded g Is dry and dewiess. Miller's V. 245 



1 7 6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POZM. LINE. 

grasshopper is silent in the g: . CEnone . 25 
level meadow-bases of deep g . Pal. of Art 7 
in the long and pleasant £-. . . MayQitee?i,n. 32 
petals from blown roses on the g, . Lotos-E's. . 47 
Heap'd over with a mound of^ - , . >• . 112 

thro' lush green g'es burn'd . D. ofF. Worn. 71 

A league of g, wash'd by a slow . Gardeuer'sD. 40 
So light upon the g, . . . Talking O. 88 
He lies beside thee on the g. . 11 . 239 

All g of silky feather grow — . n . 269 

Make thy g hoar with early rime. Two Voices 66 
scarce could see the g for flowers. 11 . 453 

scatter'd blanching on the g. . Day-Dm. . 112 

There I put my face in the g — . Ed. Gray . 21 
roll'dabout Like tumbled fruit in g; Princess, Pro. 83 
Grate her harsh kindred in the^-; if iv. 107 

like a new-fall'n meteor on the g, . 11 vi. 119 

she sat, she pluck'd the g, 11 Con. 31 

since the g'es round me wave, . InMent. xxi. 2 
I take the g'es of the grave, .11 .3 

tuft with g a feudal tower ; . 11 cxxvii. 20 

From little cloudlets on the^-, . n Con. 94 
fall before Her feet on the meadowy Maud, I. v. 26 
A livelier emerald twinkles in the^-, u xviii. 51 
grigs that leap in summer g. . The Brook . 54 

Squire had seen the colt at^-, . n . 139 

pluck'd the g There growing longest Enid 1105 

happily down on a bank of^-, . u 1356 

lived alone in a great wild on g; . Viviett . 471 

back to his old wild, and lived on^, 11 . 499 

own voice clings to each blade of g, Elaine . 108 
like a rainbow fall'n upon the^-, . 11 . 430 

and the flowering grove Of g'es . Guinevere . 35 
Show'd her the fairy footings on the^-, Aylmer'sF. 90 
With neighbours laid along the g, Lucretius . 211 
I may die but the g will grow, (rep. ) ThelViudowiog 
Spring is here with leaf and g: . u . 128 

grass-green. 
grave s^-£-beside a gray church-tower, Circuvistance6 
A gown of g-g silk she wore, SirL. audQ. G. 24 

grasshopper. 
The g Is silent in the grass ; . . CE?ione . 25 

grassy. 

The plain was g, wild and bare, . Dying Swan 1 

grate (s.) 
glimmering vaults with iron g' s, , D.ofF.Wom. 35 

grate (verb.) 
I g on rusty hinges here : * . . Princess, 1. 85 
G her harsh kindred in the grass : n iv. 107 

harsh shingle should £- underfoot En. Arden . 773 

grated. 

g down and filed away with thought Vivien . 473 

grateful, 
g at last for a little thing : . . Maud, III. vi. 3 
G to Prince Geraint for service done, Enid . 15 
So g is the noise of noble deeds . ir . 437 

,ii , gratify. 

would do much to £" your Prince — Princess, v. 208 

gratitude. 
This nightmare weight of g, . Princess, vi. 281 

Out of full heart and boundless £• En. Arden . 343 

gratulation. 

and was moving on In g, . . Princess, ii. 16S 

grave (adj.) 

Or gay, or g, or sweet, or stern, . Pal. of Art 91 

a hero lies beneath, G, solemn !' . Princess, Pro. 208 

as grand as doomsday and as g: . 11 i. 185 

G, florid, stern, as far as eye . Sea Dreams 212 

grave (s.) 
Ovents^-i' the earth (rep.) ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 10 
the green that folds thy,§-. (rep.) . A Dirge. . 6 
Two g's grass-green beside a gray Circumstance. 6 
mother, within the mouldering £-. May Queen, ii. 20 
and upon that g of mine, . u .21 

See me till my g be gTowing green : 11 , 43 



POEM. LINE. 

cord of love Down to a silent £". . D.ofF.Wom. 212 
winter rains that beat his^". . Two Voices 261 

A shadow on the^s I knew, . ?r . 272 

From gtog the shadow crept : . ' 11 , 274 

Each pluck'd his one foot from the g, Amphion 43 
By Ellen's^, on the windy hill. . JEd. Gray . 12 
the glow-worm of the ^Glimmer . Vision q/Sin 153 
Till the g's begin to move, . if- 165 

foolish tears upon my g, * Co?nenot, whc?i, etc. 2 
There above the little^-, (rep.) . Princess, i. 257 
full voice which circles round the g, 11 ii. 31 
cram him with the fragments of the g n iii. 294 
Drops in his vast and wandering^. In Mem. vi. 16 
I take the grasses of the g, . . " xxi. 3 

hear her weeping by his g? . . ir xxxi. 4 
builds the house, or digs the g, . 11 xxxvi. 14 
I wrong the g with fears untrue : . 11 1, 9 

No life may fail beyond the^-, . 11 liv. 2 

Unused example from the g . 11 lxxix. 15 

my prime passion in the g: . . tr lxxxiv. 76 
Had fall'n into her father's^*, . if lxxxviii. 48 
fathers bend Above more g's, . ir xcvii. 16 
with me, and the g Divide us not, n cxxi. 9 
gTh&t has to-day its sunny side. . 11 Con. 71 

To-day the g is bright for me, " -73 

that had made false haste to the g — Maud, I. i. 58 
and Orion low in his^. . . 11 iii. 14 

Your mother is mute in her g . » iv. 58 

Perhaps from a selfish £-. . . 11 xvi. 23 

into a shallow £- they are thrust, . 11 II. v. 6 

no peace in the^-, is that not sad ? 11 . 16 

kind to have made me a g so rough 11 . 97 

Orion's^ low down in the west, . nlll.vi. 8 

The very g's appear'd to smile, . The Letters 45 
cackle of the unborn about the^, . Vivien . 357 
the knightly brasses of the g's } . ir . 602 

some one steps across my g;' . Guinevere . 57 
that his £- should be a mystery . ri . 295 

mourn'd his absence as his g, . En. Arden . 246 
would vex him even in his g, . 11 . 302 

thought to bear it with me to my g; n . 897 

these mouldy Aylmers in their^-V; Aylmers F. 396 
with his hopes in either g. . 11 . 624 

gray hairs with sorrow to the g — . ii . 777 

Pity, the violet on the tyrant's £- . 11 . S45 

drank himself into hisg. . . Grandmother 6 

seest all things, thou wilt see my g: Titho?ius . 73 
that deep g to which I go : ' My life is full, ' etc. 7 
bones long laid within the g, . Lucretitts „ 252 

sides of the ^-itself shall pass, . . . 253 

gravel. 
waterbreak Above the golden g, . The Brook . 62 
wizard's pentagram On garden £", 11 . 104 

gravel-spread. 
bed Of silent torrents, g-s; . . The Daisy . 34 

graven. 
C7with emblems of the time, . ArabianN's. ic3 

A pint-pot, neatly g. Will Water. 248 

graver. 
No .fthan a schoolboy's barring out ; Princess, Con. 66 
No g than as when some little cloud En. Arden 129 



gray. 
The level waste, the rounding^ - . . 
An under-roof of doleful^-. . 
my hair Isg before I know it. 
mixt Their dark and g, 
I sleep till dusk is dipt in^-; 
Touch thy dull goal of joyless £*, . 
From Como, when the light w&sg, 
made him g And grayer, 
whelm'd the world in g: 
a year hence.' ' We shall both be^-.' 



Mariana . 44 
Dyins^Swan 4 
Will Water. 168 
Princess, vi. 116 
In Mem. lxvi. 12 

l r Ixxi. 27 

The Daisy . 73 
Guiue7>ere . 597 
En. Arden . 673 
TJie Window 167 



Gray (surname.) 
are you married yet, Edward G ? * Ed. Gray 
Can touch the heart of Edward G. (rep.) u 



grayer. 
made him gray And g, . 



. Guinevere . 



TEXXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



177 



grays. poem. line. 

Behind the dappled £-. . . . Talking O. . 112 

cold winds woke the g-e morn .Mariana . 31 

grayling. 
And here and therea^, . . The Brook . 58 

graze. 

They f and wallow, breed and sleep ; Pal. of Art 202 

L-er forgot to g, . ■ ■ Gardener's Z>. 84 

. horses g, and ate themselves Enid . 1060 

grazing. 

slander, glancing here and g there ; Vivien. . 29 

great 
O silent faces of the G and Wise, . Pal. 0/ Art 195 
name of liritain trebly^-— ' You ask me why,' etc. 22 
arc indeed the manners of the g. Walk, to th 
g with pig, wallowing in sun . " .80 

had 1 lived when song wasg . Amfihion 9, 13 
Brutus of my kind ? H im you call g : Princess, ii. 265 
might reap the applause of G, . « ;"• =45 

ng Used to g ends : . . " iv. 119 

all we would be, g and good.' . " .. 57 6 

g the crush was, and each base, . n vi. 333 

r gladness loom so g '! In Mem. xxiv. 10 

Thy kindred with the g of old. . 11 Ixxiii. 8 

feels him g and wise . ir xcvi. 34 

minded, g, Consistent ; . « Con. 38 

ime of the simple g ones gone Maud, I. x. 61 

uncil and g in war, . . Ode on Well. 30 

by land as thou by sea ; . 11 84, 90 

And ever g and greater grew, . ir . 108 

Him who cares not to be g, . . tr . 199 

!; ne who scem'd so g. — . " ■ 271 

, but our hearts are. c. Enid . 352-74 

.rkof his island wonderful, it . 1746 

1 id-fold more g and wonderful it . 1762 

ither,g- nor wonderful, " . 1769 

g that her glory would be g Vivien . 66 

c as gat. you arc named, " . 185 

Jit that he was gentle, being g: 11 . 720 

ou call .<': mine is the firmer Elaine . 445 

well I am not g: « ■ 45° 

not howsoever g he be _ . n 1063 

the sinncr-sceming^.' it 1408 

be thrice as g as any of ours. Guinevere . 196 

1 thank the saints, 1 am not.!,'. . 11 . 197 

e of g ones, " . 202 

! to the griefs the g must bear, 11 . 203 

n in her womanhood as g •• . 297 

g:ui<\ small, Went nutting to the . En. Arden . 63 

name Of his vessel g in story, . The Cafltain 19 

1 being ; and it was not.c," . Lucretius . 219 

Heart, arc you g enough (rep.) . The Window 194 

greater. 
The g to the lesser, . . Gardener's D. 10 
thro' love, and g than thy . LoveatuiDutyn 

■■■, beat her . Princess, vii 223 

remain, . . In Mem. cviii. 23 

reat and g grew, . . . Ode on Well. 108 

we g than the soul 1 . » . 265 

the g their disgrace ! . . A yl 'liter's F. 384 

1 1— isn't that your cry ? . S/itifitl Let. 17 

greatest. 

yet with least pretence, . Ode on Well. 29 

\eg only are, In his simplicity " . 33 

il their g arc so small . Vivien . 682 

1 .\ng; . Elaine . 769 

red icst And g, . » 1088 

1 cllnr, orwhat isf'would lie be — Aylmer'sF. 397 

all uiir^- fain Would follow, . . Lucretius . 78 

greatness. 

should your g, and the care . . To the Queen 9 

to be gucss'd ; . . In MemAxxiv. 4 

not what his g is ; . . n xcvi. 27 

inhering all his g in the Past. Odeon Well. 20 

whom she . Vivien . 67 

iuth Toward g in its . Elaine ■ . 283 

. t be some far-off touch Of.f 11 . 449 



greaves. poem. line. 

(lamed upon the brazen g L. o/Shalott. iii. 4 

gand cuisses dash'd with drops . M. d' Arthur 215 

Grecian. 
A Gothic ruin and a G house, . Princess, Pro.215 
Ran down the Persian, G, Roman 11 ii. 114 

Greece. 
fairest and most loving wife in G,' GSnone . 183 

Greek. 

my ancientlove With the G woman. Qsnone . 257 
show'd the house, G, set with busts: Princess, Pro. ir 

green [adj. and s.) 
earliest shoots Of orient^, . . Ode to Mem. 18 
Shot over with purple, and g, . Dying Swan 20 
the ?■ that folds thy grave. . A Dirge 6, et pass. 
Under the hollow-hung ocean gl . 1 he Merman 38 
some fair space of sloping .ir" J . Pal. of Art 106 

go with me to-morrow to the g, . May Queen, 1. 25 
'11 be fresh and g and still, . . " ... 37 

Beneath the hawthorn on the g . » u. 10 

till my grave be growing g: . . 11 • 43 

branches, Hedged with clearest g, D. o/E. Worn. 59 
smell of violets, hidden in the g, . " . • 77 
like a purple beech among the g's Ed. Moms 84 
when she gamboU'd on theg's . TalkingO. 77 
All creeping plants, a wall of.g- . Day-Dm. . 6$ 
Are neither j- nor sappy : . A in/hiou . 90 

The topmost elmtree gathcr'd g SirL. andQ. G. 8 
herself, when all the woods are.?-? Princess, iv. 89 
lines of <r that streak the white . » V. 188 

twinklc'into^" and gold: . . In Mem. xi. 8 
Within the.?- the moulder' d tree, . 11 xxyi. 7 
This round "of. c, this orb of flame, 11 xxxrv. 5 

on a simple village £•; . - » ' x '.»- 4 

Thy leaf has pcrish'd in the .f, . " Ixxiv. 13 
falTn leaves which kept their g, . 11 xciv. 23 
like sunny gems on an English g, Maud. I. v. 14 
the wood stands in a mist of^, . The Brook . 14 
coppice gemm'd with g and red, . Enid . . 339 
the lovely blue Play*d into g, . » • "537 
kept tlie heart of Eden g . ■ " . • l6 i8 

the place whereon she stood wasf ; Elaine 119+ 

Moored still in g, all ear and eye, Gtdnevert . 25 
sow'U her name and kept it g . Aylmer's F. 88 

green verb.) 
g's The swamp where hums the . On a Mourner 8 

green-glimmering. 
G-g toward the summit. . . Elaine . 482 

green-suited. 
G-s, but with plume'-, that mock'd . Guinevere . 23 

greensvuard. 
danced The g into greener circles . Gardeuer'sD.133 

greenwood. 
licst beneath the g tree, . . Oriana . 95 

greet. 
g their fairer sisters of the Kast. . Gardener' sD.\i^ 
To cthe sheriff, needless courtesy I Ed. Moms 133 
To meet end g l:-r on her way . h 'gptr >Liia 6 
G her with applausive breath, . Vision o/Sm 135 
a cry As if to g the king ; . . Princess, v.. 239 
large as man he bent To g us. .In Mem.cn. at, 
To meet and.? - a whiter sun : . ■' c °!'- 7 s 

Should I fear to j- my friend . Maud.W.w. 85 
ier fashion will he g . ■ Odeon Well. 21 
lord Geraint, I £■ you with all love; Emd . 1633 
King himself, Advanced to £■ them, •< . '7-7 
g his hearty welcome heartily ; . En. Arden. 347 
ghtr, wasting his forgotten heart, Aylmer'sF. 689 
did c'l'rov's wandering prince, . On a Mourner 32 
ran To g him with a kiss, . .Lucretius . 



n =8 



greeted. 
G Gcraint full face, . . . Enid . 

Vivien, being f fair, Would fain . Vtvttn . ■• 

silent, tho" he g her, she stood . Elatnt . 354 

'Have comfort,' whom she ^-quietly. 11. . • 989 

• pale they met And. i^: . Guinr-eere . 99 
Maiden, not to be.£- unbcnignly. HtndeccuyllabicM 

M 



178 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM LINE. 

. In Mem. lvi. 14 
. The Letters 13 
. Lucretius . 138 



greeting 
Eternal g's to the dead ; 
Full cold my g was and dry ; 
gets for g but a wail of pain ; 

grew. 
G darker from that under-flame : . Arabian N^s. 91 
g A flower all gold, . . . The Poet . 23 
as her carol sadder £-, . . Mariana in t he S. 13 

Single I g, like some green plant, D.o/F. Worn. 205 
G plump and able-bodied ; . . The Goose . 18 
we g The fable of the city . . Gardener sD. 5 
hoarded in herself, G, seldom seen: it . 49 

in praise of her G oratory. . 1. .56 

uptheporch there^an Eastern rose, n . 122 

Her beauty^; till Autumn brought tr . 202 

unsown, where many poppies g. . Dora , . 71 
wreath of all the flowers That g 11 .81 

different ages, like twin-sisters^ . Ed. Morris 32 
£■ Twice ten long weary weary years StS. Stylites 88 
And in the chase g wild, . . Talking O. . 126 
dried his wings : like gauze they g: Two Voices 13 
To look as if they g there. . . Amphion . 80 
such whose father-grape g fat . Will Water. 7 
£■ in gladness till I found My spirits To E. L. . n 
That she g a noble lady, . . L. of Burleigh 75 
Faint she g, and ever fainter, . u .81 

that madman ere it g too late : . Vision of Sin 56 
The voice g faint : . ... rr . 207 

than their names, G side by side ; Princess,Pro. 13 
like the hand, and g With using ; . u ii. 134 

* How g this feud betwixt the right ir iii. 61 

they were still together, g . \\ • 7 2 

I g discouraged, Sir ; . tr . 137 

g Like field-flowers everywhere ! . ir iii. 234 

Sun G broader toward his death . tr . 346 

all men g to rate us at our worth, ir iv. 127 

a noble scheme G up from seed . tr . 291 

£- Another kind of beauty in detail ir . 427 

clamour £■ As of a new-world Babel, tr . 465 

all things g more tragic . . ir vi. 7 

o'er him g Tall as a figure lengthen'd 11 . 144 

still as vaster £- the shore, . . In Merit, cii. 25 
would the great worlds like thee, rr cxiii. 25 

g to seeming-random forms, . . \\ cxvii. 10 

rolls the deep where g the tree. » it cxxii. 1 
For thee she£", for thee she grows tr Con. 35 
Discussing how their courtship^, it . 97 

When it slowly g so thin, . . Maud, i. xix. 20 
ran on and rumour of battle £•, . tr III. vi. 29 
ever great and greater £-, . . Ode on Well. 108 
What slender campanili^ . . The Daisy . 13 
£- Forgetful of his promise to the king, Enid . 49 
gTo hate the sin that seem'd so like ir . . 593 
look'd, and still the terror g . . ir . . 615 
lie still, and yet the sapling^-; . ir . 1014 

g Tolerant of what he half disdained Vivien . 33 

g So grated down and filed away u . 472 

dark wood £- darker toward the storm tr . . 739 
£- between her and the pictured wall. Elaine . 987 
^"so cheerful that they deem'd her death u 1125 

all this trouble did not pass but^-; Guinevere . 84 
^half-guilty in her thoughts again, 11 . 405 

sickly-born and g Yet sicklier, . En. Arden . 260 
contracting £- Careworn and wan ; tr . 483 

Thicker the drizzle^-, deeper the gloom ; tr . 680 

Heaven in lavish bounty moulded, g. Ayhner^s F. 107 
still G with the growing note, . Sea Dreams 206 
g so tall It wore a crown of light, The Flower 9 
g Tired of so much within our little life, Lucretius 222 

grewest. 
Who g not alone in power . . In Mem. cxiii. 26 

gride, 
g's and clangs Its leafless ribs . In Mem. cvi. 11 

grief. 

nor let your g be wild, . . . May Queen ii, 35 
g became A solemn scorn of ills. . D.ofF. Worn. 227 
In g I am not all unlearn'd ; . To J. S. . 18 

Let G be her own mistress still. . tr .41 

weaker than your^would make G more, tr . 65 



POEM. LINE. 

such a distance from his youth 'mg, Gardener s D. 53 
g to find her less than fame, . Princess, i. 72 

wan from lack of sleep, Or^*, . )f iii, 10 

Red g and mother's hunger in her eye, ir vi. 130 
answer'd full of g and scorn. . n . 313 

Forgive my g for one removed, . TnMem.Pro. 37 
Let Love clasp G lest both be drown' d, tr i. 9 

g hath shaken into frost ! . . tr iv. 12 

To put in words the g 1 feel ; . it v. 2 

that large g which these enfold . it . ii 

Calm as to suit a calmer^-, . . tr xi. 2 

hush'd my deepest^ of all, . . tr xix. 10 

The lesser g's that may be said, . tr xx. 1 

is it that the haze of g ... it xxiv. 9 

voice was not the voice ofg, . it lxvhi. 19 

by the measure of my^ . . ir lxxiv. 3 

A g, then changed to something else, tr lxxvi. 11 

g, can g be changed to less? . it lxxvii. 16 
g my loss in him had wrought, . tr Ixxix. 6 
A g as deep as life or thought, . tr .7 
To this which is our common^ - , . n lxxxrv. 7 
in my ga. strength reserved. n • 5 2 
Or so shall g with symbols play, . 11 -95 
in the midmost heart of g . . tilxxxvii. 7 
No more shall wayward g abuse . tr civ. 9 
Ring out the g that saps the mind, tt cv. 9 
possible After long g and pain . Maicd, II. iv. 2 
overtoil'd By that day's g and travel, Enid 1226 

1 have^-'j enough : Pray you be gentle, tr 1555 
Hand-hidden, as for utmost g or shame ; Vivien 746 
I find with^-.' I might believe you n . 771 
Words, as we grant g tears. . . Elaine 1182 
nor sought, Wrapt in her^-, for housel Guinevere 147 
the King's g For his own self, . tr . 194 
if there ever come a g to me . tr . 198 
even were the g's of little ones . tr . 201 
g Is added to the^-'-s the great must bear, it . 202 
common^ of all the realm V . rr . 215 
all woman's g, That she is woman, tr . 216 
Grieve with your g's, not grieving tr . 671 
Annie, seated with her^-. . . En. Arden . 279 
if g's Like his^ have worse or better, it . 741 
My g and solitude have broken me ; tr . 858 
I am grieved to learn your g — . Ayhners F. 398 
from his height and loneliness ofg it . 632 

grieve. 
faints and my whole soul g's { A spirit haunts? etc. 16 
With such compelling cause to g . InMeiu.xxix. 1 
g Thy brethren with a fruitless tear? ir lvii. 9 
G with the common grief of all the . Gtdnevere . 215 
G with your griefs, not grieving at your joys, tr . 671 
I g to see you poor and wanting help ; En. A rden 403 
it is not often I g; . . . Grandmother 89 

grieved. 
began to change — I saw it and g — Princess, iv. 280 
be not wroth or g At your new son, Enid . . 779 
great charger stood, g like a man . 11 . 1384 

I am g to learn your grief — . Ay Inzer's F. 398 

she g In her strange dream . . Sea Dreams 222 

grieving, 
g that their greatest are so small. . Vivien . 682 
not g at your joys, . . . Guinevere . 671 

^-held his will, and bore it thro*. . En. Ardeji . 167 

griffin-guarded. 
we reached The g-g gates. . . Audley Ct. . 14 

grig. 
like the dry High-elbow'd g's 

grim. 
Were their faces g. 

grimace. 
Caught each other with wild g's, . Vision of Sin 35 

grin, 
gs on a pile of children's bones, . Maud, I. 1. 46 
chuckle and g at a brother's shame ; tt iv. 29 

grind. 
A grazing iron collar^ my neck ; . St S. Stylites 115 
centre-bits G on the wakeful ear . Maud, I. i. 42 



. The Brook , 54 
. TJie Captai?i 54 






TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



179 



gnnmng. poem. line. 

Who was gaping and g by : . . Maud, II. i. 20 

grip. 
in the hard/- of his hand, . . Sea Dreams 159 

gripe. 
hand in wild delirium, git hard, . Princess, vii. 78 

gript. 
last G my hand hard, . . . Sea Dreams 156 

groan. 

exprest By sighs or g's or tears ; . D.ofF. Worn. 284 

t gave a wrathful g, . . Enid . 1247 

marvellous great shriek and ghastly £-, Elaine . 515 

Down in the S is a flash and a.g; The Window 42 

groaned. 
deep brook /-beneath the mill ; . Miller's D. . 113 
/Sir Lancelot in remorseful pain, Elaine 141S 

as their faces drew together, g, . En. Arden . 74 
• No trifle,'/ the husband ; . . Sea Dreams 141 

groaning. 

almost burst his pipes, G for power, Princess, ii. 451 

11 the doors gave way G, . " vi. 330 

lien man Made answer,/, . Enid . . 576 

tum'd, and g said, ' Forgive ! . Sea Dreams 59 

groom (a servant.! 
hungwith g's and porters on thebridge, Godiva . 2 

groom (married man.) 
her harsh g fur bridal-gift . Princess, v. 368 
drinking health to bride and g . InMept. Con. 83 

groom d. 
strongly g and straitly curb'd . Princess, v. 446 
' long liy bandits g, . . Enid . 1042 

groove. 
down the ringing /-V of change. . Locjcslcy II. 182 

grope. 

g. And gather dust and chaff, . In Mem.Wv. 17 

, groped. 
g as blind, and seem'd Always about Aylmer's F. 821 

groping. 
feeble twilight of this world G, . Enid . . 85s 



gross. 
mouth So g to express delight 
■ .v to tread, 
ije lighter ihro' the g. . 

grosses/. 
Love, tho' Love were of the g, 



Gardener s D. 55 
Princess, vii. 306 
In Mem. xl. 4 



Vivien 



3" 



grossness. 
the / of his nature will have weight Locksley II. 48 

grot. 

The hollow g replieth . . . Clarilvl . 20 

I the garden-bowers and g's . Arabian N't. 78 

falling down to twilight g's, OdetpMem. 107 

of arches interlaced . Pal. of Art 51 

gnatesgue. 

raillery, or jr. or false sublime— . Princess, iv. 565 

ground (earth, etc. ) 
cold upon the g, . . . TheOtul,\. 2 
All the place is holy g;. . . Poet's Mind 9 
fall to the g if you came in. . . 11 .23 

And shall fall again to g. . . Deserted H. 16 
ffm I ed her piercing D.o/F.Wom.xjo 

th plats of fruitful g, . The Blackbird 3 

lh. happy home, tlie A -. . Gardener's P. 91 

of the comm 11 .134 

the/, . Dora . . 87 

. Locksley II. 103 

II 'tis in my neighbour's/-, Amphum . 75 

-. . . SdAgtut'l 

E. L, . :o 

SirL.andQ. G. 18 

' ill the lower/-; VUionofSin 15 

1 elay : . Princess, v. 56 

ike not, gazing on the g, . 1- vi. 210 



POEM. LINE. 

To dance with death, to beat the/, In Mem. i. 12 
chesnut pattering to the. g-; . . 11 xi. 4 

here upon the g. No more partaker 11 xl. 7 

hide thy shame beneath the g. . 11 Ixxi. 28 

all is new unballow'd g. . . n ciii. 12 

crush'd, and dinted into the g: . Maud, I. i. 7 
myself in my own dark garden/-, 11 iii. 10 

O let the solid g Not fail . . 11 xi. 1 

Rivulet crossing my g, x.\i. 1 

forks are fixt into the meadow/, . Enid . . 482 
Coursed one another more on open/ 11 . . 522 
they fixt the forks into the g . 11 . . 548 

moving downward to the meadow g, 11 . 1053 

held her eyes upon the g, . . Elaine . 232 

answer'd with his eyes upon the/-. M . 1342 

weep their burthen to the g, . Tithonus . 2 

restore me to the g ; ... 11 -72 

ground (primary reason.) 
' Not that thc/'sofhope were lix'd, Two Voices 227 

ground (verb.) 
'g in yonder social mill . luMemAxxxv'tW.^g 

teeth that g As in a dreadful dream, Aylmer's F. 328 

ground-plan. 
Lo ! God's likeness-.-the g-p — . Vision of Sin 187 

ground-swell. 
a full tide Rose with/-{, . Sea Dreams 51 

Roll as ag-s dash'd on the strand, W.toAlexan. 23 

group. 

A got Houris bow'd to see . . Pal. of Art 102 

s,hadow'd many a g Of beauties. . 'Talking O. . 61 

a g of girls In circle waited, . . Princess, Pro. 68 

in g's they stream'd away . . 11 Con. 105 

grouped. 

Muses and the Graces, g'm threes, Princess, ii. ' 13 
stood her maidens gliinmeringly/- 11 iv. 172 

grove. 
From the g's within The wild-bird's Poet's Mind 20 
Ij rooted hcr-e among theg's J . Talking O. . i8r 
Wherever in a lonely g. . . Amp/two . 21 
Hush'd all the. g's from fear of Sir L, amiQ.G. 13 
gem-like up before the dusky g's . Princess, Pro. 75 
in a poplar/ when a light wind . 11 v. 12 

halls alone among their massive g's; 11 Cou. 43 
Uncared for, gird the windy/-, . In Mem. c. . 13 
In the little /•where I sit — . . Maud, I. iy. 2 
Vet present in his natal g, . . The Daisy . 18 
g's of pine on either hand, . Top. I). Maurice 2t 
knot, beneath, of snakes, aloft, a/*. Enid . . 325 
young Lavainc into the poplar/. . Elaine . 508 

wide world's rumour by the g . u . 521 

all points, except the poplar g, . 11 - . 614 
Lavaine across the poplar /-Led . 11 . 800 

high wall and the flowering/* Of . Cvituvert . 34 
under g's that look'd a paradise . 11 . 386 

to the garden now, and g of lines, Aylmer's F. 550 
Thy God is far diffused in noble g's " . 653 

Burnt and broke the / and altar . Bo/ldicea . 2 
To rest in a golden g, . . . Wages . 9 

grovel. 
Stands at thy gate for thee to /-to— Aylmer's F. 652 

grovelike. 
Once/*, each huge arm a tree, . Aylmer's F. 510 

grovelled. 

unlaced my casque And g on my . Princess, vi. 12 

g with her face against the floor : . GuintVIYI . 412 

while she /-at his feet, . . , 11 . 575 

grow. 
in the rudest wind Never p sere, . Ode to Mem. 25 

/ so full and deep In thy large . EUSnort . 85 

slowly /To a full face, . 11 . 91 

G golden all about the sky : . . " . 101 

/"round him in his place, G, live . Fa/ima . 40 

ft light that $ps Larger -and clearer, (Inone . 106 

enduranqe/-SinewM with action, ■• .161 

Gs green and broad, and takes no Lolos-E's. . 73 



i So 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

g's to guerdon after-days: * Love thou thy land,' 'etc. 27 
felt her hearty prouder: . . T/ie Goose . 22 
until he g's Of age to help 1 us." . Dora . . 124 
schoolboy ere he g's To Pity — Walk, to the M.gg 
that my soul mighty to thee, . StS.Stylites 70 
faces ,£■ between me and my book . 11 . 173 

'tis fitted on and g's to me, " . 206 

shall g so fair as this.' . . . Talking O. . 244 
All grass of silky feathery — . 11 . 269 

But we g old. Ah ! when shall . Golden Year 47 
g's the day of human power?' . Two Voices 78 
sons g up that bear his name, . n . 256 

Some^ to honour, some to shame — n . 257 

The vast Republics that may^- . Day-Dm. . 227 
That g's within the woodland . AmJ>hiou . 8 
g's From England to Van Diemen. 11 . 83 

To g my own plantation tr . 100 

I g in worth, and wit, and sense, . Will Water. 41 
my father's facet? long and troubled Pri?icess, i. 58 
mighty To use and power . . ?r ii. 150 

And g for ever and for ever. . n iii. 363 

slowly g's a glimmering square, . 11 iv. 34 

g To prize the authentic mother . tr v. 422 

this snail g A night of Summer . if vi. 37 

miserable, How shall men g? . ti vii. 250 

in the long years liker must they g; 11 . 263 

in purpose, will in will, they^ - , . " . 287 

A beam in darkness : let it g. . In JMein. Pro . 24 

knowledge g from more to more, . ir .25 

g incorporate into thee. . . it ii. 16 

as he^-s he gathers much, . . 11 xliv. 5 

His isolation g's defined. . tt .12 

blanch'd with darkness must Ig! 11 Ix. 8 

days that g to something strange, 11 lxx. 11 

year by year the landscape g . 11 c. 19 

For thee she grew, for thee she g's 11 Con. 35 

I should flight-headed, I fear . Maud, I.xix. 100 
ever afresh they seem'd to^". . 11 II. i. 28 

I know where a garden g's, . 11 v. 72 

That g for happy lovers. . . The Brook . 173 
let the sorrowing crowd about it^, Ode on Well. 16 
weaker g's thro' acted crime, . Will . . 12 

ourselves shall g In use of arms . Elaine . 64 

days will g to weeks, the weeks . Gninevere . 617 
your growth, I seem'd again tog, Ay Inzer's P. 359 
heaps of living gold that daily g, . it . 655 

as by miracle, g straight and fair — rr . 676 

I may die but the grass will^, (rep.) The Window 109 

growest. 
ever thus thou g beautiful . . Titho?ius . 43 

growing. 
ere the light on dark was g, . . Oriana . 10 
till my grave be g green : . . May Queen, ii. 43 
His face is g sharp and thin. D. oftheO. Year 46 
like a pear In g, . . Walk, to theM. 46 

g coarse to sympathise with clay. Locksley H. 46 
On that cottage g nearer, . . L.qf Burleigh 35 
C7and fading and g upon me (rep.) Maud, I. iii. 7 
had a saplings on it, . . . Enid . 1012 

g longest by the meadow's edge, . n . 1106 

November day Was g duller twilight, En. Arden 723 
g dewy-warm With kisses balmier TitJw?ins . 58 

growled. 
farewell to my sire who g An answer Princess, v. 223 
so the ruffians^, Fearing to lose, Enid . 1411 

growling. 
^like a dog, when his good bone . Enid . 1407 

lays his foot upon it, Gnawing a.udg;n . 1411 

ga.s before, And cursing . ?r 1423 

grown. 
That her voice untuneful^ - , . . The Owl, ii. 6 
she is^ so dear, so dear, . . Aimer's D. 170 
eyes g dim with gazing on the . Lotos-E's. . 132 
when love is^-To ripeness, . . To J. S. . 14 
am I feeble g ; my end draws nigh ; StS. Stylites 35 
matin-chirp hath^- Full quire, . Love and Dutyg$ 
maiden's jet-black hair has^ - , . Day-Dm. . So 
My beard has g into my lap.' . ti . 154 

wake on science g to morej , 11 . 222 



tho' you have g You scarce have 
g a bulk Of spanless girth, . 
left barren, scarce had g The grain 
thy crescent would have g; . 
I myself with these have g . 
morbid hate and horror have^ - . 
now has g The vast necessity 
g a part of me ; but what use in it ? 
mean Vileness, we are^so proud — 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, ii. 285 

11 vi. 19 

In Mem. Hi. 7 

n lxxxiii. 

tf Con, 

Maud, I. vi, 
Vivien 

Elaine 1406 

Ay liner* sF. 756 



4 

75 
773 



growth. 
G's of jasmine turn'd Their humid D. of P. Worn. 69 
seed of men and g of minds. 'Love tltou thy land,' 20 
knightly g that fringed his lips. . M.d' Arthur 220 
Or that Thessalian £-, . . . Talking O. 292 
bear a double g of those rare souls, Princess, ii. 163 
freedom, force and^f Of spirit . tr iv. 123 

no song, the true g of your soil, . 11 . 132 

In us true^-, in her a Jonah's gourd 11 . 292 

train To riper g the mind, . . In Mem. xli. 8 
dwarf 'd a g of cold and night, . 11 lx. 7 

change of place, like g of time, . 11 civ. n 

native g of noble mind ; tr ex. 16 

Watching your^, I seem'd again to Aylmer'sF. 359 

gnuit. 
meditative g's of much content, Walk. totlieM. 79 

gnmted. 
waked with silence, g * Good ! ' M.d Arthur, Ep. 4 

grunter. 
tends her bristled^ in the sludge ;' Princess, v. 26 

guano. 
A pamphleteer on g and on grain, Princess, Con. 89 

guard (s.) 
Encompass'd by his faithful g, . InMem.cxxv. 8 

guard [verb.) 
clear-stemm'd platans g The outlet A radian N*s. 23 
cliffs that g my native land, . . Audley Ct. 4S 
Brothers, the woman's Angel g's you, Princess,v. 400 
like a beacon g's thee home. . In Mem. xvii. 12 

g the portals of the house ; . .11 xxix. 12 

here shall silence £- thy fame ; . 11 Ixxiv. 17 

myself from myself I g, . . Maud, I. vi. 60 

g us, g the eye, the soul Of Europe, Ode on Well.160 
bad you g the sacred coasts, 
arms to g his head and yours, 
to g the j ustice of the King : 
I shall g it even in death. 
g thee in the wild hour coming 01 
I g as God's high gift . 
g and foster her for evermore, 
enough, Sir! I can g my own/ 

guarded. 
G the sacred shield of Lancelot : 
thou shalt be g till my death. 

gua?-diug. 
G kings and realms from shame ; 

guerdon (s.) 
Sequel of g could not alter me 
take A horse and arms for g; 
free gift, then/ said the boy, ' Not^, 
legend as in g for your rhyme " 

guerdon (verb.) 
grows to g after-days : ' 'Love tJwu thy land' etc. 27 
a costly bribe To g silence, . . Princess, i. . 201 



. E7iid . 


172 
1276 


. Elnhie 


1782 
1109 


1, Guinevere 


44S 


■ 


4§o 
586 
276 


. Aylmer*s F 


. Elaine 


4 


. Guinevere 


445 


. Ode on Well 


68 


, CEnone 


I 5i 


. Enid . 


1067 


. Vivien 


1072 
404 



guess. 
cannot g How much their welfare 
Power in darkness whom we^; . 
What art thou then? I cannot £"; 
To his own great self, as I g; 
I might g thee chief of those, 

g?tess*d. 

I leave thy greatness to be g; 
might have g you one of those 
g a hidden meaning in his arms, 



Princess, iii. 263 
InMem. exxiii. 4 
11 exxix. 5 
Maud, II. v. 33 
ElaUie . 183 

In Mem. Ixxiv. 4 
Enid . . 431 
Elaine . 17 



TENXYSO.X'S WORKS. 



iSr 



POEM. LINE. 

Tiuo Voices 411 

Will Water. 73 

• =39 

Princess, Pro. 106 

11 v. 220 

In Men;, vi. 30 

11 xxix. 5 

11 Ixxxiii. 2r 

11 lxxxviiL 26 

11 Con. 86 

Enid . . 379 

" . • 1133 

Elaine . 1S1 

Ay liner's F. 790 



Locksley H. 
I/iMcm. xxiii. 
Vivien 

Elaine 

Tit lion us . 



guest. 
Each cnterM like a welcome,?-. 
honour'd by the g Half-mused, 
mellow Death, like some late,? - , 
silver-set ; about it lay the g's, 
likewise, our late ,?-'.<•, . 

flows In expectation of &g ; 
rings no more a welcome £• . 
myself an honour'd g, . 
or happy sister, sung, . 
tcturc of a stiller £-, 
that cometh, like an honour'd,?*, 
that her,?- should serve himself.' 

cheer To feed the sudden g, 
' Whence contest thou, my g, 
g, their host, their ancient friend, 

guide [s.) 
were dangerous £-\s the feelings — 
ly turns was g to each, 
ou for g and master, . 
were I glad of you as g and friend; 
with good Sir Torre for?- 
thc silver star, thy g, Shines 

guide (verb. ) 
there is a hand that g's.' . . Princess, Con. 79 
g Her footsteps, movingsidebyside/«.l/<v;/.cxiii. 18 
and He that made it will.?. . . Maud, I iv. 48 
he Will g me to that palace, . .Elaine 1123 

guided. 

Whose feet arc g thro' the land, . In Mcmixv. 9 

me had ^ me, ... 11 cxii. 3 

guile. 

pure as he from taint of craven,?, Ode on Well. 135 

guilt. 
When I have purged my g.' . . Pal. of Art 296 
g of blood is at your door . L.C.V.deVere 43 
' hro' shame and g, 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 82 
gather' d either £-. . . Princess iv. 217 
eye which watches?- And goodness, luMetu.xxvi. 5 
judger would have call'd her g, . Enid . 1282 
subtle beast, Would track her? . Guinevere . 60 
too-fearful g Simpler than any child " . 368 

wreck itself without the pilot s^, . Aylmer's F. 716 

guiltless. 
Guilty or g, to stave off a chance . Enid . 1202 

guilty. 

Am I g of blood ? .... Maud,l\.u. 73 

dream she could be.?' of foul act, . Enid . . 120 

uiltless, to stave off a chance n . 1202 

[ out the slothful officer Or g, 11 . 1787 

guinea. 

jingling of the g helps the hurt . Locksley H. 105 

guinea-hens. 
praised his hens, his geese, his g-h; The Brook . 126 
Guinev *re. 
incclot and Queen G Rode Sir L.andQ. G. 20 
that great tenderness for G, Enid . . 30 

ite into the morn, 157 

mindful of his face . if . 191 

stately queen whose name was G, 11 . 667 

that morning G had climb' d " . . 826 

"• had been sick) to G Elaine . 79 

I of beauty : ' 114 

I :1ol when they glanced at G 11 . . 270 

at the palace craved Audience of G, n . 1 157 

And therefore m our lady G, . " . • 1271 

'/' had fled the court, . Guinevere . 1 

' 01 G, . M . 360 

did not 1 ihcc, G, . ii . 529 

yet ii" r I w.i, ever virgin 11 . 552 



gum*-) 



lit Into the?'* of sleep. 

ill their mystic j-** 
he g's will wash us down : 
<low 11 the Rery^afl talk of it, 

■ g*l beneath 
Ag that ever shuts and g.ipcs, 



. D.o/F. Worn. 53 

Car. truer 'si). 257 

, Ulysses . C2 

Princess, iii. 270 

In Mem. \\. 15 

11 Ixix. 6 



POEM. LINE. 

in this stormy,?- have found a pearl Maud, I. xviii.42 
a,?-of ruin, Swallowing gold, . Sea Dreams 79 

gulf (verb.) 
ShouId.?him fathom-deep in brine; In Mem. x. 18 

Gulistan. 
any rose of G Shall burst her veil : Princess, iv. 104 

gulled. 
break our bound, and.? Our servants, Princess, 1V.51S 

gun. 
Nor ever lost an English g ; . Ode on Well. 97 

'Charge for the g's'.' he said : . Lt. Brigade 6 
Not a p-was fired. . . . The Captain 40 

Each beside his,?-. ... 11 .52 

gunner. 
Sabring the g's there . . . Lt. Brigade 29 

gurgle. 
All throats that ^-sweet! . . Talking O. . 2C6 

Gurnion. 
By castle G where the glorious King Elaine . 293 

g-.,sh. 
g'cs from beneath a low-hung cloud. Ode to item. 71 

gushing, 
g of the wave Far far away did seem Lolos-E's 



31 



gust. 



one warm?, full-fed with perfume, Gardener's D. 112 
chaff for every g of chance, . Princess, iv. 337 

.? that round the garden flew-, In .lA-w.lxx-xviii. 19 
An angry g of wind PufTd out . Vivien . 580 

Gmydion. 
G made by glamour out of flowers, Enid . 



gynci'ccum. 
Dwarfs of the g, fail so far . 



• 743 
. Princess, iii. 262 



Shot up and shrill' d in flickering^-.--, Princess, viL ;i 



II. 
too rough // in Hell and Heaven, Sea Dreams 192 

haacrc. 
Warnt worth nowt ah, . . N. Farmer . 39 

wi haate oonderd h o Squoirc's, . . -44 

liabit (custom. ) 
Idle // links us yet. . . . ililler'sD. . 212 
Or to burst all links of /< — . . Locksley H. 157 
Drink deep, until the It's of the slave, Princess, ii. 77 
to us, The fools of It, sweeter seems In Mem. x. 12 
memory from old It of the mind . Guinevere . 376 

habit (riding dress.) 
whether The /;, hat, and feather, . Maud, I. xx. 18 

Hades. 
or the enthroned Persephone in //, Princess, iv. 419 

haft. 
It twinkled with diamond sparks, . 
knife's /; hard against the board, . 

hagga rd. 
arm to which the Queens Is It 

hail{s.) 
Where falls not /;, or rain, 
Raul] wind, frost, heat, /;, damp,, 
with rain or //, or tire or snow ; 
And gilds the driving //. 
Sleet of diamond-drm and pearly h ; Vision of Sinn 

hail verb.) 
meets a friend who Its him, . If 'alk. to the if. 34 

//, hidden to the knees in fern, . Talking 
city-roar that lis Premier or king ! Princess, Coit.ioi 
voices h it from the brink ; . . /" Mem. cxv. 14 

//once more to the banner of battle Maud, 111. vi. 42 



M. d' Arthur 56 
Enid . 144S 

Elaine 1221 

M. d'ArtltursCo 

,S7 .V. Stylites 16 

ley II. 193 

Sir Galahad 56 



182 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

ere he came, like one that h's a ship, Enid 1389 

Fair as the Angel that said ' A' . Aylmer's F. 681 

hailed. 

Walter,// a score of names uponher, Princess, Pro. 155 

hair. 

With thy floating flaxen -^ ; . . Adelijie . 6 
smooth'd his chin and sleek'tl his h, A Character 11 
Dressing their A with the white . Tlie Merman 13 
Combing her A Under the sea, . T/te Mermaid 4 
I would comb my A (rep. ) . . n .11 

round her neck floated her h . CEnone . 18 

sunny A Cluster'd about his temples 11 . 58 

her deep A Ambrosial, golden . ti . 173 

her A Wound with white roses, . Pal. of Art 98 
kindly voice and on his silver A / . MayQueen,\\i. 13 
Your A is darker, and your eyes . Margaret . 49 
that A More black than ashbuds . Gardener' sD. 27 
single stream of all her soft brown A 11 * . 127 
wound Her looser A in braid, . it . 155 

In wreath about her A. . . Talking O. 288 

Catch the wild goat by the h, . Locksley H. 170 
and his A A yard behind. . . Godiva . 18 
maiden's jet-black A has grown, . Day-Dm. . 80 
my A Is gray before I know it. . Will Water. 167 
With a single rose in her A. . . Lady Clare. 60 
One her dark A and lovesome mien. Beggar Maid 12 
H, and eyes, and limbs, and faces, Visipn of Sin 39 
girl-graduates in their golden A. . Princess,Pro. 142 
long black A Damp from the river , ir iv. 257 

touch not a A of his head : . it 388 

in the long night of her deep A, . ir . 470 

fingering at the A about his lip, . 11 v, 293 

caught his A, And so'belabour'd him 11 . 330 

single band of gcjld about her A, . 11 . 502 

sittest ranging golden h ; . . In Mem. vi. 26 
youth and babe and hoary lis: . 11 lxviii. 10 

To reverence and the silver A; . nlxxxiii. 32 

the roots of my A were stirred . Maud, I. i. 13 
What if with her sunny A, . . 11 vi. 23 

thought It is his mother's A. . ir II. ii. 70 

h In gloss and hue. the chesnut, . The Brook -]\,iois 
A twist of gold was round her A; . Vivien . 70 

snake of gold slid from her A, . 1? . 737 

Set it in this damsel's golden h, . Elaine . 205 
bright A blown about the serious face ir . . 391 
shook his A, strode off, and buzzM it . . 718 
all her bright A streaming down — it . 1150 

seize me by the A and bear me far, — tt . 1415 

dewy A blown back like flame : . Guinevere . 282 
milkwhite arms and shadowy A tt . 413 

a A of this low head be harm'd. . it . 444 

golden A, with which I used to play tt . 543 

This A is his: she cut it off . . En. Arden . 895 
hoar A of the Baronet bristle up . Ay liner's F. 42 
h as it were crackling into flames . tt . 586 

not a A Ruffled upon the scarfskin, 11 . 659 

gray h's with sorrow to the grave — it . 777 

face was ruddy, his A was gold, . The Victim 36 
Beat breast, tore A, cried out . Lucretius . 273 
And you with gold for A, . . The Window 65 

hairy-fibred. 
Claspt the gray walls with Alarms, Enid . 323 

hale (adj.) 
was strong and A of body then ; . StS.Stylites 28 
wears his manhood A and green : . hi Mem. lii. 4 

Hale (surname. ) 
Francis H, The farmer's son, . A udley Ct. . 73 

haled. 
we A the groaning sow, . Walk, to the M.S3 

They A us to the Princess . . Princess, iv. 252 
h him out into the world, . . Aylmer 's F. 467 
h the yellow-ringleted Britoness — Boddicea . 55 

haler. 
and A too than I : ... Guinevere . 677 

half. 
Portioned in halves between us, . Gardener' s D. 5 
/; stands up And bristles ; A has fall'n Walk, to theM. 23 



POEM. LINE. 

H is thine and A is his : . . Locksley H. 92 

A Without you ; with you, whole ; Princess, iv. 440 
of those halves You worthiest . u . 441 

either sex alone Is A itself, . . tt vii. 284 

part it, giving A to him . . . luMem.xxv. 12 
My bosom friend and A of life ; . it lviii. 3 

divided A of such A friendship . tt lxxxiv. 63 
A to the setting moon are gone, . Maud,l.xxi\. 23 
A to the rising day ; ... 11 .24 

half-aghast. 
Leolin still Retreated h-a, . . Aylmer's F. 330 

half-akin. 
No longer h-a to brute, . . InMem.Cou. 133 

half-allowing, 
h-a smiles for all the world, . . Aylmer's F. 120 

half-ajjtazed. 
Whereat he stared, replying, h-a . Godiva . 21 
dispatcheswhichtheHeadTookA-tf, Princess, iv. 361 

half-angered. 
H-a with my happy lot, . . Miller's D. . 200 

half arisen. 
came upon him h-a from <sleep, . Aylmer's F. 584 

half-attained. 
cope Of the h-a futurity, . . Ode to Mem. 33 

half-asleep. 
As h-a his breath he drew, . . The Sisters 28 

half-awake, 
h-a I heard The parson taking wide The Epic . 13 

half-awakened. 
The earliest pipe of h-a birds . Princess, iv. 32 

half-blind. 
sudden light Dazed me h-b : . .Princess, v. 11 

half-bold. 
H-b, half-frighted, with dilated eyes, Enid . 1445 

half-buried. 
H-b in.the Eagle's down, . . Pal. of Art 122 

half-canonized. 
H-c by all that look'd on her, . Princess, i. . 23 

half cheated. 
rathe she rose, h-c in the thought . Elaine . 339 

half-clench' d. 
hand h-c Went faltering sideways Vivien . 698 

half closed. 
dropping low their crimson bells H-c, A rabian N's. 62 

half conscious, 
H-c of the garden-squirt, . . Amphion . 91 
H-c of their dying clay, . . InMem.Wn. 7 

half consent. 
Assumed from thence a h-c . . Princess, vii. 67 

half-crown. 
Is it the weight of that h-c, . . Will Water. 155 

half-cruslied. 
h-c ampjig the rest A dwarf-like Cato Princess, vii. no 

half -cut-down, 
h-c-d, a pasty costly-made, . . Audley Ct. . 22 

half-dead. 
H-d to know that I shall die.' . fuMem.xxxv. 16 
Maybe still I am but h-d; . . Maud,I\.v. 99 
And all things look'd h-d, . . Grandmot/ier 34 

half-defended. 
Lo their colony h-d ! . . . Boddicea . 17 

half-despised. 
not look up, or h-d the height . Guinevere . 636 

half-dipt. 
a summer moon H-d in cloud : . Godiva . 46 

half-disdain. 
A-fi?Perch'd on the pouted blossom Princess,Pro. 194 



■^M 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



183 



half-disfame . POEM, 
what is Fame in life but h-d, . Vivien 

well know 1 that Fame is h-d, . 11 



LINE. [ half-naked. POEM. LINE. 

. 315 H-n as if caught at once from bed Princess, iv. 266 

half-nestled. 
half-falling from his knees, H-n at his heart, Vivienys^ 

half -oblivious. 

(For I was h-o of my mask) . . Princess, iii. 320 

half-open. 

half-drain d. Thro' h-o lattices .... Eleuuore . 23 

a flask Between his knees, h-d; .Day-Dm. . 46 half-opened. 

half-dream. h-o bell of the woods ! . . . Princess, vL 176 



half-disrooted. 
A tree Was h-d from his place . Princess, iv. 168 

half-divine. 



The man I held as h-d ; 



. In Mem.xiv. jc 



Falling asleep in a h-d ! 



Lotos- E*s. . 101 



half-drooping: 
half or. her mother propt, H-d from Princess, iv. 349 

half-dropt. 
With *-</ eyelids still, . . . Lotos-Es. . 135 

half-English. 
the sweet /;-.£ Neilgherry air . The Brook . 17 

luilf -envious. 
H-t of the flattering hand, . . Elaine . 348 

half-face. 
From :he h-f 'to the full eye, . Elaine 1255 

half-fallen. 
Hf across the threshold of the sun D.ofF. Worn. 63 

half-falling, 
h-f frcm his knees, Half-nestled . Vivien . 753 ' 

half-foresaw, 
h-f that he, the subtle beast, . Guinevere . 59 

half-forgotten. 
our ^reat deeds, as /i;/ things. . Lotos-Ks. . 123 
n rhymes, Ere they be /<;/"; /K;// Water. 14 
Lmw in the dust of h-f kings, .Elaine 1328 

half-frigh tened. 
Look'd down, half-pleased, //y, . A mphioii . 54 

half-frighted. 
Half-bold, hf\\'\ti\ dilated eyes, . Enid . 1445 

on the book, hf, Miriam swore. . En. Arden . 844 

half-glance. 
With a h-g upon the sky . . A Cliaracter 1 

half-grown. 
H-g as yet, a child, and vain — . In Mem. cxiii. 9 

half-guilty. 
grew h-g in her thoughts again, . Guinevere . 405 

half-hid. 
1 1. re h-h in the gleaming wood, . Maud, I. vi. 69 

luilf-historic. 
dealt with knights Half-legend, /;-/(, Princess, Pro. 30 

half-hour. 
For one /<-/< and let him talk tome!' The Brook . 115 

half-hysterical. 
A half-incredulous, /<-/» cry. . . .£«. /J zvzV/i . 854 

half-incredulous. 
A //-;', half-hysterical cry. . En. Arden . 854 

half invisible. 
Hi to the view, Wheeling . . Vision of Sin 36 

half-lapt. 
//-/ in glowing gauze . . . Princess, vi. 118 

half-legend. 
dealt with knights //-/, half-historic /V/wrtt./Vo- 30 

half-lost. 
//•/in belts of hop . . Princess, Con. 45 

//•/ in the liquid azure bloom . Maud, I. iv. 5 
Owe you me nothing for a life h-Vi Enid . 1 167 

half-miracle. 
»eem'd h-m To those he fought with— Elaine . 496 

ha If muffled. 
answer which, h-m in his beard, . Princess, v. 224 

half-mused. 
the guest H-m, or reeling ripe, . Will Water. 74 



half-opening. 
balmier than h-o buds Of April, . Titltonus . 59 

half-parted. 
H-p from a weak and scolding hinge, The Brook Zf, 

half pleased. 
Look'd down, h-p, half-frighten'd A mphion . 54 

Ita If-possessed. 
So Lilia sang : We thought her /:-/, Princess, iv. 562 

half -right. 
I thought her h-r talking of her wrongs : Princess, v. 275 

ha If -s a rdon ica lly. 
I ask'd him h-s Ed. Morris . 59 

half-science. 
The sport h-s, fill me with a faith. Princess, Con. 76 

half-self 
my other heart, And almost my h-s, Princess, i. 55 

half-sh rouded. 
h-s over death In deathless marble. Princess, v. 71 

half-shut. 
With h-s eyes ever to seem Falling Lotos-E's. . 100 

half-shy. 
And so it was— half-sly, h-s, . Miller's D. . 133 

half -sick, 
h-s at heart, rcturn'd. . . Princess, iv. 204 

half sicken ing. 
H-s of his pension'd afternoon, . Aylmer's F. 461 

half-sister. 
Raw Haste, h-s to Delay. 'Love thou thy land,'elc.g6 

half-sly. 
And so it was — h-s, half-shy, . Miller's D. 133 

half-suffocated. 
H-s in the hoary fell . . . Vivien , 689 

till I yell'd again H-s, . . . Lucretius . 58 

half-tears. 
Eyes, love-languid thro' /;-/, . Love and Duty-fi 

half-thinking, 
h-t that her lips Who had devised Elaine 1279 

half-turned. 
lichen fixt On a heart h-t to stone. Maud, I. vi. 78 

ha If unconscious. 
I saw with h-u eye . . . The Letters 15 

half-uncut. 
She left the novel h-u . . . TalkiugO. .117 

half-virws. 
nor take H-v of men and things. . Will Water. 52 

half-whispered. 
drawing nigh llw in his ear, . CEnone . 182 

hatfwithin. 
Sccm'd h-w and half-withotit, . Miller's D. 7 

half without. 
Sccm'd half-within and h-w, . Miller's D. 7 

half -world. 
yonder morning on the blind /<-w; Princess, vii. 331 

hall. 
the throne In the midst of the h : The Mermaid 22 
Round the /< where I sale, . . 11 .26 



1 84 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Gods Ranged in the /is of Peleus ; CEnone 



LINE. 

• 79 
she shriek' d in that lone h, . . Pal, of Art 258 
stands a spectre in your h: . . L.C. V.de Vere^z 
pine among 3'our /is and towers . 11 .58 

about the gardens and the /is . M.d f Arthur 20 
who would rent the h : , . .A udley Ct. . 30 
strode About the h, among his dogs Godiva . 17 

A sudden hubbub shook the A, . Day-Djn. . 139 
So pass I hostel, h, and grange ; . Sir Galahad 81 
Leading on from h to h. . . L. of Burleigh 52 

from vases in the A Flowers . . Princess, Pro. 11 
If our old /is could change their sex 11 . 140 

up a flight of stairs into the h. . 11 ii. 17 

thought in our own h to hear . n . 39 

Look, our h I Our statues ! — . u .61 

his portrait in my father's h . 11 . 221 

in /is Of Lebanonian cedar : . m . 330 

hearts lie fallow in these /is . . 11 . 378 

round these /is a thousand baby . n . 379 

h glitter'd like a bed of flowers. . it . 416 

hooded brows I crept into the h, . ti iv. 206 

where she sat High in the h \\ . 253 

from the illumined h Long lanes . tr . 456 

cap of Tyrol borrow' d from the h, it . 578 

on they moved and gain'd the h, . 11 vi. 332 

Descending, struck athwart the h, 
Love in the sacred /is Held carnival 
Gray /is alone among their massive 



Con. 



. ■ 344 
vii. 69 
Con. 43 
Dies off at once from bower and h, hi Mem. viii. 6 
our old pastimes in the h w xxx. 5 

echoes in sepulchral /is . . 11 lvii. 2 

saw the tumult of the /is; . . ir Ixxxvi. 4 

Imperial /is, or open plain ; . . 11 xcvii. 29 

Methought I dwelt within a h, . n cii. 5 

The h with harp and carol rung. n -9 

white-f3ced /is, the glancing rills, 
lord of the broad estate and the //, Maud, I 
I am sick of the //and the hill 
Workmen up at the H ! — 
by a red rock glimmers the H 
In the meadow under the HI 
Bound for the H, (rep.) 
On my fresh hope, to the //to-night 
bringing me down from the H 
O RivuletJ born at the H, . 
As the music clash'd in the h; . 11 xxii. 
Of the old manorial h. . . . n II. iv. 
Sorrow darkens hamlet and h. . Ode 011 Well. 
loved that h, tho' white and cold, The Daisy . 
some gay knight in Arthur's hi . Enid 
on a day, he sitting high in h, 
mindful of his face In the king's h, 
thro' the open casement of the //, 
dusky-rafter'd many-cobweb'd H, 
because their k must also serve . 
here, now there, about the dusky h ; 
eat in Arthur's h at Camelot. 
all their converse in the h, . 
Woke where he slept in the high h, 
fancy dwelling in this dusky h; . 
remembering her oldruin'd h, 
take him up, and bear him to our h: 
to the naked k of Doorm, 
on an oaken settle in the h, 
in the naked h, propping his head, 
Earl Doorm with plunder to the k. 
all the h was dim with steam of flesh : 
ate with tumult in the naked h, . 
He roll'd his eyes about the h, 
turn'd all red and paced his h, 
loved me serving in my father's h : 
the brute Earl up and down his /;, 
all the men and women in the h . 
huge Earl lay slain within his h. . 
in their /is arose The cry of children, 
the King his havens, ships, and /is, P 
Arthur's arras h at Camelot . n 

After the king, who eat in Arltiur's JCs. Elaine 
* Known am I, and of Arthur's /;, 11 

ever among ladies ate in H, . n 

into that rude h Stept with all grace, ir 



34 
80 
7 
37 
. 118 

- M7 
. 192 
. 328 
. 362 

■ 39° 
. 401 

• 43 2 

- 520 
. 755 
. 802 

1 103 
1401 
1418 
1421 
1429 
1440 
1451 
1453 
1458 
1516 

1547 
1560 

1579 
1654 
1812 
. 24 

• 99 
. 184 
. 188 

• 255 
. 262 



POEM. LINE. 

a chapel and a h On massive columns Elaine . 404 
reverently they bore her into /u . ir 1259 

rarely could she front in H, . . Guinevere . 62 
the lighted lantern of the h; . n . 260 

in the h itself was such a feast . w . 261 

sit once more within his lonely h, m . 493 

peacock-yewtree of the lonely H, En. Ardengg,6og 
county God — in whose capacious h, Aylmer's F. 14 
Aylmer follow' d Aylmer at the H it .36 

so that Rectory and H, Bound . m . 38 

ever welcome at the H, . if , 114 

darken'd all the northward of her H. n . 415 

groves And princely /is, and farms, it . 654 

children's laughter in their h it 787 

great H was wholly broken down, 11 . 846 

gleaming /is of morn. . . Tithonus . 10 

Echoes in his empty A ( Home t/iey brought/iim, 'etc. 4 
climb into the windy /is of heaven : Lucretius . 136 

Hall (surname.) 
the poet Everard H, The Epic . 4 

Here ended H, and our last light, M. d'A rthur£p. 1 

hall-ceiling. 
the fair h-c stately-set . 

hall-garden. 
up in the high H-g I see her pass 
Birds in the high H-g . 

hall-hearths. 
On the h-h the festal fires, . 

halloo. 
With a lengthen'd loud h, 
in the h Will topple to the trumpet 

hallowed. 
Your very armour /z, 

halo. 
hence this h lives about 
her own /is dusky shield ; 

halt (adj.) 
cured some h and maim'd ; . 
is there any of you h or maim'd ? . 
if a man were h or hunch'd, 

halt fs.) 
they made a h ; The horses yell'd ; 

halt (verb.) 
He seems as one whose footsteps h, 
cry '//,' and to her own bright face 

halted. 
hung his head, and h in. reply, 
when we h at that other well, 

halter. 
scared with threats of jail and h . 

hamlet. 
Two children in one h born . 
massive groves ; Trim /is ; . 
where the kneeling h drains . 
Four voices of four /is round, 
sorrow darkens h and hall. . 
distant colour, happy //, 
known Edith among the /is round, 

hammer (s.) 
Came to the h here in March — . 
silver /is falling On silver anvils, . 
iron-clanging anvil bang'd With /is 
hear'st the village h clink, 
everywhere Was h laid to hoof, . 
h and axe, Auger and saw, . 

hammer (verb.) 
h at this reverend gentlewoman. . 

hammered, 
/t from a hundred towers, 
long morn the lists were /; up, 

hammering. 
H and clinking, chattering stony . 



Pal. of Art 141 

Maud, I. iy. 11 
11 xii. 1, 25 

. Day-Dm. . 34 



The Oiul, ii. 13 
Princess, ii. 213 



Princess, v. 403 

Will Water. 113 
The Voyage 32 

St S. Siylites 135 

11 140 

Guinevere . 42 

Princess, v. 233 

Will . 15 

Enid . . 959 

Enid . 1659 

Vivien . 129 

Aylmer" 's F. 520 

Circumstance 8 

Princess, Con. 44 
In Alem. x. 15 
it xxviii. 5 
Ode on Well. 7 
The Daisy . 27 
Aylmer's F. 615 

A udley Ct. . 59 
Princess, i. 213 
; " v. 494 
In Mem. cxx. 15 
Enid . . 256 
En. Ardeii . 173 

Princess, in. 113 

Godiva . 75 

Princess, v. 358 

Princess, iii. 343 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



hammock-shroud. poem. line. 

His heavy-shotted h-s . . . JuMem.wi. 15 

hand. 
to take Occasion by the /;, . . To the Queen 31 
Claps her tiny lis above me, . Lilian . 4 

When I would kiss thy h, . . Madeline . 31 
Ieddest by the h thine infant Hope. Ode to Mem. 30 
O cursed h ! O cursed blow ! . Oriana . 82 

Laughing and clapping their lis . The Merman 29 
who hath seen her wave her h ? . L. ofShalott,\.2^ 
Leaning his cheek upon his h, . Eteanbre . 118 
till thy// Fail from the sceptre-staff. CEuoue . 123 
on this h, and sitting on this stone ? 11 . 229 

lis and eyes That said, We wait . Pal. of Art 103 
hollowing one h against his ear, . it . 109 

From one h droop'd a crocus : . ir . 119 

clapt her h's and cried, " I marvel tr . 189 

The airy /; confusion wrought, . 11 . 226 

If Time be heavy on your h's, I,. C. V. de Vere 66 
put your h in mine, . . 1 May Queen, iii. 23 
for other lis than mine. . " . 52 

Sinking ships, and praying lis, . Lotos-E's. . 161 
Beauty and anguish walking h in h D.ofF. Worn. 15 
father held his h upon his face ; . n . 107 

Shake h's, before you die. . D.oftheO. Year 42 
with his h against the hilt, f Love thou thy land* etc. 83 
clapt his h On Everard's shoulder, The Epic 21 

* either/;, Or voice, or else a motion M.d 'Arthur 76 
arise and slay thee with my h's. 7 . 11 . 132 

Then with both lis I flung him, . tr . 157 

drew the languid lis, n . 174 

three Queens Put forth their h's, . ir . 206 

chafed his lis, And call'd him . 11 . 209 

knowing God, they lift not h's of prayer, tr . 252 

at her h the greatest gift, . . Gardener* sD. 224 
Was wroth, and doubled up his lis, Dora . . 23 
She bow'd upon her h's, . . . 11 . 101 

clapt him on tKe h's and on the cheeks, n . 130 

clapt his h in mine and sang — . Audley Ct. 38 
modest eyes, a h, a foot . Walk, to the M. 46 

With h and rope we haled . <? 83 

with h's of wild rejection ' Go ! — Ed. Morris 124 
She might have lock'd her h's . Talking O. 144 
kingdoms overset, Or lapse from h to h. it . 258 

not dip His h into the bag : . . Golden Year 71 
turn'd it in his glowing It's; . . Locksley H. 31 
kiss him : take his h in thine. . 11 . 52 

tho' I slew thee with my h! . . it . 56 

Then a /; shall pass before thee, . ti .81 

a heart as rough as Esau's h, . Godiva . 28 
answer should one press his h's? . Two Voices. 245 
The page has caught her h in his : Day-Din. . 49 
lightly rain from ladies' lis. . . Sir Galahad 12 
Nor maiden's h in mine. . 11 .20 

stricken by an angel's h, . . n .69 

hold their h's to all, and cry . . Will Water. 45 
halo lives about The waiter's lis, . 11 . 114 

lay your h upon my head. . . Lady Clare 55 
Dropt her head in the maiden's/;, . 11 . 63 

Panted h in h with faces pale, . Vision of Sin 19 
Bandied by the lis of fools. ti . 106 

And the warmth of/; in /;. if . 162 

clasps the crag with hooked lis; . The Eagle . 1 
the touch of a vanish'd /;, . ' Break, break' etc. 11 
sport Went /; in /; with Science ; . Princess, Pro. 80 
/; that play'd the patron with her curls, n . 138 

long arms and lis Reach'd out, . ir i. 28 

Airing a snowy /; and signet gem, ir . 120 

to the tips of her long lis, . . u ii. 26 

set our // To this great work, . u -45 

Besides the brain was like the h, . 11 . 134 

Took both his h's, and smiling faintly ir . ^84 

Melissa, with her /; upon the lock, it . 301 

Push'd her flat h against his face . it . 345 

circle rounded under female h's . i: , 350 

one In this /; held a volume . it . 431 

Lady Psyche was the right /; now, n iii. 21 

hush'd amaze of /; and eye. n . 122 

shameless /; with shameful jest, . u . 297 

Many a little /; Glanced . . t» . 338 

once or twice she lent her h } . ir iv. 9 



POEM. LINE, 

Princess, iv. 370 



Palpitated, her /; shook, 

fell In to his father's lis, 

up unscathed : give him your /; ; . ' 

Whose brains are in their lis 

She, ending, waved her h's : 

on my shoulder hung their heavy lis, 

gives the battle to his lis : . 

clapt her lis and cried for war, 

Lay by her like a model of her h. 

fell Into your father's /;, 

push'd by rude lis from its pedestal, 

White lis of farewell to my sire, . 

now a wandering /; And now a pointed 

tender orphan h's Felt at my heart, 

king's right /; in thunder-storms, . 

a moment /; to /;, And sword to sword, 

female lis and hospitality.' . 

prest Their lis, and call'd them dear 

Us so lately claspt with yours, 

soft babe in his hard-mailed lis 

take her /;, she weeps : *Sdeat»'i I . 

the rougher /; Is safer : 

Refuse her proffer, lastly gave his /;. 

Low voices with the ministering h 

nor the /; That nursed me, . 

catch Her /; in wild delirium, 

often feeling of the helpless lis, . 

and tears upon my /; ; . 

/; in /; with Plenty in the maize, . 

the voice trembled and the /;. 

her forehead sank upon her lis, . 

all the fair young planet in her lis — 

Lay thy sweet lis in mine . 

there is a /; that guides.' 

Now shaking lis with him, now him, 

reach a /; thro' time to catch . In . 

A hollow form with empty lis.' 

waiting for a /;, A /; that can be . 

letters unto trembling lis 

lis so often clasp'd in mine, . 

where warm lis have prest and clos'd, 

strike a sudden /; in mine, 

Come then, pure lis, andbearthe 

Her lis are quicker into good : 

With human lis the creed of creeds 

thou and I have shaken lis, . 

I stretch lame lis of faith, 

reaps the labour of his lis, 

winds their curls about his /; .* 

He reach'd the glory of a h, . 

A /; that points, and palled shapes 

dark /; struck down thro' time, 

Whate'er thy lis are set to do 

Reach out dead lis to comfort me. 

reach us out the shining /;, . 

How much of act at human lis 

noise Of songs, and clapping lis, . 

Behold their brides in other h's ; . 

The larger heart, the kindlier A; . 

child would twine A trustful /;, 

A higher /; must make her mild, . 

I take the pressure of thine /;. 

out of darkness carrfe the lis 

Sweet human /; and lips and eye ; 

him to whom her /; I gave. . 

in their/; Is Nature like an open book: 

Pickpockets, each /; lusting for all Maud, I. i 

moved by an unseen /; at a game . 

Ready in heart and ready in /;, 

touch'd my /^ with a smile so sweet 

the treasured splendour, her /;, 

She waved to me with her /;. 

God, for a man with heart, head, /;, 

I kiss'd her slender h, . 

Sunn'd itself on his breast and his lis. 

if a /;, as white As ocean-foam 

labour and the mattock-harden'd /;, 

given false death her /;, 

It is this guilty /; / — 

sorrow For the /;, the lips, the eyes, 

(Claspt/;\yand that petitionary grace The Brook 





389 




497 




5°i 




■531 




557 
567 


1 


574 


t V. 


49 




55 


. 


223 




259 




425 




429 


' • 527 

1 vi. 57, 80 
t . 76 
r . z68 




191 
208 




261 


vii. 


327 
6 




38 

78 
96 




123 
186 




212 




231 
248 


r Con. 


345 
79 




92 


r em. i. 


7 


iii. 


12 


vii. 


4 


X. 


7 




'9 


xiii 


7 


xiv 


11 


xviii. 


9 


xxxiii. 


10 


xxxvi. 


10 


xxxix. 


29 


[iv. 


17 


lxiii. 


26 


lxv. 


12 


lxviii. 


17 


lxix. 


7 


Ixxi. 


J 9 


lxxiv. 


J 9 


Ixxix. 


16 


lxxxiii. 


43 


lxxxiv. 


38 


lxxxvi. 


19 


lxxxix. 


34 


cv. 


3° 


cviii. 


19 


cxiii. 


17 


cxviii. 


12 


exxiii. 


23 


exxviii. 


6 


Con. 


70 




131 


J, I. i. '. 


22 


iv. 


26 


v. 


9 



X1U. 


13 


XIV. 


17 


XV111. 


34 
63 



II. 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Ode oji Well. 22 

95 



733 



917 
2041 
1050 
1129 
1293 
1322 
1 361 
1366 
1430-3 
156S 
1607 
1615 
1741 



greet With lifted h the gazer 

both her open lis Lavish Honour 

toil of heart and knees and lis, . tr 

upon whose h and heart and brain it 

with her own white lis Array' d . Enid 

flyers from the h Of Justice, . . tr 

mightful h striking great blows . tr 

instinctive h Caught at the hilt, . if 

White from the mason's h, . . tr 

forward with the helmet yet in h . ir 

Or it may be the labour of his lis, tr 

the lords of our own It's; . . 11 

fondling all her h in his . . n 

On either shining shoulder laid a h, ti 

came a clapping as of phantom lis. 11 

seek a second favour at his lis. . u 

in her li A suit of bright apparel, . 11 

with this and laid it in my li, . m 

Help'd by the mother's careful h . tr 

Her by both lis he caught, . . tt 

our kind Queen, No h but hers, . 11 

by the lis of Dubric, the high saint, tr 

liever by his dear h had I die, . 11 

gently born But into bad lis fall'n, h 

in his li Bare victual for the mowers: h 

mid-warmthofwelcomeandgrasptA, 11 

Geraint Waving an angry h . .11 

lift a shining h against the sun, . 11 

Nor let her true h falter, . . it 

after all was done that h could do, tr 

chafing his pale lis, and calling . ?r 

unknightly with flat h . . tt 

reach'd a li, and on his foot . . 11 

li to h beneath her husband's heart, ir 

wrought too long with delegated lis, ti 

a stronger race With hearts and lis, 11 

left h Droop from his mighty . Vivien 

made a pretty cup of both my lis . tr 

Merlin lock'd his li in hers . 

woven paces and of waving Us, . 

Merlin loosed his h from hers 

lives dispersedly in many lis 

The wrist is parted from the h 

ringing with their serpent lis, 

her h half-clench'd Went faltering 

clapt her lis Together with a wailing 

Some one put this diamond in her h Elaine 

Half-envious of the flattering li, . tt 

kiss'd her, and Sir Lancelot his own h, ir 

smote her h: well-nigh she swoon'd: ir 

sweet to have it From your own li; ir 

slightly kiss'd the li to which he gave tr 

with mine own h give his diamond 11 

battle-writhen arms and mighty lis u 

laid the diamond in his open li. . ir 

glanced not up, nor waved his li, . tr 

Then gave a languid li to each, . ir 

lay the letter in my h . . . tr 

close the k Upon it ; . . 11 

Set in her h a lily, tr 

in one cold passive h Received at once h 

Arthur spied the letter in her h, . ti 

Be carven, and her lily in her /;. . 11 

gardener's^ Picks from the colewort Gziiuev. 

lis in lis, and eye to eye, . . ir 

bow'd down upon her lis Silent, . 11 

passionately, Her head upon her lis, ir 

meathelong'dfor served By lis unseen ; it 

his h fell from the harp, it . 301 

the novice crying, with clasp'd lis, tr . 309 

spared to lift his h against the King tr . 434 

lay their lis in mine and swear . n . 464 

laid her lis about his feet. tr . 524 

I cannot take thy li ; " • 549 

waving of the lis that blest. n . 57^ 

her h Grasp'd, made her vail her eyes : it . 654 

Another h crept too across his trade En. Ardetl . no 

set his h To fit their little streetward it . 169 

his careful li — The space was narrow tr . 176 

waved his li, and went his way. . it . 237 

eye was dim, li tremulous ; . u . 241 



756 



1026 
1107-28 

1108-29 
1142-49 

"95 
1263 

i33 2 
■e . 32 

• 99 
. 156 
. 179 
. 264 



POEM. LINE. 

fixt his heart he set his h . . En. Arden . 293 
Caught at his h, and wrung it . tr . 325 

her face had fall'n upon her lis ; . tr . 388 

door he paused and gave his h, . it . 444 

Shaking a little like a drunkard's h, tt . 462 

h dwelt Iingeringly on the latch, . tr . 515 

from her lifted h Dangled a length it . 750 

to all things could he turn his h. . n . 814 

Her art, her h, her counsel . . Aylmers F, 351 
Queenly responsive when the loyal h it . 169 
and an open h of help, . tr 174 

with the blade he prick'd his k, . 11 . 239 

stood Storming with lifted lis, . it . 332 

whiter even than her pretty /;; . tr . 363 

and the lis of power Were bloodier it . 452 

His face magnetic to the h . it 626 

free of alms her h — The h that robed tr . 697 

Wifelike, her h in one of his, . 11 . 808 

bore along the nave Her pendent lis, tr . 813 
A pickaxe in her h: . . . Sea Dreams 98 
last Gript my h hard, ... ir . 156 

loose one in the hard grip of his h, it . 159 

Left him one h, and reaching thro' tr . 275 

Strongofhis/;'^,andstrongonhislegsC : ?'(7?;^w^/^ri3 
sit with empty lis at home. . . Sailor Boy . 16 
Brandishing in her h a dart . . Boadicea . 71 
beat with rapid unanimous li, . tr . 79 

now shake lis across the brink ' My life is full* etc. 6 
Shake lis once more : I cannot sink m . 8 

Caress' d or chidden by the dainty h, Coquette, i. 1 
To Thor and Odin lifted a h. . The Victim 8 
King bent low, with h on brow, . 11 -57 

lis they mixt, and yell'd . _ . Lucretius . 56 
vast and filthy Us upon my will, . 11 . 217 

Fine little lis, fine little feet, . The JVi?idoiu 88 
Two little lis that meet, . . tt 134-7 

And loving lis must part, — . ir . 139 

hand (hand-writing.) 
such a li as when a field of corn . Princess, i. 233 
Last, Ida's answer, in a royal h, . tr v. 361 

hand {verb.) 
Hebes are they to h ambrosia, . Princess, iii. 97 

handful. 
Two lis of white dust, . . . Eotos-E's. . 113 
And my heart is a k of dust, . Maud, II. v. 3 

h an d-h idden. 
face H-h, as for utmost grief . Vivien . 746 

hand-in-hand. 
in a circle li-i-h Sat silent, . . InMem.xxx. n 
A wreath of airy dancers h-i-h . Guinevere . 259 
Enoch and Annie, sitting h-i-h t . En. Arden . 69 

handle. 
the sense that lis daily life — Walk, to theM.16 

loved to h spiritual strife, . In Mem. lxxxiv.54 

handled. 
Enoch took, and h all his limbs . En. Arden . 153 

handmaid. 
a h on each side Bow'd toward her, Princess, iv. 256 

hand?naid-work. 
On Enid, at her lowly h-w, . . Enid . . 400 

liand-to-inotith. 
Low miserable lives of h-t-jn . En. Arden . 116 

hang. 
lis the broad sunflower (rep.) ' A spirit haunts? etc. 9 
rainbow lis on the poising wave, . Sea-Fairies. ^ 29 
lis before her all the year, . L. ofShalott, ii.n 

midway down H rich in flowers, . CE7W7ie . 7 

statue seem'd To h on tiptoe, . Pal. of Art . 38 
the poppy lis in sleep. . : . Eotos-E's. . 56 
lis the heavy-fruited tree — . . Locksley H. 163 
the thunderbolt FTs silent ; . . Pri7icess, ii. 206 
Us his portrait in my father's hall . ti . 221 

is knowledge, and this matter lis: it iii. 299 

beard-blown goat H on the shaft, . tt iv. 61 

Can h no weight upon my heart . InMem.htn. 3 
yon hard crescent, as she lis . tr cvi. 10 



TENNYSO.VS WORKS. 



187 



FOE.M. LINE. 

My anguish lis like shame. . . MaadAl.iv. 74 

starry Gemini It like glorious crowns 11 III. vi. 7 

vcn: how he lis his head.'. Enid . . 976 

.ind-hovcr/i's in balance, . Aylmer's F. 321 

For it h 's one moment later. . Spiteful Let. 16 

/tanging. 

1 1 to points and h loose, 

\\ M .me kosa, /; there . 

u/j down his head. . 



Hanover. 
whether he came in the // ship, . 

happen. 
the dream that /; \rthen, . 
■ cr /< to me ! 
over evil // to me, 
. cr It's, not to speak to me, 

happier. 
Make me a little h : 

incthing h than myself. 

happiness. 
her due, Love, children, hi' 
all the warmth, the peace, the //, . 
shatter all the It of the hearth. 



M. d'Arthur2ig 
The Daisy . CO 
Enid . . 909 

Maud, II. v. 59 

Two Voices . 353 

Aland, II. ii. 79 

Enid . .471 

" . . 866 



Enid . 1 166 
En. Arden . 422 

Princess, iii. 229 

En. Arden . 762 

11 . 77: 



happy. 

O It thou that liest low, . . Oriana . 84 

She wish'd me //, but she thought Miller s D. . 139 

in ike him h yet. . MavQueen,'m. 46 

1 .11 it lies Decp-meadow'd, h, fair . M. if Arthur 262 

Made mc most //, faltering . . Gardener s D. 230 

have been h : but what lot Walk. lotheM.&g 

:lf alone Of all men h. . Ed. Morris. 78 

; ,tend thy flowers ; . . Love and DntyZ^ 

A with the mission of the Cross ; . Golden Year 43 

I- it well to wish thee /< ? . . Locksley 11. 43 

Overlive it — lower yet — be hi . 11 -97 

11 lie With such a mother! . . Princess, vW. 308 

is that lam It, . . . Maud, I. xviii. 50 

11. Too fresh . The Brook . 217 

ing her Tho' pale, yet/r, . Enid . 1728 

hanced they are It, being pure.' Vivien . 595 

i /; enough, and shook it off, Elaine . 780 

Bo that would make you h: . . n . 955 

< n we dwelt among the woods, 11 1030 

make mc //, making them An armlet 11 1176 

'. before thy shame? . . Guinevere . 420 

be still as It as God grants . En. Arden . 413 

*hc is h, he is singing Hosanna . 11 . 498 

faceagain And know that she is /(.' 11 . 720 

It : let her parents be.' . Aylmer's F. 366 

we two shall be It still. . . . Grandmother 52 

n my life : 11 .08 

filter as It as fair, 

K In i iiild and wife ; 

was //, His victim won. 



IV. toAlexan. 26 

The Victim 25 

11 65, 78 



harangue. 
Lady Psyche will h The fresli . Princess, ii. 81 

harassed. 
Vext with lawyers and It with debt : Maud,\.\\x. 22 
the thought Haunted and It him, . En. Arden . 721 

harbour. 
ring on a mast In //, . . En. Arden . 106 
that /; whence he sail'd before. . >i . 667 

harbourage. 

k for the night?. . . Enid . . 281 

// ' truth, g 1 1 truth, I know not, 11 . . 290 

I seek a h lor the night.' . .11. . 299 

harbour-bar. 

■:r the seething h-b . . Sailor Boy . 2 

ha rbottr-buoy. 
(be h-b With one green sparkle . Audley CI. . 85 

harbour-mouth. 
waft me from the /i~w, 'You ask me why? etc. 25 

1 the h-m; . Tin 1 ; 
ih-t't, . . . . The Captain 22 



hard. 
It seem'd so /; at first, mother, 
now it seems as It to stay, 
The Gods are h to reconcile : 
'Tis /: to settle order once again. 
How /( he breathes ! 



POEM. LINE. 

MayQueeu,iu. 9 

. 10 

Lotos-E's. . 126 

» . 127 

D. oj the O. Year 37 



62 

. The Goose . 50 

. Dora . . 150 

Love and Duty 35 

" . 50 



Lady Clare 

Princess, ii. 



53 

76 

2 73 

138 

v. 87 

• SOS 

vi. 181 

. 205 



It Vll. 

In Mem. XX. 
11 Ixviii. 
lxxxiv. 



saying, It to shape in act; 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 49 

vague in vapour, h to mark ; 

The blast was /; and harder. . 

you Will make him k, . 

It it seem'd to mc, When eyes, 

If the sense is h To alien ears, 

// is my doom and thine : 

' Your riddle is /: to read.' 

It, when love and duty clash 
rock so // but that a little wave 
will take her, they will make her /;, 
no tenderness — Too /;, too cruel : . 
These men are /* upon us 
woman is so It Upon the woman. . 
And call her /; and cold 
' It will be It ' they say ' to find 
words were /; to understand. 

"Tis It for thee to fathom this . 11 lxxxiv. 90 
/: to frame In matter-moulded forms 11 xciv. 45 

1 found, tho' crush'd to It and dry The Daisy . 97 
to give you warning, that seems/r ; Enid . 1271 
How/^youlookandhowdenyingly! Vivien . 187 
It and still as is the face that men . Elaine 1244 
It to take The helpless life . . En. Arden . 557 
' Too // to bear I why did they take 11 . 782 
Small werehisgains,and/:hiswork;.SVrt Dreams 8 
think I am /; and cold ; . . . Grandmother 17 
be jealous and It and unkind.' . 11 -54 
//, /;, /; is it only not to tumble, Hendccasyllabics 13 
O foolish bard, is your lot so h, . Spiteful Let. 5 

harden. 
sandy footprint It into stone.' 

harder. 
The blast was hard and h. 
Enid answer'd. It to be moved 
then indeed // the times were, 
hearts of men Seem'd It too ; 



Princess, iiL 254 



The Goose . s° 

Enid . 15.',- 

Ay Inters F. 452 

11 . 454 



It a rd-gra ined. 
h-g Muses of the cube and square Princess, Pro. 173 

hardilwod. 
Sick for thy stubborn //, . . InMent.W.. 14 

hard-mailed. 
Laid the soft babe in his h-m hands, Princess, vi. 151 

hardness. 
For he will teach him /;, . . Dora . . 118 

hard-ridden. 
like a beast h-r, breathing hard. . Aylmer's F. 291 

hard-set. 
smile a Its smile, like a stoic, . Maud, I. iv. 20 

hard-won. 
It-w and hardly won with bruise . Elaine 1159 

hare. 
nightly wircr of their innocent h . Aylmer's F. 490 

harebell. 
Like an Alpine h hung with tears Princess, vii. 100 

hark. 
hating to /< The humming . . To J. M. K. 9 
A the Dell For dinner, . . . Princess, ii. 410 
It the cluck within, the silver knell Maud, I. xviii. 64 



Elaine 



'II the Phantom of the bouse 

harken. 
mother Ida, /< ere I die. 
I shall // what you say, 
/; what the inner spirit sings. 

harlot. 
It's paint their talk as well as face Vivien 
in liii . Arc lis like the crowd, . 11 
hearing 'It ' mutter'il twice or thrice, 11 
the // leapt Adown the fori 



1016 



CEimne 23, rt pass. 

. May - 

. Lotos-E's. . 67 



r"'70 

680 

69a 

821 



Mammon made The It of the cities : Aylmer'sF. 37s 



1 88 



CONCORDANCE TO 



harm (s. ) poem. line. 

What/;, undone? deep /; to disobey, M.d'A rt/mrgj 
bites it for true heart and, not for /;, Princess, Pro. 172 
shielded all her life from h . . hi Mem. Con. 47 
a /; no preacher can heal ; . . Maud, I. iv. 22 
dare obey him to his h ? . . Enid . . 985 
use it to the h of any one, . . Vivien . 535 

harm (verb.) 
little thing may h a wounded man. M. d'Arthnr 42 

well might h The woman's cause. Princess, iii. 128 

To h the thing that trusts him, . n iv. 229 

not /is distinctive womanhood. . if vii. 258 

Jmrmed* 

satire, kin to charity, That h not : Prinecss, ii. 446 

h where she would heal ; . . Guinevere . 353 

a hair of this low head be h, . tr . 444 

harmonizing. 
A music h our wild cries, . . Sea Dreams 247 

harmony. 
adore The full-flowing h . . Eleano7'e . 46 
mighty-mouthed inventor of harmonies, Milton 1 

harness. 

clash'd his h in the icy caves . M. d'Arthuri86 

and the golden scale Of h, . . Princess, v. 40 

Hever had I gird his h on him, . Enid . . 93 

Harou?i A Iraschid. 
Of good HA. . . Arabia7i N*s. 11, etj>ass, 

harp (s.) 

bosoms prest To little lis of gold ; Sea-Fairies 4 
with cymbals, and h 's of gold, . Dying Siuan 32 

Love took up the h of Life, . . Locksley H. 33 

Like an iEolian h that wakes . Two Voices 436 

smote her /;, and sang. . . . Princess, iv. 20 

To one clear h in divers tones, . In Mem. i. 2 

I — my h would prelude woe — . 11 lxxxvii, 9 

brought the h and flung A ballad 11 lxxxviii. 27 

The hall with h and carol rang. . tr cii. 9 

Nor h be touch'd, nor flute be blown ; 11 civ. 22 

bitter notes my h would give, . 11 cxxiv. 2 

his hand fell from the h, . . Guinevere . 301 

harp (verb.) 
to h on such a moulder' d string? . Locksley H. 147 

harped. 
equal to the man. They h on this ; Princess, i. 131 

harfiing. 
Now h on the church-commissioners, The Epic 15 

harPy, 

harpies miring every dish, . . Lucretius . 159 

harry, 
h me, pretty spy And traitress/ . Guinevere . 358 

Harry. 
Bluff H broke into the spence . Talking 0. 47 
While H is in the five-acre . . Grajubnother 80 
H and Charlie, I hear them too — 11 . 81 

For PI went at sixty, ... ir .86 

harsh. 
his ways were h; But Dora bore them Do7-a . 33 
like a butt, and h as crabs. . Walk, to the M. 41 
not Too h to your companion . Princess, iii. 1S3 
Day by day more h and cruel . The Captain 13 
To make a truth less /;, . . Lucretius . 222 

harshness. 
My needful seeming /;, pardon it. Princess, ii. 289 
parents' h and the hapless loves . Aylmer's F. 616 

hart. 

a h Taller than all his fellows, . Enid . . 149 

heard The noble h at bay, ii 233 

the h with golden horns. . . Vivien . 259 

harvest. 

reap the h with enduring toil, . Lotos-Es. . 166 

for these five years So full a h . Dora . . 64 

heart is glad Of the full h, . .11 . . 67 

God reaps a h in me (rep.) . . SiS. Stylites 146 



POEM. LINE. 

rapt Upon the teeming h, . . Golden Year 70 

reaps not h of his youthful joys, . Locksley H. 139 

Dispensing h, sowing the To-be, . Princess, vii. 273 

And watch her h ripen, . . Maud, III. vi. 25 

harvest-field. 
brother James is in the h-f: . . The Brook . 227 

harvest time. 
and in h t he died. . . . Dora . -53 

hasp. 
were laid On the /; of the window, Maud, I. xiv. 19 

Jiaste (s. ) 
H, half-sister to Delay, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 96 
all miscounted as malignant h, . Princess, iv. '315 
made false k to the grave — . . Maud, I. i. . 58 
not dead!' she answer'd in all h. . Enid . 1391 

haste (verb.) 
oh, h, Visit my low desire I . . Ode to Mem. 3 
h away O'er ocean-mirrors . . In Mem. xii. 8 

hat. 
grew about, and tied it round his/2 Dora . . 81 
slavish h from the villager's head ? Maud, I. x. 4 
whether The habit, /;, and feather, if xx. 18 

hatch. 
the nest,' she said, 'To h the cuckoo. Princess, iv. 347 

hatched. 
fancies h In silken-folded idleness ; Princess, iv. 48 

hate (s. ) 
A h of gossip parlance, . . Isabel . . 26 

the h of/;, the scorn of scorn, . The Poet . 2 
hated him with the /; of hell, . The Sisters 22 

mete the bounds of/; and love — . Ttuo Voices 135 
Frantic love and frantic /;. . . Vision of Sin 150 
common /; with the revolving wheel Princess, vi. 157 
morbid /; and horror have grown . Maud, I. vi, 75 
All this dead body of/;, . . n xix. 97 

fires of Hell and of H ; . . n II. i. 10 

in a wink the false love turns to /;) Vivien . 701 
sharpen'd by strong /; for Lancelot. Guinevere . 21 
' With what a /; the people and the n . 155 

Hated him with a momentary h. . Aybuer's F. 211 
shriek of/; would jar all the hymns Sea Dreams 251 
aloof From envy, /;, and pity, . Luc7'etius . 77 
his hopes and h's, his homes and . 11 . 251 

hate (verb.) 
how much I /; Her presence, . CEnone . 225 
my flesh, which I despise and h, . St S. Stylites 57 
men have done it : how I /; you all ! Princess, Pro. 130 
(tho' you should /; me for it) . n iv. 322 

/; to hear me like a wind 11 v. 95 

mars her plan, but then would h, m . 126 

Discuss'd the books to love or/;, InMem. lxxxviii. 34 
I /; the dreadful hollow . . Maud, Li.. 1 

Well, he may live to /; me yet. . it xiii. . 4 
/; that he should linger here ; . Enid . . 91 

wheel and thee we neither love nor/;. 11 . 349-58 
/; the sin that seem'd so like his own 11 . 594 

people and the King Must /; me,' . Guinevere . 156 
Shriek out, ' I /; you, Enoch,' . Eji. Arden . 33 
height That makes the lowest A it, Aybuer's F. 173 
because I love their child They /; me : n . 424 

To /; a little longer ! Sea Dreams 62 

/; me not, but abide your lot : . Spiteful Let. 11 
yellow leaf h's the greener leaf . n .15 

I /; the spites and the follies. . tr -24 

I /;, abhor, spit, sicken at him ; . Lucretius . 196 

hated. 
presence, /; both of Gods and men. CEnone . 225 
/; him with the hate of hell, . . The Sisters . 22 
death and life she h equally, . Pal. of Art . 265 

madness, /; by the wise, . . LoveandDuty 7 

this world's curse, — beloved but h 11 -47 

Men /; learned women : . . Princess, ii. 442 

/; banter, wish'd for something real, it Con. i3 
/; her, who took no thought of them, Enid 1487 

She /; all the knights, . . . Vivien . 7 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



183 



POEM. LINE. 

and she It all who pledged. . . Elaine _ . 74° 

H him with a momentary hate. . Aylmer s F 211 

But they A his oppression . . The Captain 9 

they look'dat him theyA, . " -37 

hateful. 

II is the dark-blue sky, . . Lotos-E's._ . 84 
falsehood and yourself are A to us: Princess, iv. 524 

A, monstrous, not to be told ; . Maud, 111. vi. 41 

this forgetfulness was A to her. . Enid . . 55 

hater. 

What room is here for a A ? . . Spiteful Let. 14 

hating. 

h to hark The humming . . To J. M. A". 9 

hatred. 
A of her weakness, blent with shame Princess, vii. 15 

haunch. 

On his lies rose the steed, . . Princess, v. 482 

haunt (s.) 
A/: of ancient Peace. . . .Pal. of Art. 88 
The lis «f memory echo not. . Two Voices . 36y 

In lis of hungry sinners, . . Will Water. 222 
flood the lis of hern and crake : . In Mem. c. 14 
The feeble soul, a/; of fears, . 11 cix. 3 

Ks of horror and fear, . . . Maud, III. vi. 2 
I come from lis of coot and hem, . The Brook . 23 
A h of brawling seamen once, . En. Arden . 608 
A frequent h of Edith, . . . Aylmer's F. 148 

haunt (verb.) 

h's the year's last hours ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 1 

■whatever Oread A The knolls of Ida, (F.none . 72 

odours A my dreams ; . Sir Galahad 68 

Will h the vacant cup : . . Will Water. 172 

h Van nt the moulder'd lodges . Princess, iv. 44 

h the silence of the breast, . In Mem. xciii. 9 

Imy shapes That A the dusk, 11 xciv. 11 

I il lis The birth, the bridal : . " xcvii. 13 

Hies that h a wound, . . Aylmer's F 571 

Gods, who h The lucid interspace Lucretius . 104 

haunted. 

It k me, the morning long, . . Miller's D. . 69 

with a jolly ghost, . Walh.t0theM.2Z 

h by the wrangling daw ; . . InMetn. xcix. 12 

h by the starry head . . . Maud, I. xviii.22 

By autumn nutters h, . ._ . En. Arden . 8 

the thought // and harass'd him, . n . 721 

haunting fpart. ) 
phantoms moved Before him A him, En. Arden . 604 
mself Moved A people, . 11 . 605 

Christian hope // a holy text, . Sea Dreams 42 

haunt ill g f s. ) 
No ghostly h's like his Highness. . Princess, ii. 389 
out of h's of my spoken love, . n vii. 94 

haven. 

inland town and A large, . . CEnone . 115 

'I 1 their h under the hill : ' Break, break,' etc. 10 

Had built the King his h's, . . Vivien . 24 

! a larger A: . . . En. Arden . 103 

'I ill -.'dent in her oriental h. 11 . 533 

either A opened on the deeps, . 11 . 672 

rush abroad all round the little h, . n . 868 

all the houses in the h rang. . " . 910 

h's hid in fairy bowers, . . The Voyage 54 

havock. 
lit Such waste and h . . Aylmer's F. 640 
Made //among those tender cells . Lucretius . 22 

haw. 
hoary knoll of ash and It . . In Mem. xcix. 9 

hawk fs.) 
wild A stood with the down . . Poet's Song. 11 
e both of h and hound, . Enid . . 711 

Lies the lis cast Aylmer's F. 849 

hawk (verb. ) 
when a hawker It's his wares. . The Blackbird '20 



hawker. POEM. line. 

when a k hawks his wares. . . The Blackbird 20 
This broad-brimm'd h of holy things, Maud, I. x. 41 

hawking. 

Now h at Geology and schism ; . The Epic . 16 

hawk-mad. 

if you be not like the rest, h-ni, . Enid . . 280 

hawthorn. 

Beneath the A on the green . . MayQuccu,\\. 10 

just beneath the h shade . . " . 29 

hay. 

rarely smells the new-mown h, . The Owl, i. 9 

Stuff his ribs with mouldy A. . Vision of Sin 66 

haze. 
light A along the river-shores, . Gardener'sD.259 
Purple gauzes, golden h's, . . Vision if Sin 31 
world was once a fluid h of light, . Princess, ii. 101 
is it that the A of grief . . . InMem.xxiv. 9 
silvery A of summer drawn ; . . 11 xciv. 4 
thro' the dripping A The dead weight En. Arden . 678 

hazel. 

may-pole and in the A copse, . MayPncen.W. 11 

in the dark of h eyes — . . . Locksley H. 28 

The thick-set h dies ; . . . Will Water. 234 

In native Ks tassel-hung. . . In Mem. a, 12 

as lissome as a k wand ; . ■ The Brook . 70 

I slide by A covers ; ..." . 171 

Went nutting to the lis. _. . En. Arden . 64 

Down thro' the whitening Ks . " . 376 

hazel-tree. 

on the bridge beneath the h-t ? . May Queen, i. 14 

hazehoood. 
a A By autumn nutters haunted, . En. Arden . 7 

head. 
Madonna-wise on either side her h; Isabel . . 6 
Revered Isabel, the crown and Ii, " .10 

Thou wilt never raise thine A . A Dirge . 19 
Beat time to nothing in my h . Miller's D. . 67 
Upon my lap he laid his /; : . . 'The Sisters 17 
curl'd and comb'd his comely //, . 11 . 31 

The h's and crowns of kings ; . Pal. of A rt 152 
put strange memories in my /;. L.C. V.deVere 26 
With your feet above my A . . MnyQueeii.u. 32 
kindly heart and on his silver A ! . n iii. 15 

from a casement leans his A, . . D. ofF. Worn. 246 
Her murder'd father's /;, . . tr . 267 

full of rest from A to feet : . . To J. S. . 75 
faction seldom gathers //, 'Youaskmewhyi etc 13 
heap their ashes on the//; ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 70 
/; and heels upon the floor . . The Goose . 37 
laid his // upon her la]>, . . M . d' Arthur loZ 

May with me from // to heel. . Gardener 1 sD. 80 
She bow'd down her //, . . . Dora . . 103 
turn the horses' h's and home again. Walk. totheM.^i 
stiff spine can hold my weary //, . StS.Stylites 42 
She sank her It upon her arm . Talking 0. . 207 
From // to ancle line. ..." . 224 

Dropt dews upon her golden //, . " . 227 

shook her It, And shower'd the . Godiva . 46 

widc-mouth'd lis upon the spout .11 . 56 

shrivcll'd into darkness in his /;, it .70 

from /; to tail Came out clear . Two Voices 1 1 
Dominion in the // and breast.' . " .21 

simple senses crown'd his h : . « 277 

proverb flashes thro' his A, . . Day-Din. .115 
You shake your/;. A random string n . 213 

All-graceful /;, so richly curl'd, . " . 250 

This wheel within my /(, . . Will Water. 84 
Live long, ere from thy topmost It " . 233 

Live long, nor feel in /; or chest . " . 237 

lay your hand upon my it, . . Lady Clare 55 
Dropt her /; in the maiden's hand 11 .63 

[ saw within my A A grey . . Vision of Sin 59 
In her left a human A. ..." . 138 

Hollow hearts and empty lis! . 11 • 174 

trample round my fallen //, ' Come not 'when,' etc. 3 
one that arm'd Her own fair A . Princess, Pro. 33 



190 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 


LINE. 


. Princes, Pro. 57 


ii 


. IlS 


u 


_. 125 


11 


1. 239 


it 


ii. 23 


" 


• 131 


11 


. 156 


11 


. 186 


11 


• 257 


11 


...• 383 


11 


"»• 5 




. 18 


rid, 11 


• M7 


TI 


• 152 


ie h, n 


• 163 




IV. 134 



the multitude, a thousand fist 

above their lis I saw The feudal 

Ask'd Walter, patting Lilia's h 

o'er his h Uranian Venus hung, 

such eyes were in her h, 

some said their Ks were less : 

'everywhere Two h's in council, 

axelike edge unturnable, our H, 

by the bright h of my little niece 

//of all the golden-shafted firm, 

the Muses' h's were touch'd 

Princess should have been the H, 

h and heart of all our fair she-world 

came a message from the H. 

Among her maidens, higher by the h, 

turn'd her sumptuous h with eyes 

' The H, the H, the Princess, O the H ! 

underneath The /* of Holofernes . 

partly that you were my civil h, . 

seal'd dispatches which the H Took 

touch not a hair of his h : 

after-beauty makes Such h . 

gemlike eyes, And gold and golden /is ; 

Not peace she look'd, the H : 

fear ye brawlers? am not I your H? 

one rag, disprinced from h to heel 

sweet sculpture draped from h to foot, 

at her h a follower of the camp, . 

* Lift up your h, sweet sister : 

in the furrow broke the ploughman's h, 

each light air On our mail'd /is : . 

J\Ian with the h and woman with the 

sound and whole from h to foot 

Her h a little bent ; 

Lifting his grim h from my wounds. 

ask for him Of your great h — 

o'er the statues leapt from h to h, 

small bright /;, A light of healing, 

fear'd To incense the H once more ; 

gravest citizen seems to lose his h, 

Among six boys, h under h, . . m 

fibres net the dreamless /;, . . In Mem 

cave Thy sailor — while thy h is bow'd, i: 

Come then, pure hands, and bear the h 

The Shadow cloak'd from h to foot, 

God shut the doorways of his h. . 

When in the down I sink my h, . 

h hath miss'd an earthly wreath : . 

pure at heart and sound in h, 

Their pensive tablets round her h, 

catch at every mountain h, . . n 

flushes up in the ruffian's h, . . Mated, I 

her father, the wrinkled h of the race ? n 

h in a cloud of poisonous flies. . it 

At the h of the village street . tf 

slavish hat from the villager's h ? . tr 

for a man with heart, h, hand, . ir 

Gorgonised me from h to foot . n 

sits on her shining h, . . ir 

haunted by the starry h . . 11 

Shaking her h at her son and sighing n 

Here at the h of a tinkling fall, . it 

little h, sunning over with curls . u 

My bird with the shining h, . ir 

the wheels go over my h, . . n 

maggot born in an empty h, . ir 

she is standing here at my h; . n 

cry to the steps above my h, 

held their h's above the crowd 

holds her h to other stars 

A tonsured h in middle age forlorn, 

raised her h with lips comprest, . The Letters 



360 



• 477 
v. 29 

• 54 

• 57 
. 61 
. 212 

• 235 
.- 439 

vi. 194 
■ 252 
. 255 

• 2 94 

• 346 
vn. 43 



Con. 



xvi 11. 
xxiii. 

xliii. 
lxvii. 
lxxii. 
xciii. 

Co pi. 



xui. 
xvi. 

xviii. 

xix. 

xxi. 

xxii. 

II. iv. 



The Brook . 10 

200 

J 9 
good gray h which all men knew, Ode on Well. 35 
ice, far up on a mountain h. . The Daisy . 36 

the women who attired her h, . Enid . . 62 
sweet h upon her gentle breast ; . i» . . 527 
fair h in the dim-yellow light, , ir 600 

Upon a // so dear in thunder, ir 862 

laggard hanging down his h, 11 909 

1 A craven ; how he hangs his h.' 11 . . 976 
/; high, and thought himself a knight, 11 ♦ iogi 



POEM. LINE. 

arms to guard his h and yours, . Enid . 1276 

in the naked hall, propping his h, 11 . 1429-32 
russet-bearded h roll'd on the floor, n . 1577 

hung his /:, and halted in reply, . 11 . 1659 

h's should moulder on the city gates. Vivien . 444 
godlike h crown'd with spiritual fire, n . 686 

she turn'd away, she hung her h } . n . 736 

caught And set it on his h, . . Elaine . 55 
on his cuirass worn our Lady's //, n . 294 

at the h of all his Table Round, . n . 304 

the h Pierced thro' his side, . u . 488 

' Nay, by mine 7i,' said he, tr . 655 

by mine h she knows his hiding-place. \r . 710 

He raised his h, their eyes met . 11 1303 

mine, as h of all our Table Round, ir 1318 

knights had laid her comely h . 11 *3 2 7 

passionately, Her h upon her hands, Guinevere . 179 
Each with a beacon-star upon his h t w . 239 

bow'd her h nor spake. . . u . 308 

hair of this low h be harm'd. . n . 444 

realms together under me, their H, ti . 459 

laying there thy golden h, ir . 531 

in the darkness o'er her fallen h. . if . 577 

calling down a blessing on his h . En. Arden . 324 
over Enoch's early-silvering h . 11 . 623 

shaking his gray h pathetically . n . 715 

Held his h high, and cared for no man, u . 849 

h is low, and no man cares for him if . 851 

when she laid her h beside my own. " . 882 

eyes from under a pyramidal h . Aylmers F. 20 
heart, 1 think, help'd h : 11 . 475 

made Still paler the pale h of him, u . 623 

near storm, and aiming at his h, . n . 727 

/is of chiefs and princes fall so fast, if . 763 

his own h Began to droop, to fall ; n . 834 

not a word ; she shook her h. . Sea Dreams 112 
Like her, he shook his h. \\ . 144 

Hadn't a h to manage, . . Grandmot/ier 6 

singer shaking his curly h . . The Islet . 6 
She dipt you from her 7^, . . The Ringlet 33 
hoary Roman h and shatter it . Boadicea . ■ 65 

Head [surname.) 
Sir Edward IPs; But he's abroad: Walk. totheM.10 

head (verb. ) 
h's the count of crimes With that wild D.o/F. Wovi.101 

headed, 
h And wingM with flame, . . The Poet . 11 
In shining draperies, h like a star, Princess, ii. 94 

headland. 
saw them — h after h flame . . Guinevere . 241 
Flames, on the windy h flare ! . W. toAlexan. iu 

headstone. 
About the moss'd h: . . . Claribel . 12 

/lead-waiter. 

plump h-iv at The Cock, . 
If-iv, honour'd by the guest 
And one became h-zu. . 
H-w of the chop-house here, 

/teal. 
will h me of my grievous wound.' . 

1 can h him. Power goes forth 
h me with your pardon ere you go. 
a harm no preacher can h; . 
harm'd where she would h ; . 
loathsome hurts and h mine own ; 
To spill his blood and h the land : 

healed. 
To touch my body and be h, 
They say that they are h. 

healing. 
before we came, This craft of h. . Princess, iij. 303 
light of h, glanced about the couch " vii. 44 
Geraint lay h of his hurt, . . Enid . 1779 

health. 

In glowing^ with boundless wealth L. C. V.deVerefa. 
breathing h andpeace upon her breast : AudleyCt.67 



Will Water. 1 

" • 73 

if . 144 

11 . 209 

M.d' Arthur 264 
StS.Stylztes 143 
' Princess, iii. 49 
Maud, I. iv. 22 
Guinevere . 353 
.1 , 678 

T/te Victim . 46 

StS.Stylites 78 
i» . 144 



T£K.VVSO.VS WORKS. 



191 



POEM. LINE. 

Huge women blowzed with A, . Princess, iv. 260 

:d here /;, wealth, and time, . ■■ . 333 

■n wealth. Than sick men A — " . 440 
drinking A to bride and groom . InMem.Con. 83 

the double A, The crowning cup, . 11 . 103 

happy years of A and competence . En. A rden . 82 

Now seaward-bound for A . . Sea Dreams 16 

healthy. 
So /:, sound, and clear and whole, Miller's D. . 15 

luap [5.) 

no more shall rest in mounded It's, . Golden Year 32 
;ourds, and skins of wine, . Vision of Sin 13 
Each hurling down a h of things . Enid . . 1442 
stand High on a/; of slain, . .Elaine . 307 
h's of living gold that daily grow, Aylmer's F. 655 

heap (vb.) 
A their ashes on the head; Love t/iou thy land,' elc.70 

heaped. 

]l over with a mound of grass, . Lotos-E"s. . 112 

Pain A ten-hundred-fold to this, . StS.Stylites 23 

h the whole inherited sin . . Maud, I. xiii. 41 

icr terms of disgrace, . . » II. i. 14 

pieces of his armour . . Enid . 1222 

A Their firewood, and the winds . Spec, of Iliad 6 

heaping. 
Still h on the fear of ill . . Two Voices 107 

hear. 
you may A him sob and sigh 'A spirit haunts,' etc. 5 
t A From the groves within . Poet's Mind 19 
never would A it : your ears are so " . 35 

73 
98 

3° 
141 

49 

35 

38 

88 

J67 

203 

244 

=53 

70 

Hi 

'75 

250 

275 

279 



L. o/Shahtt, i 
. Eleauore 
. Milter s D. 
. Uinone 



Pal. 0/ Art 



1 cry aloud : none h my cries, . Oriana 
• roaring of the sea, 
. that echoes cheerly 
1 h what 1 u ould h from thee 
from the bridge 1 lean'd to h 
1 1 Earth, // me O Hills, 
; r 1 will speak, 
unheard // all, and see thy Paris . 
heard me not, Or hearing would not A 

l before 1 die . 

as I h Dead sounds at night . 

// in..-. O Earth. I will not die 

scem'd to A them climb and fall 

if wisdom and of law. . 

il to h her echo'd song 

h's all night The plunging seas . 

h the dully sound Of human footseps 

low Moan of an unknown sea : 

I shall A you when you pass, MayQueen,\\. 31 

1 A the bleating of the lamb. . " iii. 2 

I did not h the dog howl, . . " .21 

ich other's whisper'd speech ; Lotos-Ks. 104 

To A the dewy echoes calling . 11 . 139 

A and see the far-off sparkling brine, 11 . 143 

To A the murmur of the strife, . Margaret . 23 

.11, and h me speak : . 11 -56 

•: not at all, or hoarse . The Blackbird 19 

we /; with inward strife ' Love thouthy land,' etc. 53 

I hat h's the corn-bin open, . The Epic . 45 

vindy clanging of the minster Gardener's D. 37 

'// how the bushes echo ! . . 11 -97 

for the pleasure that 1 took to h . 11 . 223 

pippin hung To h him, . Andley Ct. . 38 

pon my cap, . Ed. Morris. 56 

I scarce A other music ... 11 -57 

my ears could A Her lightest breaths : " . 64 

About the windings of the marge to 11 -94 

nor heard of her, nor cared to A (rep. ) . . 138 

scarce can A the people hum . St S. Stylites 37 

me with thine ears,) . . Talking O. . 82 

I - - 1 1 1 1 1 oath, 11 . 281 

Among her stars to h us ; Love and Duty 72 

. my work Golden Year 20 

ring, . . Locksley II . 35 

ihalt A the ' Never, never,' . n . 83 

tTt little of the false or just.' . Two Voices 117 

Hi His country's war-song thrill . 11 . 152 



POEM. LINE. 

will not h the north-wind rave, . Two Voices 259 
seems to h a Heavenly Friend, . 11 . 293 

' O wake for ever, love,' she lis, . Day-Dm. . 175 
lets thee neither h nor see : . . » 

what is that I A < a sound . . Amphion . 73 
I h a noise of hymns : . . . Sir Galahad 23 
I h a voice, but none are there ; . 11 . 30 

H's him lovingly converse, . . L. of Burleigh 26 
He, dying lately, left her, a_s I h, . Princess, i. . 77 
h my father's clamour at our backs 11 . 104 

very ears were hot To h them : . " . 134 

A each other speak for noise Of clocks ■• __ . 212 
thought in our own hall to h . 11 ii. . 39 

there was one to h And help them : " . 248 

// my conditions : promise . . 11 . 275 

the Doctors ! Oto/i the Doctors ! 11 . 399 

mine in part. O A me, pardon me 11 iii. 15 

hark, O A ! how thin and clear, 11 . 354 
let us A the purple glens replying 11 _ . 358 
A A trumpet in the distance . . 11 iv. 62 
what they were, and she to A: " . 304 
A of it From Lady Psyche:' . " . 309 
For thus I A ; and known at last . 11 . 328 
A You hold the woman is the better 11 . 390 
h me, for I bear, Tho' man, yet human 11 . 404 
seem'd to A As in a poplar grove . 1 v. n 
hate to A me like a wind . . " -95 
when I A you prate 1 almost think " . 145 
'Amazed am I to A Your Highness : 11 vi. 304 
h's his burial talk'd of by his friends, 11 vii. 137 

1 A the noise about thy keel ; . In Mem. x. 1 
I A the bell struck in the night ; . n .2 
A the ritual of the dead. . . " xviii. 12 
traveller h's me now and then, . 11 xxi. 5 
A her weeping by his grave ? " xxxi. 4 
A The moanings of the homeless sea, m xxxv. 8 
A thy laurel whisper sweet . . » xxxvii. 7 
I A it now, and o'er and o'er, . " lyi. 13 
I A a wizard music roll, . . " Ixix. 14 
I h the sentence that he speaks ; . n lxxi.x. 10 
We cannot /; each other speak. . « Ixxxi. 16 
hung to /( The rapt oration . . " lxxxvi. 31 
heart and ear were fed To A him, lllxxxviii. 23 
h a wind Of memory murmuring . " xci. 7 
/; The wish too strong for words . 11 xcji. 13 
// the household jar within. . . 11 xciii. 16 
h's the latest linnet trill, . . " -xcix. 10 
sing the songs he loved to h. . 11 cvi. 24 

1 // a chirp of birds : cxviii. 5 

/; the tidings of my friend, . . " exxv. 3 

/; at times a sentinel ..." _. 9 

// A deeper voice across the storm, 11 exxyi. 3 

I /( thee where the waters run ; . " exxix. 2 

A voice as unto him that h's, . " exxx. 6 

Still ! I will // you no more, . . Maud, 1. y. 23 

A the dead at midday moan, . . " vi. 70 

Did I /; it half in a doze . . » vii. 1 

. that I // two men, 11 -13 

The chivalrous battle-song 11 x. 53 

The larkspur listens, 'I A, I A;' . " xxii. 65 
My heart would// her and beat, . 11 69-7 1 

Do I /; her sing as of old, . . " II. iv. 44 
then to /; a dead man chatter . » v. 19 

Before you h my marriage vow.' . The Letters 8 
A The tides of Music's golden sea. Ode on Well. 251 
only /( the magpie gossip . ToF. D. Maurice 19 
stay'd Waiting to h the hounds ; . Enid . . 163 
chance that we shall // the hounds : 11 . . 182 
They would not h me speak : . i» . 4 2 ' 

ask'd again, and ever loved to h; . 11 . . 436 
thro' the crash of the near cataract //'i 11 . 1021 

soldiers wont to A His voice in battle >• . 1023 
A him breathing low and equally. » • 1221 

What thing soever you may //, . » . 1264 

h the violent threats you do not A, " . 1269 

ears to // you even in his dreams.' 11 . 1278 

.vhen you A them feed ; . " . 1454 

//'ithejudgmentof the King of Kings.',, 

tven that A** I tell you . \'i-.<ien . 193 
will you A The legend as in guerdon » . 4°3 
Amy words: go to the jousts : . Elaine . \n 



192 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

h it said That men go down before Elaine . 148 
as I h It is a fair large diamond — . if . 227 

e h. but hold my name Hidden, . n . 415 

we shall h anon, Needs must we h.' u 633, 752 

till the ear Wearies to h it, 11 . 894 

that I live to h,' he said, 'is yours.' ti . 924 

h of rumours flying thro 1 your court, ir 1184 

liege Arthur, and all ye that h, . n 1282 

h high talk of noble deeds. . . Guinevere . 495 
Thro' the thick night I h the trumpet w . 565 

seem'd to h Her own death-scaffold En. Arde?i . 174 
H's and not h's, and lets it overflow. it . 209 

Nor ever h a kindly voice, . . it . 583 

clamour'd the good woman, '/jhim 11 . 841 

plain-faced tabernacle To h him ; Ayhner's F. 619 
you do but h the tide. . . . Sea Dreams 83 
But will you h my dream, ti . 198 

Eh! — but he wouldn't h me — . Grandmother 8 
eyes that fill with tears To h me?. Tithomcs . 27 
and could h the lips that kiss'd . 11 .60 

That it makes one weary to h.' . The Islet . 29 
Did they h me, would they listen, Boiidicea . 8 
H Iceniati, Catieuchlanian, . . 11 10, 34, 47 

h it, Spirit of Cassivelaun ! . it .20 

H it, Gods ! the Gods have heard it, 11 . 21 

Till the victim h within and yearn tt . 58 

Let him h my song. . . . The Captain 4 
h's Echoes in his empty ' 'Home they brought him, 'etc. 3 
I h the roll of the ages. . . Spiteful Let. 8 

heard. 
she h the night-fowl crow : . . Mariana . 26 
Hast thou h the butterflies . . Adeline . 28 
We h the steeds to battle going, . Oriana . 15 
She saw me fight, she h me call, tt . 32 

She has h a whisper say, . . L.ofShalott, ii. 3 
h her singing her last song, . . tr iv. 26 

H a carol, mournful, holy, . tt .28 

h her native breezes pass, . Mariana in the S. 43 
oft I h the tender dove . . Miller's D. 41 

Sometimes I h you sing within ; . tt . 123 

Then first I h the voice of her, . CEnone . 105 
Give it to Pallas ! ' but he h me not, tt . 166 

Indeed I h one bitter word . L. C. V. de Vere 37 
I h the angels call ; MayQueen,\\\. 25 

I h them call my soul. , it .28 

made His music h below ; . D. of F. Worn. 4 

h sounds of insult, shame, and wrong, it . 19 

Sudden I h a. voice that cried, . 11 . 123 

h my name Sigh'd forth with life it . 153 

A A noise of some one coining . 11 . 177 

h the lion roaring from his den ; . u . 222 

I h Him, for He spake, . tt 227 

h just now the crowing cock. D. ofiheO. Year 38 

She h the torrents meet. t OfoldsatFreedom,etc. 4 
half-awake I h The parson . . The Epic . 13 
hast seen? or what hast /: ? . M.d'Arthur6%,ii4 
h the ripple washing in the reeds, ti . 70 

h the water lapping on the crag, . u . 116 

what is it thou hast h, or seen? . 11 . 150 

He h the deep behind him, 11 . 184 

h indeed The clear church-bells . it Ep. 30 
h Of Rose, the Gardener's daughter 1 Gardener sD. 50 
when I h her name My heart was if . 61 

out of everything I h and saw, . ir . 65 

Nor h us come, nor from her tendance it . 143 

h the watchman peal The sliding season : tr . 178 

h The heavy clocks knolling . it . 179 

when I h his deep ' I will,' it . 203 

h it was this bill that past, . Walk, to the M. 59 

h with beating heart The Sweet-Gale Ed. Morris 109 
nor h of her, nor cared to hear. . v . 138 

since I h him make reply . . Talking 0. 25 
That oft hast h my vows, . . 11 .98 

When I h my days before me, . Locksley H. no 
H the heavens fill with shouting, it . 123 

h, by secret transport led, . . Two Voices 214 
her breathings are not h . . Day-Dm. . 93 
methought I h a mellow sound, . Vision of Sin 14 
they that h it sigh'd, ... it .18 

I h a voice upon the slope . ir 219 



xcvn. 20 



C1X. 

cxx. 

cxxiii. 



POEM. LINE- 

he h her speak ; She scared him ; Frincess t i. 183 

seen And h the Lady Psyche/ . tr ii. 194 

'Ah — Melissa — you! You h us?' it . 310 

I h, I could not help it, tt . 311 

we h The grave Professor. it . 348 

like parting hopes I h them passing 11 iv. 155 

behind I h the pufT'd pursuer . ?t . 246 

we h In the dead hush the papers n . 370 

h of, after seen The dwarfs of presage : tr . 426 

h The voices murmuring. it . 536 

voice is h thro' rolling' drums, . ti . 554 

h The drowsy folds of our great ensign ir V. 7 

She h, she moved, She moan'd, . 11 .68 

when first I h War-music, 11 . 255 

h Of those that iron-cramp' d . 11 . 365 

Seeing I saw not, hearing not I h: it vi. 3 

My father h and ran In on the lists 11 . 10 

h A noise of songs they would not 11 . 23 

clamouring on, till Ida h, . 11 . 134 

h that there is iron in the blood, . 11 . 213 

had a heart — I h her say it — . it . 217 

hung A moment, and she h, . ir vii. 65 

I h her turn the page ; . ir . 175 

I have h Of your strange doubts : »r __. 315 

words that are not h again. . . InMem.xvm. 20 

Before I h those bells again : . it xxviii. 16 

h them sweep the winter land ; . it xxx. 10 

h once more in college fanes . . tt lxxxvi. 5 

h behind the woodbine veil . . 11 lxxxviii. 50 

brook alone far-off was /z, . . 11 xciv. 7 

yet myself have h him say, . 

roofs, that h our earliest cry, 

h The low love-language of the bird 

put himself to school And h thee, 

great world's work is h Beginning, 

I h a voice 'believe no more' 

h an ever-breaking shore 11 . 

/zTheshrill-edgedshriekofamother Maiid t Li. . 

I have h, I know not whence, . 11 

h no longer The snowy-banded, 

I h no sound where I stood . 

even then I h her close the door, 

All night have the roses h 

I h your rivulet fall 

That h me softly call, . 

h it shouted at once from the top 

' Have you not h Y said Katie, 

His captain's-ear has h them boom Ode on Well. 

was h The world's loud whisper . Enid 

h but fragments of her later words, it 

h instead A sudden sound of hoofs, 11 

thinking that he h The noble hart 11 

H by the lander in a lonely isle, . it 

dear child hath often h me praise . 11 

tho' I h him call you fairest fair . it 

h one crying to his fellow, . . ir 

h them boast That they would slay it 

own ear had h Call herself false : . it 

h the wild Earl at the door, . . tr 

for he rode As if he h not, . . if 

Enid h the clashing of his fall, . it 

so low he hardly h her speak, . if 

This h Geraint, and grasping . if 

Not, tho' mine own ears h you . 11 

h you say, thatyou were no true wife: if 

h in thought Their lavish comment Vivien. 

h the great Sir Lancelot sing it . it 

was the song that once I h . . ir 

h their voices talk behind the wall, 11 

in words part h, in whispers part, it 

fearing heaven had h her oath, . 11 . 789 

in his heart H murmurs ' lo, thou Elaine . 56 

h her name so tost about, . . it . 233 

H from the Baron that, ten years. 11 . 272 

h Sir Lancelot cry in the court . tf . 343 

h mass, broke fast, and rode away : 11 . 414 

that had h the noise of it before, . it . 727 

when she h his horse upon the stones, it . .974 

still he h him, still his picture form'd 

brothers h, and thought With . n 1015 

song H on the winding waters . 11 1398 



vin. 

xiv. 

xviii. 

xx ii. 

II. iv. 



C7 
9 



30 
76 



The Brook , b=i 

65 

26 

"3 

163 

232 

330 
434 
720 



922 
962 
1230 
1 301 
1358 
1491 
1573 
1588 

159° 

7 

235 

255 



TENNYSOiV'S WORK'S. 



193 



POEM. LINE. 

// 1 y the watcher in a haunted . Guinevere . 73 

It the Spirits of the waste and weald 11 . 128 

or thought she h them moan : . 11 .129 

ul,':n she //, the Queen look'd up, 11 . 162 

A the bridegroom is so sweet ? . ?r . 175 

down the coast, he A Strange music, o . 236 

in the darkness A his armed feet . ir . 415 
running on thus hopefully she //, . En. Ardeu . 201 

// and not A him . 11 . 205 

ivriad shriek of wheeling . 11 . 583 

h the pealing of his parish bells ; . 11 . 616 

A them talking, his long-bounden 11 . 645 

en are mightier than things^, if , 767 

As the woman /*, Fast flow'd . it . 865 

than had he A his priest . Aylmer's F. 43 

H the good mother softly whisper n . 187 

nor liked the thing he //. . 11 . 250 

had Sir Aylmcr A— Nay, buthe must— h . 261 

/; the ponderous door Close, . 11 . 337 
// thro' the living roar. . . Sea Dreams 56 

I A the clash so clearly . . 11 . 132 
strange song I A Apollo sing, . Titlumus . 62 

II .1 fierce mermaiden cry, . Sailor Boy . 6 
Mad and maddening all that A her Boadicea . 4 
Hear it, Gods ! the Gods have A it, 11 . 21 
a murmur /* aerially, ... n .24 
There I A them in the darkness, . n . 36 
they /; the focman's thunder . The Captain 41 
often when the woman h his foot . Lucretius . 5 
thrice I A the rain Rushing . 11 .26 
She /; him raging, A him fall : . 11 . 272 
1 have /( of thorns and briers. . The Window 197 

hearer. 
outran The /; in its fiery course ; . In Mem. cviii. 8 
While thus he spoke, his A's wept ; Aylmer's F. 722 

Aear'st. 
A the village hammer clink, . . In Mem. cxx. 15 

hearing (part.) 
Or /< would not hear me, . . QZnone . 167 
A the downward stream, . . Lotos-Es. . 99 
// the holy organ rolling waves . D. of F. Worn. 191 
Seeing I saw not, A not I heard : . Princess, vi. 3 
A any more his noble voice, . . Enid 
h her own name had slipt away) . 
Across the face of Enid, A her ; . 
h 'harlot' muttcr'd twice or thrice, 
h his mischance, Came, 
shook the heart of Edith k him. . 
h her tumultuous adversaries 



POEM. 

Miller's D. 



LINE. 
. I IO 
. 160 

• 177 



hearing (s.) 
And in the h 0/ the wave. 
in these cars, till // dies, 
Within the h of cat or mouse, 

hearsay. 
blamed herself for telling /; tales : . Vivien 



Vivien 
En. Arden , 
Aylmer's F. 
Boadicea . 

In Mem. xix. 

11 lvi. 

Maud, II. v. 



98 
507 
524 
692 
120 
63 
78 

4 



800 



heart. 
Thro' my very h it thrilleth . . Lilian . 22 

the blanched tablets of her /«,- .Isabel. . 17 
Right to the /* and brain, . . 11 .22 

strain the /nintil it bleeds. ' Clear-headed friend 'etc. s 
All my bounding/: cntanglcst . Madeline . 40 
// faint :m. I my whole soul ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 16 
'Jake I he// from out my breast. . Adeline . 8 
beating It's of salient springs , 11 .26 

hii h the silver dews ? . » . 32' 

■' of the garden the merry bird Poet's Mind 22 
Out of the live-green /i of the dells Sea-Fairies. 12 
My // is wasted with my woe, . Oriana . 1 
1 'by//, my love, my bride (rep.) 11 . 42 

breaking A that will not break, . ■■ .64 

I ' my h unto my eyes, . 11 .78 

Within thy A my arrow lies, . 11 .80 

their 1V1 lor 1 fir- love of me. The Mermaid 30 
My hope and // is with thee— . To J. M. K. 1 
spurrM at h with fieriest energy ,11 .7 

'O cruel A.'s bechanced htr tone, Marianain tfteS.6g 
And the as of purple hills . . Eleiinore . 17 
My // a charmed slumber keeps, . 11 . 128 



full at A of trembling hope . 
Approaching, press'd you A to A 
her h would beat against me, 
Do make a garland for the h : 
Round my true h thine arms entwine ; 11 . 216 

The still affection of the h . . n . 225 

My h, pierced thro' with fierce delight, Fatima . 34 
eyes are full of tears, my h of love, (Euone . 30 
h is breaking, and my eyes are dim, n . 31 

h may wander from its deeper woe. 11 . 43 

all my h Went forth to embrace him 11 . Cr 

river of speech Came down upon my /;. 11 . 68 

weighest heavy on the h within, . 11 . 239 

Devil, large in // and brain, To — — . With Pal. of A rt 5 
hollow shades enclosing It's of flame, Pal. of Art . 241 
thought to break a country A L. C. V. de Vere 3 

h that doats on truer charms. . 11 14 

changed a wholesome h to gall. . 11 .4 + 

Kind h's are more than coronets, . 11 -55 

Pray Heaven for a human h, . 11 . 71 

They say his/; is breaking, mother, May Queen, i. 22 
O blessings on his kindly A . . 11 iii. 15 

in his ears his beating // did make. Lotos-E's. . 36 
To lend our A's and spirits wholly . 11 . 10S 

A's worn out by many wars 11 . 131 

A Brimful of those wild tales, . D. ofF. Worn. 1 1 
mighty A's Of captains and of kings. 11 . 175 

A Faints, faded by its heat. 11 , 387 

Encircles all the //, and feedeth . Margaret . 16 
burning brain from the true //, . 11 -39 

live alone In all our A's, . . To y. S. . 50 

Sleep sweetly, tender /;, in peace : n .69 

wild A's and feeble wings, *Love thou thy land,' etc. 1 1 
Not yet the wise of /: would cease 11 . 81 

She felt her A grow prouder : . TAe Goose . 22 

Summer pilot of an empty A . Gardener's D. 16 

So blunt in memory, so old at A, . h . 52 

A was like a prophet to my A, . 11 .62 

coursed about The subject most at A, 11 . 218 

A woman's /:, the /: of her I loved ; 11 . 225 

secret bridal chambers of the //, . 11 . 244 

// on one wild leap Hung tranced . 11 . 254 

Make thine // ready with thine eyes : 11 . 268 

beheld her ere she knew my /;, . 11 . 270 

have set my A upon a match. . Dora . . 12 
A is glad Of the full harvest, .11 . .66 

gone to him, Hut her h failed her ; 11 . • 76 

With all my //,' said Francis. . Audley Ci. . 7 
all my A turn'd from her, . . 11 -S3 

Dipt by itself, and we were glad at /;. 11 . 87 

hid her needle in my A, . . Ed. Morris 62 

heard with beating /; The Sweet-Gale " . 109 

Until he plagiarised a //, . . Talking O. . 19 
girl, for whom your /; is sick, 11 .71 

When last with throbbing h 1 came 11 _ . 155 



Ulysses 



Streaming eyes and breaking h's t Love and Duty 2 

the narrow brain, the stony It, 

peace, my // so slow To feel it ! 

the want, that hollow'd all the //, 

to lift a burthen from thy /* . 

always roaming with a hungry // 

and opposed Free h's, free foreheads — 

One equal temper of heroic h's 

and a narrower // than mine ! 

hidden from the h's disgrace, 

tho' my A be at the root. 

lest thy /; be put to proof, 

preaching down a daughter's//. 

Left me with the palsied //, . 

dccp/< of existence beat for ever 

/; as rough as Esau's hand . 

my full /;, that work'd below, 

Nor sold his h to idle moans, 

A deeper tale my // divines. 

His // forbodes a mystery : . 

My frozen // began to beat, . 

From out my sullen // a power 

li" upon her charmed /'. 

The Magic Music in his h 

1 e my /■• is pure. . 
all my h is drawn abuve 



'5 
3', 
Co 
93 

i 

Lock si cy II. 44 
ti . 57 

. 66 
11 . 77 

" • 94 

11 . 132 

140 
28 
44 

. 321 
. 269 
. 20O 
. 422 

• 443 

• 9 « 

lao 

4 



Godiva 

'J ".chi I 'oices. 



Day-Dm. 

Sir Galaliad 



N 



194 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

A virgin h in work and will. . . Sir Galahad 24 

This weight and size, this h and eyes, tr . 71 

'And have you lost your k ?' . Ed. Gray . 3 

the h of Edward Gray. . . . "8, et pass, 

that child's k within the man's . Will Water, 31 

I will not cramp my h, ... tr . 51 

all his vast h sherris-warm'd . . tr . 197 

tear his h before the crowd ' You might have wen.' 36 

her h within her did not fail ; . Lady Clare 78 

' If my k by signs can tell, . . L. of Burleigh 2 

Thus her /; rejoices greatly, . . n -4* 

Shaped her h with woman's meekness » . 71 

did win my h from me ! * . 11 .84 

waste his whole h in one kiss Sir L. andQ. G. 44 

Every h, when sifted well, . . Vision ofS 'in 112 

Hollow lis and empty heads ! it . 174 

Pass on, weak h, and leave ' Come not, 10/ieti,' etc. 11 

'O noble A who, being strait-besieged Princess, Pro. 36 

bites it for true h and not for harm 

still I wore her picture by my k, . 

my other h, And almost my half-self. 

with all my h, With my full h : 

think I bear that h within my breast, 

lis lie fallow in these halls, . 

twanging headless arrows at the /is, 

dear is sister Psyche to my k, 

sister came she won the h Of Ida ; 

I tried the mother's h. . 

h of all our fair she-world, . 

My h beat thick with passion 

men may pluck them from our lis. 

in the dark dissolving human k, . 

Rise in the h, and gather to the eyes, 

her h Would rock the snowy cradle 

cursing Cyril, vext at h, 

half-sick at h, return'd. 

Beaten with some great passion at her h, 

block and bar Your h with system 

Bursts of great h and slips . 

woman's garment hid the woman's h.' 

from the dark h of the long hills . 

living lis that crack within the fire 

/: Made for all noble motion ; 

tender orphan hands Felt at my h, 

Man with the head and woman with the h 

noble /; was molten in her breast ; 

Win you the h's of women ; 

She said You had a k — 

' Our Ida has a h — 

will not? well — no h have you, 

to the hollow h they slander so ! . 

I cannot keep My h an eddy 

stranger seem'd that, h's So gentle, 

at the happy lovers h in h — 

all thy h lies open unto me. 

misled the girl To vex true /is 

great h thro' all the faultful Past 

The two-cell'd h beating, 

I waste my h in signs : let be. 

with my h I muse and say : . 

O /i, how fares it with thee . 

for the unquiet h and brain, 

but some h did break. . 

my h was used to beat (rep. cxviii. 1) 

O my forsaken h, with thee 

in my h, if calm at all . 

void where h on h reposed ; 

I, falling on his faithful h, 

darken'd h that beat no more ; 

melt the waxen /is of men.' . 

glad at h from May to May : 

Nor could I weary, h or limb, 

The h that never plighted troth . 

lull with song an aching /:, . 

vex my h with fancies dim : 

the h is sick, And all the wheels . 

tis that beat from day to day, 

Like some poor girl whose h is set 

On some unworthy h with joy, 

hang no weight upon my h . 

thought my h too far diseased-* - 



. 172 

i- 37 

- 54 

- 125 
"• 3*3 

• 378 

• 380 
..." 396 
111. 71 

■ 131 
. 147 

• 174 
. 240 

. • 295 

iv. 23 

• 85 

■ J53 
. 204 

• 369 

■ 443 
v. 191 

■ 295 

• 339 

■ 369 

• 373 
. 426 

.- 439 

vi. 103 

• 155 
. 217 
. 218 

• 243 
. 270 

- 302 
vii. 51 

• 93 
. 168 
. 227 
. 232 



In Mem. iv, 



xin. 

xviii. 

xix. 

xxi. 

xxii. 

xxv. 

xxvii. 

xxxvii. 

xli. 

xlix. 

lvii. 

lix. 

Ixi. 

lxii. 

Ixv. 



338 

4 
5 
5 
8 

3 
18 

15 

6 



t. lxxviii. 


2 


lxxxi. 

Ixxxiv. 


14 

34 
108 


1 xxxvii. 
Ixxxviii. 


"3 

7 

22 


XC1U. 


1 


xciv. 


13 

21 


xcvi. 


10 



32 



CXX111. 


i=; 


Con. 


82 


ud,\.\. 


IS 




24 




31 


IV. 


39 


V. 


9 


VI. 


iS 








7° 




79 


vm. 


8 


X. 


36 




60 


XIV. 


zi 


XVI. 


5 



POEM. LINE. 

Let not this vex thee, noble hi In Me; 
wrath that garners in my h ; 

h, with kindliest motion warm, 
marry with the virgin /:. 
My h, tho' widow'd, may not rest 
in the midmost h of grief 
h and ear were fed To hear him, . 
pure at h and sound in head 
when the h is full of din, 
A hunger seized my h ; 
h's of old have beat in tune, 
seems to slight her simple h. 
The pulses of a Titan's h ; . 
The larger h, the kindlier hand ; . 

1 will not eat my k alone, 
By blood a king, at h a clown 
the h Stood up and answer'd 
h's are warm'd and faces bloom, . 
closed their gates with a shock on my hMaud,\\. 
h of the citizen hissing in war 
May make my h as a millstone, , 
passionate h of the poet is whirl' d 
Ready in h and ready in hand, 
warm in the /: of my dreams, 
On a.h half-tum'd to stone. 
O h of stone, are you flesh, 
suddenly, sweetly, my /: beat stronger 
Sick, sick to the h of life, am I. 
Ah God, for a man with h, head, . 
Set in the h of the carven gloom, . 
drown His h in the gross mud-honey 
Catch not my breath, O clamorous h, 
shook my h to think she comes 
Dear/;, I feel with thee the drowsy 
My own h's h and ownest own farewell ; 
my h more blest than h can tell, 
that dead man at her h and mine : 
who had ceased to share her h, 
awoke in the h of the child, 
faults of his h and mind, 
one With whom she has h to be gay. 
My h would hear her and beat, . 
It will ring in my h and my ears, . 
/is that know not how to forgive : 
Shall I nurse in my dark h, 
Courage, poor h of stone ! 
H's with no love for me : 
my h is a handful of dust, 
surely, some kind h will come 
it is time, O passionate h,' said I . 
h of a people beat with one desire ; 
blossom of war with a h of fire 
proved we have h's in a cause, 
of one name and h with her. 
mellow'd all his h with ale, . 
mock'd the wholesome human h, 
spoke with h, and heat and force, 
deeper knell in the h be knoll'd 
What long-enduring h's could do 
toil of h and knees and hands, . 11 . 212 
upon whose hand and h and brain tr . 239 
Uplifted high in h and hope are we. tr . 254 
inheritance Of such a life, a //, . Ded. of Idylls 32 
with true /jAdoredher, as thestateliestzT/m/ . 19 



II. i. 



94 



rlll.vi. 30 



49 



76 
155 



T/ie Brook 

T/ie Letters 

11 • 37 

Ode on Well. 59 



to her own h piteously she said : 
hoard is little, but our h's are great, 
noise of noble deeds To noble h's 
seem to suffer nothing h or limb, . 
' Well said, true h,' replied Geraint, 
Yniol's h Danced in his bosom 
prove her h toward the Prince.' . 
converse in the hall, Proving her h : 
like the h of a great fire at Yule, . 
softly to her own sweet h 
h All overshadow'd by the foolish 
tempest brooding round his h, 
broke the sentence in his h . 
plover's human whistle amazed Her /;, 
Enid ponder'd in her h, 
sharpness of that pain about her h .' 
in the k of waste and wilderness. . 



- 85 
352-74 

. 438 

■ 47 2 

• 474 

• 505 

- 513 
. 521 

■ 559 
. 618 
. 674 
. 860 



9*3-79 
IC39 



TENXYSOX'S WORKS. 



'95 



Enid 



LINE. 

1218 

1294 

j 338 

H35-9 

1500 

'595 

1618 

1679 

>747 

1754 

1789 

1805 

384 

39S 

4-4 

639 

671 

7'7 

7--' 

74- 

754 

7«5 

77 I 

55 






had no /: To wake him, 
sadden'd all her A again. . . 11 

A enough To bear his armour? . 11 

1 » n //, ' she weeps fur me : ' >■ 

all but empty // and weariness . » 

blunt and stupid at the It . 11 

kept the A of Eden green " 

one main purpose ever at my // •> 

! ith change of A is changed. m 

Edym has done it, weeding all his li « 
1 ;er race With lis and hands, m 
mildly, that all lis Applauded . " 

Without the full // back may merit Vivien 
full A of your* Whereof you prattle, " 
rustiest iron of old fighters' lis ; . ■■ 
Merlin to his own /;, loathing, _ . " 

• if the A that are not theirs. ■• 
1 the lis affections to the h .' n 

md in him a greater It. . 11 
let his ir ease of A, . » 

Half-nestle. 1 at his //, . . » 

1 reckon worth the taking ? 11 

■ssity of A and life. . . " 
in his /; Heard murmurs Mo, thou Elaine 
re-loyal Co the least wish . 11 

I her own A said the lily maid " . 318 
1 riotous // in asking ■■ . 358 

reverence Dearer to true young lis 11 . 418 

To which it made a restless It, . 11 . 549 

With smiling face and frowning //, " . 552 

Lancelot is no more a lonely It. . 11 . 600 

one-day-secn Sir Lancelot in her /(, 11 . 743 

changed itself and echoed in her /:, " . 778 

in her A she answer' d it ... " . 782 

in her It she laugh'd, . . . h . 804 

1 secret blazed itself In the 

A's colours ... . •' . 832 

a treacherous quiet in his //, >i . 879 

11 to your true // ; . » . 910 

stupid It To interpret ear and eye, n . 937 

heat is gone from out my // mo 

parted, laughing in his courtly //. . n 1170 

in my// of //\r I did acknowledge nobler " 1204 

I I A's the value of all gifts . 11 1208 
all true lis be blazon'd on her tomb « 1334 
doubt her purenesswere to want a It — 11 1368 

nple A and sweet, . . 11 1384 

a man Not after Arthur's //.' . . 11 1410 

Rankled in him and ruffled all his/:, Cttinevere . 50 

unbind niy It that I may weep.' . 11 . 164 

to her own sad It mutter'd the Queen, » . 211 

into the rich It of the west " . 242 

gather // again, . . 11 . 366 

II my at had destined i> . 488 

could speak Of the pure //, nor seem " . 498 

King's waste hearth and aching A >• . 520 

while I weigh'd thy It with one . ■' . 536 

fume of little A's. . u . 626 

in mine own A I 1 an live <1 wn sin 11 . 629 

her h was loosed Within her, n . £59 

either fixt his It On that one girl ; . En. Arden . 39 

Bearing a lifelong hunger in ins /;. n . 79 

o his A determined all : . 11 . 148 

* to break his purposes . " . 153 
Philip's true A, which hungcr'd . 11 . 271 
fixt his A he set Ins hand 11 . 293 
oft denied hit A his dearest wish, . » . 333 
full A and boundless gratitude . 11 ■ 343 
the expectant terror of her A, 11 

never merrily beat Annie's A. . 11 . 509 

nt her A, 11 . 520 

ken with That, 11 . 619 

ilamity, 11 . 684 

iitly " . 867 

1 Edith hearing him. Aylmer's F. 63 

■ t.itlhcv loved, 11 . 1 

the warmth of the A, . " . 180 

■ rill's e.ir : " . 342 

'.'i • f men Sccm'd hardcrtoo; n . 453 

tnt in a A remembering , . n . 4" 

li .; warm, , 11 -471 



POEM. LINK. 

//, I think, help'd head : . . Aj'lntir's F. 475 

Hating his own lean h . u 525 

bad him with good // sustain himself — 11 . 544 

in flood, and dash'd his angry A 11 . 633 

To greet her, wasting his forgotten k, 11 . ctg 

her // had beat remorselessly, . n . 799 

from tender A's, And those who sorrow'd " . 843 
pious talk, when most his A w:is dry, Sea Dream 

loathe it ; he had never kindly/;, . 11 . 195 

set my // on your forgiving him, . n . 260 

what It had he To die ofl . . " 205 

His angel broke his /(. ... n . 265 

To his great A none other than a God ! Tttlionus 14 

bosom beating with a // rcnew'd. . -i . 36 

ay me ! with what another// . » . 5.0 

madly danced our It's with joy, . TAe I 'eyage 3 

Across the whirlwind's // of peace, 11 . £7 

in thy A the scrawl shall play.' . Sailor Boy . 12 

A devil rises in my A, . " . 23 

Tear the noble //of Britain . . Boadicea . 1 2 
h within her fall and flutter . . i> . .81 
and the Shepherd gladdens in his // Spec, of Iliad 16 

Shame and wrath his /(confounded, Tit* Captain ci 

my /; so near the beauteuus breast . Coquette,^, 7 
on thy /: a finger lays, . . . On a Mourner 1 1 

Teach that sick A the stronger, . " . iR 

my //, my It is an evergreen : . Spiteful Let. 23 

h to endure for the life of the worm Wages . 7 

bird Makes his A voice . . . Lucretius . 10 1 

What beast has It to do it? . . " . 230 

from the maiden fountain in her A. 11 . 237 

my /; is there before you are come TIj; WituUrji 14 

Gone, and a cloud in mv It, . . 11 40 
bite far into the It of the house, . " '53 

bitten into the A of the earth, . 11 . (o 

Fine little // and merry blue eye. . 11 . eg 

Break, you may break my /:. . » . 141 

Faint A never won — ...» . U2 

O merry my //, you have gotten . 11 . ij3 

lighten into mv eyes and my /* » . 192 

Into my It and my blood . . » . 193 
H, are you great enough . 11 '94-6 

Aeart-affluence. 

H-a in discursive talk . . .In Mem, cviii r 

Iteart-broke't . 

he pass'd his father's gate, H-b . Dora . . 49 

Aeart-disease. 

suddenly dropt dead of lt-d.' . . Sea Dreams 264 

of h-d! what heart had he To die of? 11 . 265 

It ear I en. 

Cry thro' the sense to A trust . In Man. cxv. 7 

heart-free 

escaped//;/" with the least little . Maud, \.\\. it 

Iteartlt. 

now our household lis arc cold : . Lotos-E's. . 117 

'pick'd the eleventh from this /:. . 'lite Epic . 41 

an idle king, By this still /;, . . Ulysses _. 2 
Two heads in council, two beside the//, Princess. 

household talk, and phrases of the //, 11 . 294 

Man for the field and woman for the //: 11 v. 437 

fires of Hell Mix with his // : . » . 445 
will make it faggots for the //, . 11 
Till happier times each to her proper//; 11 
azure pillars of the // Arise to thee ; 11 ' 

by the It the children sit . . In Mem. x\. 1 ) 

ind the Christmas//; lxxvii.2) ,. xwe. 2 

prey By each cold A, ... 11 xcvii. is 

whose lis he saved from shame . Ode on Well 225 
Beside your own warm //, . I-'nid . 

King's waste // and aching heart . Guinevere . 520 
clean // and a clear fire for me, . Er. Ardi H 

left his // and native land •• ■ 357 

so genial was the //: ..." • 744 
on the right hand of the // he saw 11 : 
shatter all the happiness of the /. . " 

warm-blue breathings of a hidden A Aylmer's F, 1 ■ <; 
On cither side the //, indignant : . 

Meet for the reverence of the //, . •> . 333 



196 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

beside your h's Can take her place Aylnzer^sF. 735 
strangers at my h Not welcome, . Lucretius . 158 

hearth-flower. 
The little hfhWia. . . Pri?icess, Pro. 165 

heart-hiding. 
H-h smile, and gray persistent eye : Gicinevere 64 

hearthstone. 

hissing in war or his own h ? . Maud, Li.. 24 

heartless. 
Insolent, brainless, hi . . . Aylmer's F. 368 

Iieat. 
Clear, without h, undying, . . Isabel . . 3 
Close-latticed to the brooding £, Mariana in tJie S '. 3 
day increased from h to h, . . tr . 39 

From h to h the day decreased . 11 -78 

Throbbing thro' all thy h and light, Fathna . 4 
the heart Faints, faded by its h. . D.ofF. IVonz. 2&S 
Rain, wind, frost, h, hail, damp, . StS. Stylites x6 
That h of inward evidence, . . Two Voices 284 
Remembering its ancient h. . rr . 423 

in the h of dusty fights' . . Princess, ii. 223 

Hung, shadow'd from the h; . n . 435 

my honest h Were all miscounted 11 iv. 314 

What h's of indignation . n v. 365 

my veins Stretch with fierce h ; . 11 . 527 

A night of Summer from the h, . 11 vi. 38 

Where we withdrew from summer lis 11 . 228 

whiff! there comes a sudden h, . 11 Con. 58 

life outliving lis of youth, . . In Mem. lii. 10 
The landscape winking thro' the h: 11 Ixxxviii. 16 
To make a solid core of A; . . ir cvi. 18 

the schoolboy h t The blind hysterics if cviii. 15 
In tracts of fluent h began, . . it cxvii. 9 
true blood spilt had in it a h . Maud,\. xix. 44 

I spoke with heart, and h and force, TJie Letters 37 
after nodded sleepily in the h. . Fnid . 1102 

with mild h of holy oratory, ir 17T4 

Brain-feverous in his /; and agony, Elaine . 850 

h is gone from out my heart, . 11 1110 

the casement standing wide for h, ir 1227 

a sudden flush of wrathful h . Guinevere . 354 

some h of difference sparkled out Aylmer's F. 705 
all-generating powers and genial h Lucretius . 97 
animal h and dire insanity. m . 163 

heated, 
h thro' and thro' with wrath and love. Princess, iv.145 
h hot with burning fears, . . InMem. cxvii. 22 
h the strong warrior in his dreams ; Enid . . 72 

heath (over-grown place.) 
blackening over h and holt, . . Locksley H. 191 
slowly rode across a wither' d h } . Vision of Sin 61 
At the dragon on the h 1 tr . 72 

Priest went out by h and hill ; . The Victim 30 

heath (heather.) 
are dabbled with blood-red h, . Maud, I. i. 2 

heathen. 

the h of the Northern Sea [Guinevere 134I Enid 
till we drive The H, who, some say, Elaine 
h caught and reft him of his tongue n 
Trath Treroit, Where many a k fell ; rr 
Red as the rising sun with h blood » 
in this h war the fire of God ir 

H, the brood by Hengist left ; . Guinevere . 
And leagued with him the h, . rr 

and the Godless hosts Of h . it 

break the h and uphold the Christ, 11 

heave, 
h and thump A league of street . Princess, iii. 
Ji's but with the heaving deep. . In Mem. xi. 
tho' the Giant Ages h the hill . Ode on Well. 
rough Torre began to h and move, Elaine 

heaved. 

silver lily h and fell ; . . . To E. L. . 10 

bush-bearded Barons /: and blew, Princess, v. 20 

might'st have h a windless flame . In Mem. Ixxi. 13 



1817 

66 

2 73 



259 
1060 



POEM. LINE. 

only h with a summer swell. . The Daisy . 12 

h his blade aloft, And crack'd the helmet Enid 572 
I was h upon it In darkness : . Sea Dreams 90 

heaven. 

could not look on the sweet h, . Mariana . 15 
A' ^ mazed signs stood still ' Clear-headed frie?uT etc. 28 
Sure she was nigherto/:'.s spheres, Ode to Mem. 40 
H flow'd upon the soul in many dreams TJie Poet 31 
mountain draws it from H above, Poet's Mind 32 
from a throne Mounted in h . To J. M. K. 13 

H over H rose the night. . Mariana in the S. 92 
Sleepeth over all the h, . . Eleanore . 39 

As tho' a star, in inmost h set, . 11 .89 

Coming thro' H like a light . . CEnone . 106 
From me, IPs Queen, Paris, to thee tr . 125 

happy H , how canst thou see my face ? 1 r . 232 
hollow'd moons of gems, To mimic h ; Pal. of A rt 189 
From yon blue k's above us bent L. C. V. de Vere 50 
Pray H for a human heart, . ir -71 
seem'd to go right up to H . . MayQuee?i } \\\. 40 
the h's are in a glow ; . 11 - 49 
Beneath a h dark and holy, . . Lotos-E's. . 136 
' H heads the count of crimes D. ofF. IVom. 201 
with you thro' a little arc Of h t . To J. S. . 27 
dwells in h half the night. 11 -52 
else of H was pure Up to the Sun, Gardener 'sD. 78 
praise the h's for what they have? 11 . 101 
to praise the h's but only love . 11 . 103 
h's between their fairy fleeces pale 11 . 256 
— H knows — as much within : . Ed. Morris 82 
Unfit for earth, unfit for/:, . . StS. Stylites 3 
Battering the gates of h . . 11 .7 
H, and Earth, and Time are choked. tr . 102 
saints Enjoy themselves in h . 11 . 104 
know I have some power with H . rr . 141 
whole, and clean, ajid meet for H. 11 . 210 
under H None else could understand : Talking O. 21 
all as one to fix our hopes on H . Golden Year 57 
in old days Moved earth and h; . Ulysses . 67 
Sees in h the light of London . Locksley H. 114 
Saw the h's fill with commerce, . it . 121 
Heard the h's fill with shouting . tr . 123 
Rapt after h's starry flight . . Two Voices 68 
joy that mixes man with H : . 11 . 210 
H opens inward, chasms yawn, . tr . 304 
float thro' H, and cannot light ? . Day-Dm. . 276 
My breath to h like vapour goes . St Agnes' Eve 3 
Break up the h's, O Lord ! . . 11 .21 
All h bursts her starry floors, . tr .27 

1 yearn to breathe the airs of h . Sir Galahad 63 
set in H's third story, . . . Will Water. 70 
Shall show thee past to H: rr . 246 
With tears and smiles from h again SirL.andQ. G. 2 
Blue isles of h laugh'd between . 11 . 6 
vases in the hall Flowers of all/:'.?, Princess, Pro. 12 
weird seizures, //"knows what: . tr i. . 14 
lamps blazon'd like H and Earth . n . 220 
to call down from HA blessing . it ii. 454 
breathe for one hour more in H' . tr iii. 53 
Appealing to the bolts of H ; . 11 iv. 353 
his anger reddens in the h's rr . 367 
sweet influences Of earth and hi . u v. 184 
Like a Saint's glory up in h n . 503 
Andright ascension, //knows what; 11 vi. 240 
The cloud may stoop from h . u . 365 
H, Star after star, arose and fell ; 11 vii. 34 
cease to move so near the IPs, . ir . 180 
Beyond all thought into the H of H' s. u Con. 115 
Sleep, gentle h's, before the prow ; In Mem. ix. 14 
bear thro' H a tale of woe, . . tr xii. 2 
Hung in the shadow of a /: ?. . it xvi. 10 
Her early H, her happy views ; . if xxxiii. 6 
The full-grown energies of/:. . tt xxxix. 20 
In its assumptions up to h; . . n lxii. 4 
all the starry h's of space . . it Ixxv. 3 
the inviolate spring Where nighest h, it lxxxix. 3 
scale the h's highest height, . . it cvii. 7 
To bare the eternal H's again, . tt cxxi. 4 
high in /: the streaming cloud . tr Con. 107 
Let the sweet h's endure, . . Maud, I. xi. 8 



TEXXYSOX'S IVORA'S. 



197 



TOEM. LINE. 

O Maud were sure of H . . Maud,I. xi\. 19 
glide Like a beam of the seventh H, 11 xiv. 21 

The gates of // are closed . . 11 xviii. 12 
up into H the Christless code, . 11 II. i. 26 
and the It's fail in a gentle rain, .11 . 41 

'Cold altar, //and earth shall meet The Letters 7 
// flash'd a sudden jubilant ray, . Ode on Well. 129 
gloom that saddens // and Earth, The Daisy . 102 
as he loved the light of //. . . Enid . . 5 

as the light of H varies, 6 

aid me // when at mine uttermost, 11 . . 502 
on open ground beneath a troubled//, 11 . . 523 
Sweet It, how much I shall discredit o . . 621 
clothe her like the sun in H. .11 . . 784 

was ever praying the sweet lis .11.. 893 
might amend it by the grace of h, 11 . . 902 
issuing under open lis beheld . 11 . 1045 

' by //, 1 will not drink, . .11. 1512 

love the H that chastens us. . ti . 1637 

eyes that ever answer' d h, . " . 1690 

Bard, and knew the starry h's; . Vivien . 25 
By // that hears I tell you . . 11 . 193 

men at most differ as H and earth 11 . 663 

women, worst and best, as//and Hell. 11 . 664 

yon just //, that darkens o'er me, . 11 . 780 

she ceased, when out of/<a bolt . 11 . 783 

fearing It had heard her oath, . 11 . 789 

who can gaze upon the Sun in h ? . Elaine . 124 
'// hinder,' said the King . . 11 . 531 

lose it, as we lose the lark in /;, . 11 . 656 

after It, on our dull side of death, 11 1373 

A blot in /;, the Raven . . . Guinevere . 132 
There came a day as still as //, . 11 . 290 

help me, It, for surely I repent. 11 . 370 

the lis upbreaking thro' the earth 11 . 388 

nomorc subtle master under h . ti . 474 

be his mate hereafter in the lis . 11 . 630 

high in It behind it a gray down . En. Arden . 6 
On providence and trust in //, 11 . 205 

The breath of It came continually n . 531 

such as drove her under moonless lis 11 . 543 

glades high up like ways to //, ir . 574 

Mars that globed themselves in H, 11 . 598 

a touch of light, an air of /*, . . Aylmer's F. 5 
// in lavish Bounty moulded, . 11 . 107 

in the Northern dreamer's lis, . n . 161 

marriages are made in //.' . . n 188 

rain of A, and their own bitter tears, n . 428 

Tears, and the careless rain of //, 11 . 429 

breathless burthen of low-folded lis n . 612 

Shot up their shadows to the // of l/'s, 11 . 642 

thy brother man, the Lord from //, 11 . 667 

iwly but that beam of// . 11 . 684 

the living fount of pity in //. . ■■ . 752 

if every star in It Can make it fair : Sea Dreams 82 
high as //,... 11 100 

the too rough H in Hell and //, . 11 . 192 

would jar all the hymns of h : . 11 . 251 

in A are cold, . The Ringlet 9 
Thunder, a flying fire in /;, . . BoSdicea . 24 
the /;. . . Spec, of Iliad 8 
when in // ti the moon 11 . 11 

unable lis lircak open . 11 .14 

from that quiet h of hers, . Lucretius . 87 
climb into the windy halls of h; . 11 . 136 

Be merry in //, () larks, and far away The II 'indtmi 146 

heaven-descended. 
Corrni ih of lt-d Will, Will . . 11 

heavenly. 

But Wisdom A of the soul. . . InMem.cxin. 22 

htavntfy'iofud, 

■ that in that hour . . Two Voices. 442 

heavenly-wise. 

glow In azure orbits It-w; . In Mem. lxxxvi. 38 

heavier. 
tougher, A, stronger, he that smote. Princess, v. 525 



ktavily-galloting. 

> iid of many a hg hoof . Enu 



Enid . 



1296 



heaviness. poem. line. 
Why are we weighed upon with It, Lotos-Li's. . 57 

heavy. 
If Time be It on your hands, L. C. I', de I'ere C6 

What is this? his eyes are /< : . Locksley H. 51 
gentle maiden's death Right h am I ; Elaine 1284 

heavy-blossom' d. 
Droops the h-b bower, . . . Locksley H. 163 

heavy-folded. 
swung The h-f rose, . . In Mem. xciv. 59 

Iteavy-fruited. 
hangs the h-f tree — . . . Locksley II. 1C3 

heavy-plunging. . 
would the white cold /;-/ foam, . D.qfF.Wom.iiZ 

heuvy-shotted. 
His h-s hammock-shroud . . In Mem. vi. 15 

Hel-e. 
violet eyes, and all her //bloom, Gardener's D. 136 
ITs are they to hand ambrosia, . I'rincess, iii. 97 

Hebrew. 
' No fair // boy Shall smile away . D.ofF. Worn. 213 
blame among The H mothers ' . 11 . 215 

Hector. 
So //said, and sea-like roar'd his host : Spec, oflliadi 

hedge (s.) 
one green wicket in a privet /; ; . Gardener' sD. 109 

All round a // upshoots, . . Day-Dm. . 61 

He breaks the h: he enters there : 11 . 118 

The /( broke in, the banner blew, " 141 

The very sparrows in the /; . . Amphion . 67 

seated on a style In the long It, . The Brook . 198 

air made tremble in the It •• . 202 

tin.' she were a beggar from the /;, Enid . . 230 

pick'd a ragged-robin from the h 11 724 

hedge (verb.) 
laurel-shrubs that It it around. . Poet's Mind 14 

hedgehog. 
It underneath the plantain bores . Aylmer's F. £30 

hedge-row. 
where the h-r cuts the pathway, . Gardener's D. C5 

heed (sec take heed. ) 
whether he // it or not, . . . Maud, I. iv. 53 
Shall 1 It them in their anguish ? . Boiidicca . 9 

heeded. 
He /; not reviling tones, . . Two Voices 220 
Bubbled the nightingale and It not, Princess, iv. 247 
All would be well — tnc lover It not, Aylmer's F. 545 

heedlessness. 
pleased her with a babbling It . Guinevere . 149 

heehaw. 
A jackass It's from the rick, . . Amphion . 71 

heel (for head to heel, etc., see head.) 
with the dint of armed lis— . M.d' Arthur 150 

drove his It into the smotildcr'd log, " If. 14 
snarling at each other's lis. . . Locksley II. 106 
trampled some beneath hcrhorscs'//'j, I'rincess. Pro. 44 
brains arc in their hands and in their It's, 11 iy. 497 
virgin marble under iron It's: . 11 vi. 331 

Gnarr at the Ks of men, . . In Mem. zcvii.17 
t the pavement echoing, . Enid . 1120 

her palfrey whinnying lifted //, . " . • 2 3" a 

lissome Vivien, holding by his //, I' kirn 
Lancelot pluck d him by the A, . Guintvtrt . 35 
precipitate h, Fledged as it were . Lvcrttna . ig? 
bitten the It of the going year. Tht Window 48 

height. 
from thy noonday // Shudderest . Fatima . 2 
I . a line of lis, and higher Pal. of Art 82 

Be flattcr'd to the //.... 11 . 192 

not leave the myrrh-bush on the It ; Lotos-Pis. . 103 
To her full /; her stately stature P. <f P. Wont. 102 
sat l'rccdom on the It's, 'Of old sal Freedom,' etc. 1 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

hast not gain'd a real h, . . Two Voices 91 
In gazing up an Alpine h, n . 362 

leave the plain, I climb the h ; . Sir Galahad 57 
fold by fold, From those still lis . Vision of Sin 52 
She rose her h, and said : . . Princess, ii. 27 
rosy lis came out above the lawns. 11 iii. 347 

When storm is on the /is, . . 11 v. 338 

arose Once more thro' all her h, . n vi. 144 

drags me down From my fixt h . 11 . 289 

maid, from yonder mountain h: ir vii. 177 
What pleasure lives in A 11 . 178 
In h and cold, the splendour . 11 . 179 
gain in sweetness and in moral h, n . 265 
On Argive's h's divinely sang . InMem.'xxm. 22 
Upon the last and sharpest /i, . ir xlvi. 13 
A higher /i, a deeper deep. . . 11 lxii. 12 
all thy breadth and h Of foliage . ir lxxxviii. 3 
About empyreal h's of thought, . n xciv. 38 
To scale the heaven's highest h, . it cvii. 7 
Powers of the /i, Powers of the deep, Maud, II. ii. 82 
manhood stand on his ancient h, . 11 III. vi. 21 
The h, the space, the gloom, the glory ! The Daisy 59 
Another sinning on such h's . . Elaine . 248 
free flashes from a h Above her, . n . 644 
not look up, or half-despised the h Guinevere . 636 
lo ! her Enoch sitting on a h, . En. Arden . 496 
bending from his h With hal f-allowing Aylmers F. 119 
dealing goodly counsel from a h . ir . 172 
from his h and loneliness of grief . n . 632 
Whisper in odorous h's of even. . Milton . 16 
every h comes out, and jutting Spec, of Iliad 13 

heightened. 
Then the Captain's colour h, . The Captain 29 

heir. 

His son and h doth ride post haste, D.oftheO. Yearyi 
first-born, and h to all, . . Gardener sD. 185 

1 the h of all the ages, . . . Locksley H. 178 
Lord Ronald is h of all your lands, Lady Clare 19 
And I,' said he, ' the lawful h, . 11 .86 
hard h strides about their lands, . InMem.\xxxix.i$ 
Spurn'd by this h of the liar — . Maud, I. xix. 78 
dead love's harsh h, jealous pride ? Elaine 1389 
heiress and not h regretfully? . Aylmers F. 24 
Blissful bride of a blissful h, . . IV. to Alexan 27 
Bride ofthe/iofthe kings of the sea — n . 28 

heiress. 
1 If you are not the h born, . . Lady Clare 83-5 
comes the feebler h of your plan, . Princess, iii. 221 
As /; and not heir regretfully ? . Aylmers F. 24 
Their child.' 'Our child!' 'Our A/* .r . 297 

h, wealth, Their wealth, their hi . ir . 368 

heirless. 
now a lonely man Wifeless and h, Elaine 1362 

held. 

h the pear to the garden-wall. . Mariana . 4 
Paris h the costly fruit Out . . CEnone . 133 

h she her solemn mirth, . . Pal. of Art 215 

h your course without remorse, L. C. V.de Vere 45 
H me above the subject, . . D. ofF. Worn. 10 
father h his hand upon his face ; . n . 107 

Her rags scarce h together; . . The Goose . 2 
He // a goose upon his arm . . 11 .5 

h a talk, How all the old honour . The Epic . 6 
so we h it then) What came of that? n .26 

dropt the branch she h, and turning Gardener 'sD '.154 
h it better men should perish . Locksley H. 179 
She h it out ; and as a parrot . Princess, Pro. 169 
h his sceptre like a pedant's wand 11 i. 27 

so my daughter h, Was all in all : it - 134 

h her round the knees ... 11 ii. 342 

In this hand h a volume as to read, 11 . 431 

the papers that she h Rustle : . n iv. 371 

some pretext h Of baby troth . 11 v. 387 

pored upon her letter which I h, . w . 458 

painting and the tress And h them up : 11 vi. 95 

Love in sacred halls H carnival . 11 vii. 70 

h A volume of the Poets of her land : » . 158 

h it truth, with him who sings . In Mem. i. . 1 



POEM. LINE. 

man I h as half-divine ; . . In Mem. xiv. io 

if we h the doctrine sound . . 11 Iii. 9 

Where once we h debate, . . 11 Ixxxvi. 21 
h that sorrow makes us wise, (cxii. 1) n cvii. 15 

h their heads above the crowd, . The Brook . 10 
His Memory — since he h them dear, Ded. of Idylls 1 
H court at old Caerleon upon Usk. Enid . . 146 
caught His purple scarf, and /;, ir 377 

meadow where the jousts were h, w . . 537 
H his head high, and thought himself 11 . 1091 

H commune with herself, 11 1217 

moving back she h Her finger up, " . 1301 

fill'da horn with wine and h it to her,) 11 . 1507 

whom he h In converse for a little, ir . 1730 

watch'd, and had not h his peace : Vivien . iS 

was too slippery to be h, . . Elaine . 213 

she, who h her eyes upon the ground 11 . 232 

h her from her sleep. 11 . 338 

and they that h the lists, 11 . 454 

the Table Round that h the lists, . 11 466-98 

h her tenderly, And loved her . n . S63 

II her awake : or if she slept, . Guinevere . 75 
grieving h his will, and bore it thro*. En. Arden . 167 
yet she h him on delayingly . . 11 . 465 

that she but h off to draw him on ; m . 473 

daily-dwindling profits h the house ; ij . 697 

//his head high, and cared for no man, 11 . 849 

face and faith H him from that : . Aylmer's F. 393 
Faded with morning, but his purposed. 11 . 412 

as if he A The Apocalyptic millstone, Sea Dreams 25 
My master h that Gods there are, Lucretius . 116 

Helen. 

the breasts, The breasts of H, . Lucretius . Cj. 

Heliconian. 
//"honey in living words, . . Lucretius . czi 

hell. 
hated him with the hate of h, . The Sisters, cz 
Struck thro' with pangs of //. . Pal. of Art. 220 

down in h Suffer endless anguish, . Lotos-E's. . 16C 
all h beneath Made me boil over. . St S.Stylites 167 
Mix'd with cunning sparks of h. . Vision ofSi?i 114 
paint the gates of H with Paradise, Princess, iv. 113 
fires of //"Mix with his hearth : . u v. 444 

Procuress to the Lords of H. . In Mem. Iii. 16 
compass'd by the fires of H ; . ir cxxvi. 17 

passions that make earth HI . Maud, I. x. /6 
I have climbed nearer out of lonely H. ir xviii. Co 
fires of H brake out of thy rising . 11 II. i. g 
fires of H and of Hate ; m .10 

slander, meanest spawn of H . The Letters 33 
Into the mouth of H . Lt. Brigade 25-47 

halfway down the slope to H, . Enid . 1639 

hard earth cleave to the Nadir h, . Vivien . 199 

worst and best, as Heaven and H. m . 664 

Lightens from her own central // — Ayhner*s F. 761 
too rough H in H and Heaven, . Sea Dreams 192 
Deep as H 1 count his error. . The Captain 3 

mortal soul from out immortal k, . Lucretius . 259 

helm (helmet.) 
so deeply smitten thro' the h M. d' Arthur 25, 41 
scarf of orange round the stony h, Princess, Pro. 102 
fired an angry Pallas on the h, . n vi. 347 

Aim'd at the h, his lance err'd ; . Enid. . 1006 
his lance aside, And doff'd his h; . 11 . . 1444 
upon his h A sleeve of scarlet, . Elaine . 601 
he had not loosed it from his h, . n . . 805 
look'd Down on his h, from which it . . 976 
spake to these his h was lowered, . Guinevere . 5G7 

helm (of a boat.) 
She took the h and he the sail ; . Vivien . 49 

helm (verb. ) 
the bark, And him that h's it, . Elaine . 4^3 

helmet. 
The h and the helmet-feather L. ofShalott, iii. 21 
From underneath his h flow'd . 11 • 3 3 

She saw the h and the plume, . 11 .40 

out of stricken h's sprang the fire. . Pri?icess t v. 4G4 
Psyche's colour round his h, . u . 523 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



199 



. Enid 



riveting a // on his knee, 
forward with the h yet in hand . " 
crack'd the /; thro', and bit the bone, 11 
eye darken'd, and his /; wagg'd ; . " . • 
bound Her token on his /;, . . Elaine 



Sir Galahad 39 



Dora . 


I2S 


Locksley It. 


105 


ir 


185 


Princess, ii. 


249 


11 


3" 


11 111. 


29 


11 


67 


11 


144 



Elaine 



348 
783 
66 
370 
404 



■ 49 
. 1 1 1 

i. 224 
• 738 
i486 

■ 297 
1299 
1302 

~ 6 



. 268 
. 285 
■ 573 
1354 
• 373 
helmet-feather. 
The helmet and the ///Burned L. o/Shalott, iii. 21 

helmsman. 
I leap on board : no A steers : 

help (s.) 
without h I cannot last till morn. . M. a" Arthur 26 
promised h, and oozed All o'er . Princess, v. 231 
ise it needed h of Love : . In Mem. xxv. 8 
shall I kill myself? What h in that? Guinevere . 6:4 
to see you poor and wanting/;: . En.Arden . 403 
comfort and an open hand of/;, . Aylmer's F. 174 

help (verb.) 
grace To/; me of my weary load.' /]//ir;Vi«/i;>; ;"/;<?.?. 29 
until he grows Of age to /; us.' . " 

hurt that Honour feels, 
h me as when life begun : 
there was one to hear And // them 

I heard, I could not /; it, 

1 s, could 1 /; it, but my cheek 

■'■ her) she was wedded to a . 

A my prince to gain His rightful 

H, father, brother, h ; ... » «;• *»" 

.'■1 to /; their equal rights . " vh. 218 

h thy foolish ones to bear; . . In Mem. Pro. 31 

// thy vain worlds to bear thy light u . 32 

could lAher? . . . The Brook . in 

fellow, could he/; it? . . " ■ 158 

^.ivin,; that, ye /; to save mankind Ode on Well. 166 

How best to/; the slender store, To F. D. Maurice 37 

name Slip from my lips if I can /; it— Enid . 446 

Least seeking to //herself . Vivien 

• him back to life?' . .Elaine 

h it from the death that cannot die, Guinevere 

h me, heaven, for surely I repent. » 

cannot /; you as I wish to do . En. Arden 

II me not to break in upon her peace. " 

me! save I take my part . Sailor Boy . 
II us from famine And plague . The Victim 

helped. 
and his father h him not. . . Dora . 
that A her in her widowhood. ". • 
running at the call, and /; us down. Princess, 
II by the mother's careful hand . Enid . 
Vea, would have /; him to it: 
rleon had he h his lord, 
Ami /; her from herself 
would have /; her from her death. 

mil unlading 
For heart, I think, /; head . 
helper. 
Henceforth thou hast a /;, me, 
helping. 
mother silent too, nor/; her, 

helplessness. 
I, in her utter/;, 

helpmate. 
• lo mine /;, one to feel M y purpose . Guinevere 

hem. 
ill her raiment's/; was traced in flame The Poet . 45 

hemlock. 

ma, teaching him that died Of/;; Print ess,\i\. 286 

hen . 

, his eggs; Walk, to the .I/.77 
htersin the pool : Prim ess, v. 318 

hi guinea-hens lite Ilrook 126 

Hengitt. 
then, the brood by //left ; .Guinevere . 17 

herald. 
I of her triumph, . . O'.none . 181 

her /4, Reverence, fly 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 18 



En. Arden . 8 
Aylmer's F. 47s 

Princess, vii. 242 

768 



Enid 
Enid 



1567 
. 481 



POEM. LINE, 

sent a /; forth, And bade him cry, Godiva . 35 
had sent a /; to the gates. . . Princess, v. 322 
all that morn the It's to and fro, . " . 359 

The /; of a higher race, . . InMem. exvu.14 

h's blew Proclaiming his the prize, Elaine . 499 

heraldry. 
title scrolls and gorgeous heraldries. Aylmer's F.6$6 

herb. 
Step deeper yet in /; and fern, . Talking O. . 245 
The vilest /; that runs to seed . Ampltion . 95 
bruised the /; and crush'd the grape, //; Mem.xxxv. 23 
underfoot the /; was dry ; . . " xciv. 2 

Hercules. 
My PI, my Roman Antony, D. o/F. Worn. 150 

My Eustace might have sat for H ; Gardeners D. 7 

herd [s.) 
h's upon an endless plain, . . Pal. 0/ Art . 74 
The/;, wild hearts and ' Lovethou thy land,' etc. 11 
count not me the /; .' . . . Golden Year 13 
a /; of boys with clamour bowl'd . Princess, Pro. 81 
and as the leader of the /; . . 11 v '-... f ? 

So thick with lowing* of the lis, . In Mem. xcvni. 3 
her harvest ripen, her/; increase, . Maud, 111. vi. 25 

herd (verb. ) 
/, to /; with narrow foreheads, . Locksley II. 175 

herdsman. 
Earth Reels, and the herdsmen cry : Princess, v. 518 

Here. 
II comes to-day, Pallas and Aphrodite, CEuone . 83 
beheld great IPs angry eyes, . 11 . 186 

Samian H rises and she speaks . Princess, 111. 99 

heresy. 
woman is the better man ; A rampant/;, Princesses-. 392 

heretic. 

Burn, you glossy /;, burn, . . The Ringlet 53 

heritage. 

Will not another take their/; t . Aylmer's F. 7S6 

hermit. 

now for forty years A /;, . . Elaine . 402 

came the /; out and bare him in, . " . 5'8 

/;, skill'd in all The simples . . 11 . 857 

hern. 

floods the haunts of/; and crake ; hi Mem. c. 14 

I come from haunts of Coot and /;, The Brook . 23 

and pools, waste places of the /;, • Enid . 880 

lost the /; we slipt him at, . . Elaine . 654 

hero, 

h'es tall Dislodging pinnacle . D. o/F. Wont. 25 

Heroic, for a /; lies beneath. Princess, Pro. 207 

be yourself your /; if you will.' . 11 ■ 216 

each be /; in his turn ! . . . " . • = 21 

While horse and /; fell, . . Lt. brigade 44 

Herod. 
II, when the shout was in his cars, Pal. 0/ Art 219 

heroic. 
II, for a hero lies beneath, . Princess, Pro. 207 

// if you will, or what you will . 11 ■ «'5 

// seems our Princess as required— " • 223 

mock h's stranger than our own ; . » Con. 64 

heroine. 
'Take Eilia, then, for /;' . . Princess,I'ro.2\j 
dames and h's of the golden year . » vi. 48 

hesitating. 
Down the long tower-stairs, /; : . Elaine . 342 

Helper. 

Large // glitter'd on her tears, Mariana in theS. 90 
Sad // o'er the buried sun . . In Mem. cxx. I 



Hesperian. 

Disclosed a fruit of pure // gold, . (Enone 



6S 



lles/'cr-Phosplior. 
Sweet IIP, double name . . /'- Mem. cxx. 17 



200 



CONCORDANCE TO 



fiest. POEM. LINE. 

I thy h will all perform at full, . M. d' Arthur 43 

Hetairai. 
girls, H, curious in their art, . Lucretius . 52 

/iew. 
lifted to h down A cavalier . . D. ofF. Worn. 45 

hewed. 
my race H Ammon, hip and thigh, D. ofF. Worn. 238 

hewn. 
With rugged maxims h from life ; Ode on Well. 184 

hexameter. 
rise And long roll of the H — . Lucretius . 11 

Hie facets. 
by the cold H J of the dead ! ' . Vivien . 603 

hid. 
k in ringlets day and night, . . Miller's D. 173 
h Excalibur the second time, . M. d 1 Arthur in 

Dora h her face By Mary. . . Dora . . 153 
h his face From all men, . . Walk, to the M.14 
have h her needle in my heart, . Ed. Morris 62 
Saying;, ' I have h my feelings, . Locksley H. 29 
ghostly woodpecker, //in the ruins; Princess,Pro 212 
some/* and sought In the orange thickets: ir ii. 435 
woman's garment h the woman's heart/ 11 v. 295 
mumbled it, And h her bosom with it ; n vi. 197 
moon is h ; the night is still ; (ciii. 2) In Mem.xxvm. 2 
an Isis k by the veil . . . Maud, I. iv. 43 
more exprest Than h her, . . Vivien . 72 
half disdain A under grace, . . Elaine . 264 
H from the wide world's rumour . it . 521 

h the Holiest from the people's eyes AylmersF. 772 
havens h in fairy bowers, . . The Voyage 54 
Woods where we h from the wet . The Window 183 

hidden. 
joy H'm sorrow : . 
violets, h in the green, . 
Hail, h to the knees in fern, 
h from the heart's disgrace, . 
these two Division smoulders h; 
' hear, but hold my name H, 
Where your great knight is h, 
(When first I learnt thee h here) 
h as the music of the moon . 



Dying Swan 23 
D. ofF. Worn. 77 
Talking 0.2^201 
Locksley H. 57 
Princess, iii. 
Elaine 



Guinevere 



63 

416 
687 
535 



. Aylmers F. 102 

hide. 
run to and fro, and h and seek, . The Mermaid 35 
neither h the ray From ' Love tlwu thy land, 1 'etc. 14 
h my forehead and my eyes? . M. d' 'Arthur 228 
// thy knotted knees in fern, . . Talking O. 93 
H me from my deep emotion, . Locksley H. 108 
cannot h that some have striven, . Two Voices . 208 
Is there no baseness we would h ?. In Mem. I. 3 
/; thy shame beneath the ground. . 11 Ixxi. 28 

earth has earth enough To h him. . Enid . . 1404 
Well, h it, hit; I shall find it out ; Vivien . 378 

h it therefore ; go unknown : . Elaine. . 151 

therefore would he h his name tt . 579 

sharply turned about to h her face, if . . 605 
There will I h thee, till my life . Guijievere . 113 
thou could'st h me from myself ! . it . 117 

See they sit, they h their faces, . Boddicea . 51 
H, h them, million-myrtled wilderness, Lucretius 201 
cavern-shadowing laurels, hi , . . 202 

hiding-place. 
by mine head she knows his h-p.' . Elaine 



710 



high. 



Did ever rise from h to higher ; . In Mem. xl. 2 
moving up from h to higher, . ir lxiii. 13 

either babbling world of h or low ; Ode on Well. 182 
If this be h, what is it to be low ?' . Elaine . 1078 
If, self-contain'd, and passionless, . Guinevere . 403 

high-arched. 
H-a and ivy-claspt, Of finest Gothic Princess, Pro. 91 

high-built. 
storm their h-b organs make, 



InMem.lxxxvi. 6 



high-elbowed. poem. line. 
.fY-^grigsthatleapinsummergrass. The Brook . 54 

higher. 
might have look'd a little h; . Miller's D. . 140 

never sow was h in this world — Walk.totJie M. 88 
sensuous organism That which \sh. Princess, ii. 74 
Among her maidens, h by the head, 11 iii. 163 

Did ever rise from high to h ; . In Mem. xl. 2 
moving up from high to h, . . if lxiii. 13 

feel There is a lower and a h ; . tr exxviii. 4 

highest. 
The h is the measure of the man, . Princess, ii. 141 
midmost and the h Was Arac : 11 v. 246 

of all men who seems to me the h.' Elaine 1071 

'II?' the Father answer'd, echo- 
ing ' h ?' . . . . tr . 1072 
know not what you call the h ; . n . 1074 
Thou art the h and most human too, Gitinevere . 642 
my duty to have loved the h: . u . 650 
We needs must love the h . . tr . 653 
Singing Hosanna in the h : . En. A rden 499-502 
their own darkness as the H ? . Aylmers F. 643 
heavens Break open to their h, . Spec, of Iliad 15 

/; ighest- mounted. 
' The h-m mind,' he said, . . Two Voices. 79 

highlands. 
Sailing under palmy h . . . The Captain 23 

Highness. 
Your //'would enroll them with your Princess, i. . 236 
One rose in all the world, your H 11 ii. . 37 

No ghostly hauntings like his H. . 11 . 389 

Your H might have seem'd the thing 11 iii. . 186 
if your H keep Your purport, . 11 . 195 

' Alas your H breathes full East,' 11 . 215 

' pass on ; His H wakes :' . . u v. . 5 

'Amazed am I to hear Your H : . 11 vi. . 305 

your H breaks with ease The law 
your H did not make tr . 306 

these men came to woo Your H — n . 309 

high-iualled. 
H-w gardens green and old ; . Arabian N's. 8 

highway. 
There she sees the h near . L.ofShalott, ii. 13 

at night along the dusky h . . Locksley H. 113 
Cuts off the fiery h of the sun, . En. Arden . 130 
Cut off the length of h on before, . it . 674 

hill. 
heaped It's that mound the sea, . Ode to Mem. 98 
Spring Letters cowslips on the h ? . Adeline . 62 
The willowy h'sand fields among, L. o/Shalott,'\\. 25 
And the hearts of purple // s, . Eleanore . 17 

white chalk-quarry from the h . Miller's D. . 115 
Before he mounts the h, I knosv . Fatima . 22 
a fire Is poured upon the lis, . tt . . 31 

all the valleys of Ionian lis . . CEnone . 2 
Paris, once herplaymate on the h's. tt . 16 

noonday quiet holds the h : . . 11 -24 

Hear me O Earth, hear me O IPs, tt . 35 

waited underneath the dawning h's, 11 . 46 

In this green valley, under this green/;, i> . 228 

at night come from the inmost h's, n . . 245 

over h's with peaky tops engrail'd, Pal. of Art 113 
and the crowfoot are over all the k, MayQueen,\. 38 
There's not a flower on all the h's: it ii. 13 

crows from the farm upon the /; . tr . 23 

His waters from the purple h — . Lotos-E's. . 138 
On the h's like Gods together, . tt . 155 

thunder on the everlasting h's. . D.o/F. Worn. 226 
Upon the hidden bases of the lis.' M. d' Arthur 106 
than human on the frozen h's. . u . 183 

stood upon the h's behind . . 11 Ep. 25 

cuckoo told his name to all the h's; Gardener's!). 92 
till we reach'dThe limit of the h's; AudleyCt. . 82 
round the h's from bluff to bluff. . Golden Year 76 
Rift the h's, and roll the waters, . Locksley H. 186 
far across the lis they went . . Day-Dm. . 167 
across the lis and far away . . n 169, 193 

Ellen's grave, on the windy h. . Ed. Gray . 12 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



201 



POEM. LINE. 

To their haven under the A • ' Break, break' etc. 10 
From li s, that look'd across a land Princess, i. 167 
sang about the morning lis, . . 11 ii. 229 

still be dear beyond the southern lis; " . 246 

double It ran up his furrowy forks 11 iii. 158 

river as it narrow'd to the lis. . « . 180 

They faint on k or field or river : . n . 361 

you had gone, Ridd'n to the lis, . 11 iv. 324 

night to him that sitting on a A . " . 551 

nit the Northern lis. ... 11 v. 42 

Forgotten, rusting on his iron lis, 11 . 140 

from the dark heart of the long lis 11 . 339 

and cold, the splendour of the lis ? n vii. 179 
makes a silence in the lis. . . In Mem. xix. 8 
all the lavish lis would hum . . 11 x.viii. 11 
Christmas bells from /; to h . . if xxviii. 3 

Draw down ^Eonian lis xxxv. 11 

About the ledges of the It.' . . ■■ xxxvii. 8 
seal I'd within the iron lis ? . .11 lv. 20 

A distant dearness in the /; Ixiii. 19 

beam and shade Along the lis, . 11 lxxi. 16 

// and wood and field did print . 11 lxxviii. 7 
Descend below the golden lis . o lxxxiii. 28 
Beyond the bounding /( to stray, . 11 Ixxxviii. 30 
those fair lis I sail'd below, . . m xcvii. 2 
I climb the A: from end to end . " xcix. 1 
quarry trench'd along the //, .11 .11 

From all the circle of the A' s. . 11 c. 24 

distant lis From hidden summits . 11 cii. 6 

A single church below the A . . 11 ciii. 3 

The lis are shadows, and they flow 11 cxxii. 5 
sleeping silver thro' the lis; . . 11 Con. 116 

fleet came yonder round by the //, Maud, I. i. . 49 
I am sick of the Hall and the A, .11 .61 

Down by the A I saw them ride, . 11 ix. 11 

harmless wild-flower on the A ? — . i> II. i. 3 
By thirty lis I hurry down, .' . TAc Brook . 27 
o'er the lis her eagles flew . . Ode on Well. 112 
tho' the Giant Ages heave the A . 11 . 259 

in a wrinkle of the monstrous A, . Will . . 19 
Mensawthegoodly.'-'tofSomersct, Enid . . 828 

not to goodly A or yellow sea 830 

all night long a cloud clings to the A, 11 . 1539 

the white horse on the Berkshire /(' J 11 . 1784 
Fired from the west, far on a A, . Elaine . 168 

yet once more on liadon A.' . . 11 . 280 

the tumbled fragments of the lis.' 11 1417 

bent the spirits of the lis . . Guinevere . 281 
from // to //, and every day Beheld " . 389 

as he climb'd the /:, . . En. Arden . 66 

silent water slipping from the lis, u . 634 

to the A. There he sat down . 11 . 723 

up the steep A Trod out a path : . Sea Dreams 116 
and Charlie ploughing the A. . Grandmother 80 
High towns on lis were dimly seen, The Voyage 34 
h's and scarlet-mingled woods « .47 

from her airy h, and greens Ona Mourner 8 
Had rest by stony lis of Crete. 11 35 

went out by heath and A; . TAe Victim 30 
I on the slope of the /;, . The Window 9 

Hill surname.) 
millionaires, Here lived the IPs — Ed. Morris 11 
in dancing after Letty //, . . 11 -55 

hill-convent. 
Or tower, or high h-c, seen . . The Daisy . 29 

hi II -fort. 
Storming a /i/of thieves He got it ; Aylmer's F. 225 

hillock. 
Peace Pipe on her pastoral h . Maud, III. vi. 24 

hillside. 

woods that belt the gray h-s, . Ode to Mem. 55 

whole h-s was redder than a fox. . Walk, to the M. 3 

hilt. 

od against the h, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 83 

111st the//: . M.d' Arthur 55 

when he saw the wonder of the /(, 11 . 85 

betray me for the precious // ; 11 . 126 

caught him by the //, and brandisYd n 145, 160 



POEM. LINE. 

So great a miracle as yonder A . M.d' Arthur 156 
Caught at the A. as to abolish him : Enid . . 210 

Ainder. 

Came all in haste to A wrong, . Princess, iv. 382 

What lis me To take such bloody 11 . 512 

rule the land Hereafter, which God /:.' Elaine . 67 

' Heaven //,' said the King . . 11 . 531 

hindrance. 

Divinely thro' all /: finds the man Elaine . 332 

hinge. 

doors upon their lis creak'd ; . Mariana . 62 
So frequent on its /; before. . . Deserted H. 8 
I grate on rusty lis here : ' . . Princess, i. 85 
Half-parted from a weak and scolding h, The Brook 84 

Aint(s.) 

A little A to solace woe, A //, . Two Voices 433 

lis and echoes of the world . . Day-Dm. . 27 

No A of death in all his frame . luMem.xiv. 18 

with shadow* d A confuse A life . 11 xxxiii. 7 

A little flash, a mystic // ; . 11 xliii. 8 

dark sweet lis of some who prized Vivien . 1 5 

Aint (verb.) 
Alone might h of my disgrace ; . Two Voices 360 
We whisper, and /;, and chuckle, Maud, I. iv. 29 
laughingly Would/* at worse in either. En. Arden 478 
lad may wink, and a girl may /;, . The Ringlet 17 
/( it not in human tones, . . Coquette, iii. 1 1 

Aip and thigh. 
my race Hew'd Ammon, h a t, D. o/F. Worn. 238 

Aire. 
A us some fair chamber for the night, Enid 1087 

Aired. 
A himself to work within the fields ; Dora . 36 

hiss. 

the hot A And bustling whistle . Enid . . 256 

Aiss'd. 

A each at other's ear . . . Enid . 1482 

Aissing. 

Each A in his neighbour's ear ; . Princess, v. 14 

A in war on his own hearthstone? Maud, I. i. 24 

gceseofthe world thatareever/; dispraise 11 iv. 52 

history. 

chant the h Of that great race . In Mem. cii. 34 

made a pretty h to herself . . Elaine . 18 

boyish histories Of battle, . . Aylmer's F. 97 

hit (s.) 
With twisted quirks and happy h's, Will Water. 1C9 

hit (verb. ) 
He scarcely A my humour . . Ed. Morris 76 
// the Northern hills. . . . Princess, v. 42 
A the mood Of Love on earth ? . In Mem. xlvi. 11 

hitting. 
//all we saw with shafts Of gentle satire, Princcss.u.m 
aim'd All at one mark, all h : . Aylmer's F. 95 

hive. 

Audley feast Humm'd like a // . AudleyCt. . 4 

from all the provinces, And fill the //.' Princess, ii. 84 

-Wasps in our good h . . 11 iv. 514 

There the h of Roman liars worship Boiidicea . 19 

hoar. 
become Unnaturally h with rime, StS.Stylites 163 
Make thy grass A with early rime n 66 

lawn as yet Is h with rime, . To F. I). Maurice 42 

hoard (s.) 
With a A of little maxims . Locksley H. 94 

a It of tales that dealt with knights Princess, Pro. 29 
Our // is little, but our hearts are great. Enid 352-74 

hoard fvcrb.) 

// it as a sugar-plum for Holmes.'. The F./<ic . 43 

That //, and sleep, and feed, . Ulysses . 5 

three suns to store anil /< myself .11 .29 

A all savings to the uttermost, . En. Arden . 46 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Vision of Sin 74 
rl . 194 



hoarded. poem, line. 

h in herself, Grew, seldom seen : . Gardener's D. 48 

hoarse. 
I hear thee not at all, or h . . The Blackbird 19 

hoary. 
prodigal in oil, And h to the wind. Pal. of Art . 80 

hoa ry~headed. 
There musing sat the h-h Earl, . Enid . . 295 
sigh'd and smiled the h-h Earl, 11 307 

hob-and-nob. 
Let us h-a-n with Death. 
H-a-n with brother Death ! . 
hog. 
his ploughs, his cows, his h's, his dogs ; The Brook 125 
brought in whole h's and quarter beeves, Enid 1450 

hold { grasp, etc.) 
shuddering took h of all my mind, May Queen, iii.35 
sweet As woodbine's fragile h, . Talking O. . 146 
that my h on life would break In Af em. xxvi'1'1. 15 
sweep me from my h upon the world, Vivie?i . 152 
their law Relax'd its h upon us . Gui?ievere . 454 
cared to lose, her h on life. . . Aylmer's F. 568 

hold (fastness. ) 

new-comers in an ancient h, . Ed. Morris 9 

to Memory's darkest h, . Love and Duty '87 

would track this caitiff to his /;, . Enid . . 415 

when I reach'd this ruin'd h, .11.. 785 

by bandit-haunted h's, . . » . . 879 

i:i the gateway of the bandit h, . n . 1622 

And broke the bandit h's . .11 . 1792 



hold (verb.) 

h A nobler office upon earth . To tlte Qiiee?t 1 

We may h converse with all forms Ode to Mem. 115 
noonday quiet h's the hill : . . (Enone . 24 
H swollen clouds from raining, . D.of F. Worn, n 
h his hope thro' shame ' Love thou thy land' etc. 82 
no anchor, none, To h by.' . . TJie Epic . 21 
Everard's shoulder, with ' I h by him.* n . 22 

Whereof this world h's record . AT. a" Arthur 16 
by some law that h's in love, . Gardener's D. 9 

h From thence thro' all the worlds : ti . 204 

what it h's May not be dwelt on . 11 . 265 

not cease to grasp the hope I h .St S. Stylites 5 
spine can h my weary head, . it .42 

angel there That h's a crown? . t» . 201 

I h them exquisitely knit . . Talki?igO. . 91 
h passion in a leash, . . Love and Duty 40 

purpose h's To sail beyond the sunset, Ulysses . 59 
h thee, when his passion shall have Locksley H. 49 
h a fretful realm in awe, . 11 129 

how should I for certain h, . . Two Voices . 340 
h their hands to all, and cry . . Will Water. 45 
h it good, good things should pass ; n . 205 

h thee dear For this good pint . n .211 

h their orgies at your tomb ' You might have 'won, ' 12 
h Your promise : all, I trust, may yet Priucess,u. 339 



substance or the shadow? will it It ? 

such, my friend, We/2 them slight : 

h These flashes on the surface 

h the woman is the better man : . 

h That it becomes no man to nurse 

We h a great convention : 

I h her, king, True woman : 

h's a stately fretwork to the Sun, 

in your own arms To h your own, 

I sometimes /; it half a sin . . . 

h's the shadow of a lark 

I h it true, whate'er befall ; . 

h's it sin and shame to draw . 

H thou the good : define it well. . 

h the costliest love in fee. 

h I commerce with the dead ; 

they that h apart The promise 

h An hour's communion with the dead, 

h it solemn to the past. . 

High wisdom h's my wisdom less 

h me from my proper place, . 

dream my dream, and h it true : 



T u A fern. v. 


II XVI. 


It XXVII. 


if xlvii. 


11 Hi. 


11 lxxviii. 


ir lxxxiv. 


. it xciii. 


II civ. 


tl CXI. 


II ex VI. 


11 CXXll. 



387 

v. 109 

• 2 33 

• 39i 

• 443 
■ 49° 

v. 171 

'i. 70 

. 162 

1 

9 

13 

it 

13 
4 

93 

105 

3 

16 



h by the law that I made, 

h Awe-stricken breaths at a work 

Think I may h dominion sweet, 

strike, for we h Thee just, 

Whatever the Quaker h's, 

h's her head to other stars, . 



POEM. 

Maud, I. 



LINE. 

'• 55 



XVI. 

i. 



II. 



287 



Elaine 



12 

45 

" v. 92 

77^ Brook . 195 

those are few we h as dear ; . To F. D. Maurice 46 

h a tourney here to-morrow morn, Enid . 

h like colours of a shell . . . ir . 

I/;a finger up ; They understand 

( hear, but h my name Hidden, 

if he love, and his love h, 

some do h our Arthur cannot die, 

my years, however it h in youth. . 

h thee with my life against the 

'Lancelot, wilt thou h me so? . 11 

strong castle where he h's the Queen ; 11 

h that man the worst of public foes ir 

Enoch would h possession for a week: En. Arden 

cares on God ; that anchor h's. 

let me h my purpose till I die. 

' O pray God that he h up' . 

h me not for ever in thine East 

shatter it, h it abominable, 



Guinevere . 114 

■ "5 

. 192 

508 

27 

11 . 222 

11 . S76 

Aylmer's F. 733 



Tithonus 
Boadicea 
he that lis The Gods are careless, Lucretius 

holden. 
the fair Was h at the town ; . 



64 
65 
149 



Talking- O. . 102 

The Merman 14 
Pal. of Art 211 
M. d' Arthur 32 
Gardener'sD. 1 26 



holding, 
h them back by their flowing locks 
sit as God h no form of creed, 
mystic, wonderful, H the sword — 
H the bush, to fix it back, 
H the folded annals of my youth ; 
h out her lily arms 
reason ripe In h by the law within, 
lissome Vivien, h by his heel, 
h then his court Hard on the river 
Stagger'd and shook, h the branch, 

hole. 
walls Were full of chinks and h's ; 
Would he have that h in his side ? 

holiday. 

With happy faces and with h. . Princess, Pro. 56 

In summer suits and silks of h. . Enid . . 173 

younger people making h, . . En. Arden . 62 

Holiest. 
hid the 77 from the people's eyes . Aylmer's F. 772 

hollow (adj.) 
Before an oak, so h huge and old . Vivien 
Monotonous and h like a Ghost's . Guinevere 
h as the hopes and fears of men. . Lucretms 



11 


2^Q 


Princess, ii. 


28^ 


fuMeju. xxxiii. 14 


Vivien 


87 


Elaine 




En. A rden . 


7 63 


Godiva 


60 


Maud, II. v. 


82 



3 

417 
i3o 



hollozv (s. ) 
like fire in swamps and h's gray, . May Queen, i. 31 
From craggy h's pouring, . . D.of F, Worn. 182 
bowery h's crown'd with summer . M.d'Arthur 263 
the river-shores, And in the h's; . Gardener sD. 260 
thrust him in the h's of his arm, . Dora . . 129 
From many a cloudy h. . . Amphion . 48 

strip a hundred h's bare of Spring, Princess, vi. 49 
I hate the dreadful h . Aland, I. i. . 1 

creep to the h and dash myself down 11 . 54 

the woody h's in which we meet . it xxii. 43 
the red-ribb'd h behind the wood, 11 II. i. 25 

All in the h of his shield, . . Enid . 1417 

in a cuplike h of the down. . . En. Arden . 9 
began To feather toward the h, . n 68, 371 

Crept down into the h's of the wood ; it . 76 

Like echoes from beyond a h, . Aylmer's F. 298 
Blanching and billowing in a h of it, Lucretius . 31 

hollow d. 
the want, that h all the heart, . Love and Duty 60 

hollower-bellowing. 
h-b ocean, and again The scarlet . En. Arden 599 

hollowing, 
h one hand against his ear,. . . Pal. of Art 109 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



203 



JwlUrar-hwig. poem. line. 
Under the h-h ocean green! . Tlte Merman ■$ 

hollow-vaulted. 
look'd to shame The k-v dark, 
holly. 
Sick for the A<?//r« and the yews . 
■while the k boughs Entwine . 

; the Christmas hearth Ixxvu. 2] 11 
leave This laurel, let this h stand : 



A rabian iPs. 1 26 

Princess, Pro 185 

IitMeiu. sxix. 9 

xxx. 2 

civ. 2 

V 22 



ic time of hollies. . Spiteful Lett* 
hollyhock . 
Heavily hangs the/;, rep.) • A spirit haunts; etc. ti 
A Summer burial deep in lis ; . Aylmer's /•. 164 

holly-oak. 
Ilefoie a tower of crimson h-o's, . Priucess,Con. 02 

Iiolm. 
«ift wind blowing over meadowy h's Ed. Morris . 
irnaby h's to plow ! . . A'. Farmer 

Holmes. 
p.ir-00 H, the poet Everard Hall, The Epic . 
Eoaid it a» a sugar-plum for//.' . 11 

Holoferncs. 
underneath The head of II peep'd Princess, iv. 
hotp. 

h To bee -is up Princess, i. 

Su Lancelot h To raise the Prince, Guinevere . 

kolpen. 
being lustily A by the rest, . . Elaine 

holt. 
sent her voice thro' all the /; . . Talking O. . 
blackening over heath and A, . Locksley H. 



9 5 



208 



4° 



495 



POEM. '. 

dim fields about the lis Of happy men lithonus . 69 
his hopes and bates, his lis and fanes, Lucretius 251 
otw way to the A of my love, . The Window 8 

home-bred. 
flatters thus Our h-i fancies : . hi Mem x. . it 

home-circle. 
from her own h-c of the poor . Aylmer's /'. 50 1 

Homer. 
II, Plato. Verulam ; . . . Princess. 11. m 

Homeric. 
faint ti echoes, nothing-worth, . The Epic . 3J 

homestead. 
the trampled year, The smouldering /;, Princess, v. 12a 

home-voyage. 
Less lucky her/;-:-: . . . En Arden . - : n 

homicidal. 
six feet high. Grand, epic, * ; Princess, Pro. 219 

homily. 
DLstill'd from some worm-canker' d A ; To J. M. A. 6 

honest. 

Suddenly A, answer'd in amaze. . Enid . 1239 

1 methinks till now Wa- h— . <> . '355 

do you, being right *, pray . . » • »34° 

I too would still be A.' » *5* 2 

honey. 

whitest A in fairv gardens cull'd— Eleannre . 26 
madness of love, The/; of poison-flowers .J/<;.-«/, I. iv. 50 



wilhei'd /; oi tilth or pasturage— . En. Arden 



123 

1 ,i 
676 

Holy Ghost. 
the warning of the H G 1 prophesy St S. Stylites 216 

Holy Land. 
He that died in H L . . In Mem. lxxxiii. 42 

homage. 
'Honour,' she said, 'and /;, tax . CEnone .114 
render All A to his own darling, . Maud, I. xx 49 
bow'd blaok knees Of h, . . Vivien .428 

home. 
The h of woe without a tear 
an English A— gray twilight 
for ever, all in a blessed A — 
' Our island /; Is far beyond the 
Then when I left my /;." 



I 
L ucre tius 



43' 



Ed. Morris. 26 



Adeline 



Princess, Pro. 1 1 5 



Ed. Morris. 29 



Mariana 'it theS. 20 

. Pat. of Art 85 

. Mayijuccu, ui.57 

Lotos-E's . 44 

l>. of P. Worn. 120 

a summer A of murmurous wings . Gardener's D. 47 

ncar'd His happy h, the ground. .11 . 9 1 

My /1 is none of yours. . . Dora . . 43 

a dusky loaf that smelt of /;, . Audley Ct. . 21 

■'it went overseas for change. Walk, to the M. 18 

subdue this/; Of sin, my flesh, . St S. Stylites 56 

climbing up into my airy //, . " ■ a'4 

Lay betwixt his It and hers ; . L. 0/ Burleigh 28 

Ancient lis of lord and lady, . 11 • 3' 

,11 have a cheerful /; ; . .11 .3° 

for the hollies and the yews of /;— Princess,! ro. 183 

three years to correspond with A; 

of a man, . 

were better at their h's, 

her gone and far from /; ; 

nl things of It ; . 
es arc lis of silent prayer, 
take her latest leave of /;, 

. but ere we go from /;, 
• It that gave me birth, 

her in her ancient A 
T golden carp 
I ■ r nd had of A 

1 A For Annie: . ■ / " Arden 47. 58 

it A t had he a hi » . 669 

reach'd the /; Where Annie lived . •> • '85 

Back toward his solitary A again, . " _• 795 

' h's, _ . Aylmers P. 147 

XT of the bitter news from A, 11 . 3;4 



50 

ii v. 257 

11 . 418 

In Mem. viii. 4 

11 xiv. 12 

11 \\.\ii. 1 

ti xxxix. 6 

ci. 5 

Maud, 1 1, iv. 7 

Enid . 644 

648 

873 



' 1 sit and gather /; ; 
Heliconian /; 1:1 living words, 

honeycomb. 
A full-cell d A of eloquence . 

Itoney-converse. 
Some lie feeds thy mind, 

honey-hearted, 
h-h wine And bread from out the . Spec, of Iliad 5 

honeying. 
It at the whisper of a lord : . 

honeymoon. 
thirty moons, one A to that, . 

honeysuckle. 
The A round the porch has wov'n . MayQuet 
Broke from a bower of vine and /';: Aylmers I-. 130 

honom 

In A of the golden prime . . Arabian h 
It; she said, 'and homage, tax .CEnone .114 
old A had from Christmas gone, . The Epic . 7 
much A and much fame were lost.' M. d Arthur sets 
Old age hath yet his A . . . Ulysses . 50 
helps the hurt that // feels, . . Locksley H.. 105 
Some grow to A, some to shame — Two Voices. 237 
an /; Unto which she was not born. L. of Burleigh 79 
hand and signet gem, ' All /;. . Princess, 1 1 I 
I lose My A, these their lives.' . » 11.321 

for A: every captain waits Hungry for/;, 11 v. 303 

this A, if ye will. It needs must be for A 11 .310 

:nk me touch'd In A— . " • 39= 

of Death, and of // that cannot die, Maud. I. 
/;, /;, /;, /;, to him. Eternal /; to his Ode on Ii 'ell. I49. 2 3J 
Lavish // shower'd all her stars, . 
did her It as the Prince's bride, 
feast with these in It of their earl 
upon this fatal quest Of A, . 
will do him No customary /; : 
His/; rooted in dishonour stood, . 
win his /; and to make his name, 
her window, sun. In A of the day. 

honour (verb.) 
his mute dust I A . . . ■ To J. S. . 30 
more than England Ks that, . . Talking O. . 295 

// the charge they made '. ' // the Light /./. H> [ 
a king who lis Ills own word, . Elaine 

A thy brute Bakl, tflmtr't 



196 
835 

"552 
542 
872 
•353 
Tlte Window 177 



Enid . 



Elaine 



204 



CONCORDANCE TO 



JlOtlOlird. POEM. LINE. 

bard has h beech or lime, . . Talking O. . 291 

not least, but h of them all : . . Ulysses . 15 

To perish, wept for, h t known, . Two Voices 149 

Head-waiter, k by the guest . Will Water. 73 

the child of one I h, . . Guinevere . 420 

/wtwuring. 

h your sweet faith in him, . . A Dedication 5 

/wod. 

teacup-times of h and hoop, . . Talking O. . 63 

in hue The lilac, with a silken h . Princess, ii. 3 

keep your /is about the face : . 11 . 337 



/wodman-blind. 



dance and song and h-b. 



In Mem. lxxvii. 12 



hoof. 



On burnish'd /woves his war-horse L. ofSkalott, iii. 29 
flints batter'd with clanging lis: . D of F. Worn. 21 
h by h And every h a knell . . Princess, iv. 155 
galloping /is bare on the ridge . 11 v. 478 

a sound arose of A And chariot, . 11 vi. 358 

the /is of the horses beat, (rep.) . Maud, II. v. 8 
heard instead A sudden sound of /is, Enid . . 164 
everywhere Was hammer laid to /;, tr . . 256 
sound of many a heavily-galloping h 11 . 1296 

Not a h left : and I methinks . 11 . 1334 

/wok. 
h it to some useful end. . . Day-Dm. . 212 

hooked. 
At last I h my ankle in a vine, . Princess, iv. 249 

/wop. 
teacup-times of hood and h, . . Talking O. . 63 
roll'd His h to pleasure Edith, . Aylmers F. 85 

hop. 

belts of k and breadths of wheat ; Princess,Con. 45 
land oik's and poppy-mingled corn, Ay liner's F. 31 

/wpe (s.J 
without h of change, . . . Mariana . 29 

leddest by the hand thine infant H. Ode to Mem. 30 
What h or fear or joy is thine ? . Adeline . 23 
breathing spring of H and Youth. T/ie Poet . 28 
My k and heart is with thee — . To J. M. K. 1 
full at heart of trembling k . . Miller's D. no 
blessings beyond h or thought, . 11 . 237 

cut off from h in that sad place, . D.ofF. Worn. 105 
in tears, fallen from h and trust : . n . 257 

his/; thro' shame and guilt, ' Love t/wu thy land, etc. 82 
A crowd of /is That sought to sow Gardener 1 sD. 63 
my desire, like all strongest /is, . u . 232 

daily h fulfill' d, to rise again . Ed, Morris 38 

not cease to grasp the h I hold . StS. Stylites 5 
h ere death Spreads more and more " . 154 

all as one to fix our /is on Hoavon Golden Year 57 
this mould of /is and fears . . Two Voices 28 
One k that warm'd me in the days ti . 122 

Beyond the furthest flights of h, . tr . 1S5 

that the grounds of h were fix'd, . ti . 227 

'A hidden h,' the voice replied : . v. . 441 

lent The pulse of k to discontent. . 11 . 450 

Care and Pleasure, H and Pain, . Bay-Din. . 75 
eyes, like thine, have waken'd /is ? 11 . 257 

Such h, I know not fear ; . . Sir Galahad 62 
phantom /is assemble : . . . Will Water. 30 
I had h, by something rare, " . 165 

Drink to lofty /is that cool — . Vision of Sin 147 

April /is. the fools of chance ; . 11 . 164 

Youthful /is, by scores, to all, . 1. . 199 

to the summit, ' Is there any hV . " . 220 

look'd across a land of /*, . . Princess, i. 167 
IT, a poising eagle, burns . . " iv. 64 

like parting /is I heard them passing 11 . 154 

all the /is of half the world, n . 166 

bore up in h she would be known : 11 . 301 

a h The child of regal compact, . 11 . 400 

my /is and thine are one : . . » vii. 343 

As we descended following H, . In Mem. xxii. n 
light that shone when H was born. 11 xxx. 32 

Man dies ; nor is there k in dust : * 11 xxxv. 4 



POEM. LINE. 

/is and light regrets that come In Mem. xxxix. 7 
Beneath all fancied /is and fears . n xlviii. 13 
faintly trust the larger h. n liv. 20 

What h of answer, or redress 1 . 11 lv. 27 

so much h for years to come, . n lviii. 14 

The pillar of a people's h, . . v lxiii. 15 

What h is here for modern rhyme 11 Ixxvi. 1 
Love, then, had /: of richer store : 11 lxxx. 5 
Despair of H, and earth of thee. . m lxxxiii. 16 
I remain'd, whose /is were dim, . 11 lxxxiv. 29 
mighty /is that make us men. .11 .60 

The h of unaccomplish'd years . n xc. 7 

h could never hope too much, . ri cxi. n 

H had never lost her youth ; . 11 exxiv. 5 
Hours that fly with H and Fear . u exxvii. 9 
I have neither h nor trust ; . . Maud, I. i. 30 
With no more k of light. it ix. 16 

comes, like a blight On my fresh h, 11 xix. 103 

a k for the world in the coming wars it III. vi. n 
in that h, dear soul, let trouble " .12 

Uplifted high in heart and k are we, Ode on Well.254 
lived in h that sometime you would Enid . 1687 

'Yea, lord,' she said, ' YourAVaremine,' Elaine . 599 
goodly /is are mine That Lancelot tr . 604 

me that, I charge thee, my last k Guinevere . 564 
what hi I think there was a h, . 11 . 623 

mock'd me when he spake of h; . 11 . 624 

His k he call'd it ; ... it . 625 

left me h That in mine own heart. 11 . 628 

beyond all h, against all chance, . En. Arden . 400 
His /is to see his own, 11 . 623 

labour for himself, Work without h, 11 . 821 

boat that bears the h of life tr . 831 

gleam' d a kindlier h On Enoch . tr . 834 

strong in /is, And prodigal of all . Aylmers F. 446 
golden /is for France and all mankind, tt . 464 

a k, a light breaking upon him. . 11 . 480 

Seem'd lis returning rose : 11 . 559 

with his /is in either grave. . . n . 624 

who kept a tender Christian h . Sea Dreams 41 
In A to gam upon her flight . . T/ie Voyage 60 
Like Heavenly H she crown'd the sea. 11 . 70 

rose at dawn and, fiied with h, . Sailor Boy . 1 
Lighti/at Beauty's call would perch Coquette, 1, 3 
H is other H and wanders far. . ?r . jo 

Come //"and Memory, spouse and On a Mourner 23 
hollow as the h's and fears of men. Lucretius . 180 
his h's and hates, his homes and fanes, 11 . 251 

darkens and brightens like my k, . The Window 18 

hope (verb. ) 
I h my end draws nigh : 
Could h itself return'd ; 
man, may h some truth to find, . 

To that I /; to be 

hope could never h too much, 
That I never can h to pay ; . 
And the titmouse k to win her 
H more for these than some 
h with me. Whose shame is that, 



StS. Stylites 36 
Talking O. . 12 
Two Voices 176 
St Agnes' Eve 20 
In Mem. cxi. n 
Maud,l.xix. 88 
tt xx. 29 

Ded. of Idylls 31 
Aylmer's F. 717 

StS. Stylites 17 
Princess, iv. 285 
InMem.Con. 135 
En. Arden . 202 
The Captain 1 7 
if . iS 



hoped, 
h that ere this period closed . 
partly that I h to win you back, . 
loved and did, And h and suffer'd, 
heard, And almost h herself ; 
Yet he h to purchase glory, . 
H to make the name Of his vessel 

/wpefuller. 
He, passionately h, would go, . Aylmers F. 419 

hopeless. 
hush'd itself at last Hoi answer: Aylmer's F. 543 

hoping. 
h, fearing 'is it yet too late?' . Guinevere . 683 

horde. 
There the h of Roman robbers . Boadicea . 18 

horizon. 
length of bright h rimm'd the dark. Gardener* sD.ij 7 
By making all the h dark. . . Two Voices 390 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



205 



POEM. LINK. 

. Will Water. 66 

In Mem. xxxviii. 4 
. Aylmer's F. 816 



With fair Abound : 

M y prospect and A gone. 

Ev'n tu its last A, . 

wave-worn A'* of the echoing bank Dying Swan 39 
erasp'd The mild bull's gold It. . Pal. of Art 120 
his lis into the neighbour field, . Gardener's D. 86 
bay runs up its latest A. . . AudleyCt. . io 

sound upon the bugle A. . . Locksley H. 2 
monstrous lis of elk and deer, . Princess, Pro. 23 
The It's of Elfland faintly blowing ! 11 lii. 357 

little space was left between the It's, 11 iv. 189 
blast and bray of the long It . 11 v. 242 

a wild It in a land Of echoes, . " . 475 

leafless ribs and iron It's Together JnMem.cn. 12 
A golden foot or a fairy A . Maud, II. ii. 19 

affluent Fortune emptied all her A. Ode on Well. 197 
let blow his lis for hunting . . Enid . . 153 
noble hart at bay, now the far It . ■■ . . 233 
fill'd a A with wine and held it . •• . 1307 

the hart with golden It's. . . Vivien . 259 

chased the flashes of his golden lis 11 . 277 

sent His lis of proclamation out . 11 . 431 

sit with knife in meat and wine in h. 11 . 544 

made and wound the gateway It. . Elaine . 169 

answer, sounding like a distant h. Guinevere . 247 

hornblende. 
chattering stony names Of shale andlt,Princess,\n. 344 

horned. 

things that are forked, and A, and Tlte Mermaid 53 

horn-handed. 
those A-A breakers of the glebe, . Princess, ii. 143 

liornpipes. 
move, And flounder into A. . . Ampltion . 24 

horrible. 
II, hateful, monstrous, not to be told; ,l/7zi«z',III.vi.4i 

horror. 
shot Light h's thro' her pulses : 
h of the shame among them all : 
drip with a silent It of blood, 
brood On a A of shatter'd limbs 

id hate and A have grown 
Felt a It over me creep, 
cells of madness, haunts of It and! 
h on him, lest his gentle wife, 
A h lived about the tarn, 
of the Baronet bristle up With /;, 
dipt by It from his term of life. 

I in // about his altar 
fling this It off me again, 

horror-slrickc, 
And Leolin's h-s answer, ' I . 

horse. 

barges trail'd By slow lis; . . L. o/Shalolt,\.2i 

h That hears the corn-bin open, . The Epic . 44 

napkin wrought with h and hound, A udlty Ct. . 20 

turn the AT heads and home again Walk.toth 

a little dearer than his It. . , Locksley II. 50 

1 and rider reel : . . . Sir Galahad 8 

A with wines, that would have flown, Vision o/Sin 3 

I h s pierced with W'.rms . 11 . 209 

lebencalh her lit heels, Princess, Pro. 44 

twinn'd as A'i ear and eye. . . 11 L 56 

; X the stars ; 11 . 208 

three h's that hue broken fence, 11 ii. 364 

My pulses, till to A we got, .1 iii. 178 

1 •> iv. 148 

I left her mine) . .. . 179 

t yell'd : they clash'd their arms ; " v. 240 

stumbled mixt with floundering lis. 11 . 487 

stroke on stroke the It and horseman. •< . 512 

I, and It ti> It we hull . 528 

kill'il in (ailing from his It. . . /« Mem vi. 40 

Yet pity for a A o'er-driven, . . .. Kii. 1 

• hiic-fjvuut d lis wait ; . .. Con. <ja 



. Godiva 


5) 


. Princess, v. 


r,2 


. M<i:ui, I. i. 


i 


11 


3" 


11 VI. 


75 


II XIV. 


11 


ear, 11 III. vi. 


2 


. Enid . 




. Elaine 


33 



. Aylmer's F. 43 
.603 
. The \ tcttm 7 
. Lucre tins . 173 
t. 
. Aylmer's F. 318 



POEM. LINE. 

Look, a A at the door, . . . Maud, I xii. 29 
left his wine and lis and play . 11 xix. 74 

the hoofs .of the lis beat, beat frep. ) 11 II. v. 8 
praisedhisland,hisA\r,hismachines; The Brook 124 
While A and hero fell, . . . Lt.JJricade 44 
Took It, and forded Usk, . . Enid . . 161 
put her Ii toward the knight, . ,. . 200-6 

good knight's h stands in the court ; n . . 370 
when they both had got to A, . » . . 858 
will slay him and will have his A . 11 . .911 
suits Of armour on their lis, . <i . . 946 

Three lis and three goodly suits of m . . 973 
bound them on their lis, each on each, u . 3031 

let the lis graze, and ate themselves 11 . 1060 

take A A and arms for guerdon ; . h . 1067 

And stalling for the lis, 11 10S8 

disappear'd, Leading the A, ., . it 1093 

' Take Five h's and their armours ; ' 11 . 1258 

wild Limours, Borne on a black A, 11 . 1307 

'// and man,' he said, 'Allofone 11 . J332 

paid with lis and with arms ; . 11 . 1335 

without a word, from his A fell. 11 . 1357 

Feeding like h's when you hear them •• . 1454 

moving out they found the stately it, 11 . 1600 

then Geraint upon the It Mounted, » . 1606 

gravely smiling, lifted her from A, 11 . 1731 

weed the white It on the Berkshire 11 . 1784 

got Sir Lancelot suddenly to A, . Elaine . 159 

strong neighings of the wild white // .. . 298 

There to his proud A Lancelot tum'd, 11 . 346 

brought his A to Lancelot where he lay, t, . 492 

charge you that you get at once to A. 11 . 538 

all in wrath he got to A and went ; 11 . 562 

wearied of the quest Leapt on his A, 11 . 700 

Making a roan It caper and curvet " . 788 

heard his A upon the stones, . . 11 . 974 

tampcr'd with the Lords of the White //, Guinevere 1 6 
So Lancelot got her A, Set her thereon, 11 . 121 
still at evenings on before his It . 11 254 

Leagued with the Lords of the White H 11 . 569 
Enoch's white A, and Enoch'socean-spoil£K./4r<jV«93 
knew her, as a horseman knows his It — 11 . j 36 
The A he drove, the boat he sold . " . 610 

rolling phantom bodies of lis and men ; Boiidicea 27 
loosed their sweating lis from the yoke Spec. 0/ Iliad 2 
lis stood Hard by their chariots, . 11 .21 

horseback. 
aware of three tall knights On A, . Enid . . 906 
lo, he sat on A at the door ! . . Guinevere . 583 

horseleech. 
like the daughters of the It, ' Give, Golden } 'ear 12 

horseman. 
With stroke on stroke the horse and A, Princess, v. 512 
Three other fumtmen waiting, . l.nid . . 970 
meet the ho r se men of Earl Doorm, 11 . 1341 
knew her, as a A knows his horse— En. Ardcn . 136 

Hortensia. 
H spoke against the tax ; . . Princess, vii. 112 
before them paused H, pleading : 11 . 117 

Ho sauna. 
singing // in the highest : . En. A rden 499, 502 

hospitable. 
all men rate as kind and It : . . Princess, i. 70 

'Ual. 
the'ir fair college turn'd to A ; . Princess, vii. 2 

hospitality. 
female hands and A.' . Princess, vi. 57-80 

broken into Thro' open doors and A; Enid . . 456 

host (landlord, etc.! 
//, and I sat round thi I, The Epic . 5 

enter'd an old hostel, calfd mine A Princess, i. 171 
sent mine /; to purchase female gear << 
'Fair H and Earl, 1 prayyonroourtesy: Enid 
lay lance m r.-si o noble //. . . n 

bad the h Call 111 what men . . 11 



206 



:ONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Call the h and bid him bring . Enid 1249 

issuing arm'd he found the h . u 1256 

the h, Suddenly honest, answer'd 11 1258 

Enoch was h one day, Philip the next, En. A rden 25 
theirguest, their h, their ancient . Aylmer's F. 790 

fosffarmy.) 

two h's that lay beside the walls, . Princess, vi. 362 
Remember him who led your h's ; Odeo?i Well. 171 
craft of kindred and the Godless A's Guinevere . 424 
summon me their King to lead mine /is 11 . 566 

Hector said, and sea-like roar'dhis h; Spec, of Iliad 1 

hostage. 
here he keeps me /z for his son.' . Princess, iv. 3S6 

hostel. 
So pass I h, hall, and grange ; . Sir Galahad 81 
entered an old h, call'd mine host . Princess, i. 171 
riding wearily, Found every h full, Enid . . 255 

hostess. 
There stept a buxom h forth, . Princess, i. 225 

hot. 
my verj' ears were h To hear them : Princess, i. 133 
heated h with burning fears, . In Mem.cxv'n. 22 

/^inhaste tojoin Their luckier mates, Enid. 1422 

h, God's curse, with anger — . 11 1508 

hot-aud-hot. 
To serve the h-a-h ; Will Water. 228 

Hottentot. 
Not the Kaffir, H, Malay, . . Princess, ii. 142 

hotter. 
her lynx eye To fix and make me /;, Princess, iii. 31 

hound. 

napkin wrought with horse and h, And ley Ct. . 20 

males that carve the living h y . Princess, iii. 293 

love in which my h has part, . In Mem. lxii. 2 

stay'd Waiting to hear the h's ; . Enid . . 163 

good chance that we shall hear the h's: 11 . . 182 

Cavall, King Arthur's h of deepest tt . . 186 

pastime both of hawk and k, n 711 

seems no bolder thana beaten h; . it . . 910 

hottr. 
but most she loathed the h . . Mariana . 77 
haunts the year's last h's 'A spirit haunts,' etc. j, 
ere he parted said, ' This/* is thine : Love and ' Death g 
Alice, what an h was that, . . Miller sD. . 57 
now those vivid h's are gone, . 11 . 195 

Last night I wasted hateful h's . Fatima . 8 
Is wearied of the rolling h's. . L. C. V. de Vere 60 
warders of the growing h, i Love thou thy land ',' etc. 61 
bird takes every h for dawn : M. d' Arthur, Ep. 11 
as tho' it were The h just flown, . Gardener's D. 82 
ere an h had pass'd, We reach' d , 11 . 106 

heavy clocks knolling the drowsy h's. v . 180 

Autumn brought an. h For Eustace, 11 . 202 

we met ; one h I had, no more : . Ed. Morris 104 
bald brows in silent h's become . StS. Stylites 162 
make reply Is many a weary h ; . Talking O. . 26 
An h had past — and, sitting straight ti . 109 

h's that bring us all things good, LoveaudDuty 56 
sad h's that bring us all things ill . 11 -57 

every/; Must sweat hersixty minutes Golden Year 67 
every h is saved From that eternal Ulysses . 26 
Were this not well, to bide mine h Two Voices . 76 
Who is it that could live an h ? ft . 162 

So heavenly-toned, that in that h. 11 . 442 

I wonder'd at the bounteous h's, . it . 451 

A pleasant h has past away . . Day-Dm. . 2 
The Poet-forms of stronger h's, . 11 . 226 

Embraced his Eve in happy h, . 11 . 254 

Still creeping with the creeping h's St Agues' Eve 7 
Thro' many an h of summer suns Will Water. 33 
But for my pleasant h, 'tis gone, . it . 179 

H's, when the Poet's words and looks n . 193 

Let us have a quiet h, . . . Vision of Sin 73 
cruel glee Forces on the freer h. . u . 130 



range of duties to the appointed h. Princess, iii. 161 
Such head from act to act, from h to h w iv. 432 
Sole comfort of my dark h, . . 11 vi. 177 

many a pleasant h with her that's gone, 11 . 230 

My heart an eddy from the brawling h : tr . 302 

wile the length from languorous h's, 11 vii. 48 
Melts mist-like into this bright h, ir . 334 

that the victor H's should scorn . In Mem. i. 13 
wrought At that last h to please him n vi. 18 

That I have been an h away. . it xii. 20 

an h For private sorrow's barren song, 11 xxi. 13 
But for one h, O Love, I strive . tt xxxv. 6 

Could we forget the widow'd h . 11 xxxix. 1 

Unconscious of the sliding h, . it xlii. 5 

Is shadow'd by the growing h, . tt xlv. 3 

The fruitful h's of still increase ; . t> .10 

watch, like God, the rolling h's . tt 1., 14 

usherest in the dolorous h v Ixxi. 9 

that remorseless iron h , . . it lxxxiii. 14 

all the train of bounteous h's . rt . 30 

The promise of the golden h's? . u lxxxiv. 106 

buzzings of the homed h's. . . nlxxxviii. 52 

An h's communion with the dead : m xciii. 4 

Thy feet have stray'd in after h's 11 ci. 14 

wakens at this h of rest . . n ciii. 6 

wayward grief abuse The genial h 11 civ. 10 

Each office of the social h . . n ex. 14 

In watching thee from h to h, . 11 cxi. 12 

O days and h's, your work is this, u cxvi. 1 

Wild Hs that fly with Hope and Fear, it exxvii. 
O happy h, and happier h's Await them, u Con. 
O happy h, behold the bride . it 

Thro' the livelong h's of the dark Maud, I. vi. 
twelve sweet h's that past in bridal white, tt xviii. 
For one short A to see . . . nil. iv. 

sold the truth to serve the h, . Odeo?i Well. 179 

Love, what h's were thine and mine, The Daisy 
At Florence too what golden h's, . it 

How many among us at this very h Enid . 
pardon me \ the madness of that h it 
And now their h has come ; . .it 
in that perilous h Put hand to hand 11 
Was half a bandit in my lawless h it 
crop his own sweet rose before the hV Vivieh 
the one dark h which brings remorse, n 
their last h, A madness of farewells. Guinevere 
so late ! What h, I wonder, now?' it 

guard thee in the wild h coming on, 



41 
. 851 
"95 
1545 
1614 
1643 
• 575 
613 
101 

^59 

443 

78 

11 . 301 

it . 382 

11 . 446 

Ayhner's F. 109 

?» . 194 

it . 441 

"" . 450 

828 



En. Arde?i 



Had his dark h unseen 

precious morning h's were lost. 

one dark h Here in this wood, 

That was your h of weakness. 

He wasted h's with Averill ; 

a tongue that ruled the h, 

Lightning of the h, the pun, 

Some niggard fraction of an h y 

weary and yet ever wearier h's, 

strong H's indignant work'd their wills, Tithouus 18 

Once in a golden h I cast to earth The Flower 1 

in an h Of civic tumult jam the doors, Lucretius 168 

that h perhaps Is not so far . 11 248 

till that h } My golden work . 11 . 255 

Houri. 
A group of Hs bow'd to see . Pal. of Art x02 

hourly. 
Daily and h, more and more. . Eleanore . 71 

ho u rly-i7icllowi7ig. 
Summer's h-?n change May breathe, luMem.xc. 9 

house (s.) 
All day within the dreamy h, . Mariana . 61 
vacancy Of the dark deserted h. . Deserted H. , 12 
The h was builded of the earth, . >i -15 

The first h by the water-side, . L.ofShalottJYv.-$\ 
Dead-pale between the h's high, . 11 .40 

h, thro' all the level shines, . Mariana in tlieS. 2 
move about the h with joy, . . Miller's D. . 95 
In this great h so royal-rich, . Pal. of Art ini 

I saw you sitting in the h, . MayQueen } ui. 30 



rz.v.vyso.vs works. 



207 



curl'd Round their golden h's, 
fill'd tlie /; with clamour. 
1 all the // i-. mute. 

wonder keeps the /;.' . 
ipt, we near'd the // ; 
always with her in the /;, 
ft his father's /;, 
Dora went to Mary's //, 



POEM. LINE. 

. Lotos-Es. . 158 
. The Goose , 36 
. M.d 'Arthur '178 

. Cu nleuer'sD. 118 

11 . 141 

. Dora . . 7 

35 

.1 . . 108 



thou and i will live within one /(, . 11 . 123 

Within one h together • ■ 165 

it is that I see? . . . Walk, to the M. 7 

they say, Was haunted . 11 . 27 

On to God's h the people prest : . Two Voices 409 

nine earthly h 1 am, . . St Agues' Eve 19 

1 r I .tin of a numerous //, . . Wilt Water. 89 

sec these handsome h's . L. of Burleigh 23 

■ fan ancient h: . . . Vision of Sin 140 

the h, Greek, set with busts : Princess, Pro. 10 

gave The park, the crowd, the h ; 11 . 94 

A Gothic ruin and a Grecian It, , 11 _. 225 

live 1 an ancient legend in our //. . it i. 5 

I -trange affection of the h. n . 13 

cared not for the affection of the h ; 11 . 26 

street half garden and half // ; tt . 211 

wish'd to marry ; they could rule a h ; 11 ii. 441 

id vision of our h : . . h iii. iC3 

. by which once more I stand In Mem. vii. 1 

I as servants in a h . 11 xx. 3 

the portals of the // ; . . tt xxix. 12 

■ ■■. 's h return'd, . . 11 xxxi. 2 

From every It the neighbours met, 11 . 9 

nninintr from the narrow It, . . 11 xxxv. 2 

builds the /(, or digs the grave. . n xxxvi. 14 

irk A where she was born. . 11 lix. 12 

with one Of mine own h, . . 11 lxxxiii. 12 

in the h light after light Went out, 11 xciv. 19 

She knows but matters of the //, . it xcvi. 31 

I daughter of our h ; . . 11 Con. 7 

in an empty li, . . Maud, I. vi. 68 

' held . . if xiv. 33 

By which our h's are turn : . .it xix. 33 

4 an irredeemable woe ; . tt II. i. 22 

door Of bis // in a rainbow frill ? . it ii. 17 

it once from the top of the/;; <• v. 50 

entertainment of a h Once rich, . Enid . . 301 

tod h, tho' ruin'd, .11.. 378 

reverencing the custom of the h tt 380 

my Enid's birthday, sack'd my h ; n . . 458 

when Edyrn sack'd their h, . .11 . . 634 

the sack and plunder of our h 11 . . 694 

r"d thro" the h s of the town ; 11 . . 695 

me from a goodly //, . n . . 708 

: .r' .ML^lit me to a goodly h; 11 ' . . 713 

the woman of the h,' . n . 1112 

' ivy breathings of the /:, . 11 . 1251 

i the // of one, . . 11 . 1531 

h Th'-re was not : . Elaine . 177 

1 1 gainst my /;, 275 

r, of a crafty/;, 11 . . 557 

'■ h .n . 1016 

done the /;.' 11 . 1066 

.attire of the //, . 11 . 1137 

1 him . 11 . 1162 

■•• -sbury . Guinevere . 2 

' ' ■! /; . • " ■ 73 

i bide and rule the h : 11 .511 

ur holy h ; . n . 674 

hrcc/i'j. . En Arden . it 



I h. 

my little wife.' . „ 

ne. . 11 

and of In, mill . 1, 

in our It. . 11 

1 ill //, . 11 

tas held the h ; n 

1 In. /;. . ,i 

I in tip: rear of Phlli] 

The 11 

Led. 11 

all the h's in the haven rang, 



• 24 
. 28 

. i.|., 

• 348 
. 420 

• 7°5 
. 728 

• 733 

910 



a »torm lie came, And shook the //, Aylmcr's E. 216 



1. LINE. 

thunders of the // Had fallen first, Aylmer's E. 278 
beheld the Powers of the H . . 11 . 287 

last remaining pillar of their //, . m . 295 

Forbad her first the h of Averiil, . 11 . 502 

weakness of a people or a It, . 11 . 570 

h is left unto you desolate I' 1721-37-97) 11 . 629 

deathless ruler of thy dying h . u . 661 

when he felt the silence of his li . 11 . 830 

bread from out the lis brought, . Spec, of Iliad 6 

house (verb.) 
That k the cold crown'd snake . CEnone . 36 
// in the shade of comfortable roofs, StS.Slylites 105 

household. 

Her /: fled the danger, . . . The Goose . 54 

Leaving her I: and good father . Elaine . 14 

lift the A out of poverty ; . . En. Arden . 4S2 

house!, 

nor sought, Wrapt in her grief, for /; Guinevere . 147 

housemaid. 
daughter and his h were the boys . Princess, i. 1S8 

hove. 
how there /: a dusky barge, . . M.d' Arthur 193 

hoveltd. 
the poor are //and hustled together Maud, I. i. . 34 

hover. 

talk About his path, and h near . Dny-Din. . 122 

Wings flutter, voices h clear : . Sir Galahad 78 

And the bird of prey will h s . . Maud, I. xx. 28 

they h about my bed— . . . Grandmother 83 

hovering, 

h o'er the dolorous strait . In. Mem. lxxxiii. 39 

sweet tendance /: over him, . . Enid . 1774 

Whenever in her // to and fro . Elaine . 325 

hoveringly. 
h a sword Now over and now under, Lucretius . 61 

kOW, 

setting the how much before the /;, Golden Year 11 

hov<d {hold.) 
who's to /: the land ater meii . X. farmer 58 

howl. 
I did not hear the dog //, mother, May Queen, iii. 21 
Crack them now for yourself, and//, Maud, 1 1, v. 56 
/* in tune With nothing but the . Sea Dreams 252 

hcnuled. 
She // aloud, ' I am on fire . . Pal. of Art 285 

howlest. 
h, issuing out of night, . . In Mem. lxxi. 2 

howling. 
The wind is It in turret and tree. . The Sisters a 
lie // in outer darkness. To — . With Pal. of Art 16 
The lis from forgotten fields . In Mem. xl. 16 

world // forced them into bonds, . / 'itrien , 594 

ho7v much. 
setting the h m before the /unit . Golden Year 11 

hubbub. 

1 /■ shook the hall. . . Day-Dtn. , 139 

A // in the court of half the maids Princess, iv. 455 

fur those That stir this /<— 11 . 488 

liars belied in the h of lies ; . . Maud, I. iv. 51 
Thro' the h of the market I steal, II. r. 

once inure what meant the /; here? Enid . . 264 

huckster. 

This It put down war I . . . Maud, I. x. 44 

huddled. 

The cattle // on the lea ; .In Mem. xv. 6 
It here and there on mound and . Enid . 1651 

huddling. 

It slant in furrow-cloven fall.; . Princess, vii. 192 

hue, 

H*s of the silken sheeny woof . Madeline , 22 
shapes and Hi that please inewcll! Pal. of Art 1 | 



208 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Touch'd with a somewhat darker h, Margaret . 50 
in h's to dim The Titianic Flora. . Gardener 'sD. 166 
By Cupid-boys of blooming h — . Day-Dm. . 278 
Moved with violence, changed in/;, Vision of Sin 34 
h Of that cap upon her brows. . it . 141 

Academic silks, in h The lilac, . Princess, ii. 2 
the other distance and the lis Of promise ; 11 iv. 68 
thoughts that changed from h to h, ir . 192 

as the fiery. Sirius alters h, . „ 11 v. 252 

past A shadow, and her h changed, ti vi. 91 

/is are faint And mix with hollow . InMemAxix. 3 
The distance takes a lovelier h, . tr cxiv. 6 

hair In gloss and h the chesnut, . The Brook 72, 207 
bays, The peacock's neck in h ; . The Daisy . 14 
tribe of woman, dress'd in many h's, Enid. 1446 

a but less vivid h Than of that islet Aylmer's F. 64 

huge. 
Before an oak, so hollow h and old Vivien . 3 

hugest. 
place which now Is this world's h, Elaine . 77 

hugged, 
h and never h it close enough, . Princess, vi. 195 
clang to him and h him close ; - Vivien 794"7 

Hugh. 
'this'hesaid '\va.sIf'sa.tAgmcourt; Princess, Pro. 25 

hull. 
till the h Look'd one black dot . M. d' 'Arthur 270 
if my brainpan were an empty h, . Princess, ii. 376 

hum fs.) 
With the h of swarming bees . Elednore . 29 

hum (verb. ) 
people h About the column's base, StS. Stylites 37 
here by thee will h the bee, . . A Farewell. 11 
h The murmur of a happy'Pan : . In Mem. xxiii. 11 
by and by began to h An air . Gui?ievere . 160 

swamp, where h's the dropping snipe, On a Mourner 9 

human. 
not less divine, But more h in your moods, Margaret 47 
Larger than h on the frozen hills. . M. d 'Arthur 183 
for I bear, Tho' man, yet h, . . Princess, iv. 405 
Thou seemest h and divine, . . JnMem.Pro. 13 
Known and unknown : h, divine ; ti cxxviii. 5 

Thou art the highest and most h too, Guinevere 642 
looking hardly h, strangely clad, . En. Arden . 639 

hti7nan-a7norous. 
Her Deity false in h-a tears ; . Lucretius . 90 

h U7iian-hearted. 
The h-h man I loved, , . .In Mem. xiii. 11 

hu7na?ikiitd. 
springs the crowning race of h . Princess, vii. 279 

hu7)ibling. 
now desired the h of their best, . E7iid . 1485 

hu7tiiliated. 
The woman should have borne, h, . Ayhner'sF. 356 
me they lash' d and h, . . . Boddicea 49-67 

hu77iility. 
she had fail'd In sweet h; . . Pri7icess, vii. 214 
all too free For such a wise h . Ode 071 Well. 249 

hu7ii77ied. 
Audley feast H like a hive . . Audley Ct. . 4 
Roundhead rode, And/^a surly hymn. Talki7igO. 300 
I turn'd and h a bitter song . . T/ie Letters 9 
father's latest word h in her ear, . Elaz7ie . 776 

hummeih. 

At noon the wild bee h . . . Claribel . 11 

JlU7n7)li7lg. 

h of the drowsy pulpit-drone . To J. M. K. 10 

while I past he was /;an air, . Maud, I. xiii. 17 

smooth' d The glossy shoulder, h to himself. Elaine 347 

humour, 
h of the golden prime . . . Arabia7i N's. 120 
According to my h ebb and flow. . D.ofF. Wom.134 



He scarcely hit my h, . 
According as his h's lead, 



POEM. LINE. 

Ed. Morris . 76 
Day-Dm. . 207 



hu77ipbacked. 
There by the h willow ; . . Walk.totJteM.i^ 

hunched. 
if a man were halt or h, . . Guinevere . 42 

hu7idred-throated. 
As 'twere a h-t nightingale, . . Visio?i of Sin 27 . 

IlU7lg. 

H in the golden Galaxy. . L. of Shalott, iu.12 
A mighty silver bugle h . w .16 

thunder-clouds that, h on high . Elea?iore . 98 
h In masses thick with milky cones. Miller's D. 55 
h with arras green and blue, . Pal. of Art 61 

choice paintings of wise men I h . tr . 131 

H tranced from all pulsation, . Gardener' sD. 255 
seal, that h From Allan's watch, . Dora . , 132 
blackbird on the pippin h . . Audley Ct. . 37 
stars that /iLove-charm'dtolrsten : Love and Duty 72 
with a mute observance h. . . Locksley H. 22 
h ivith groo77is a7id porters 071 the bridge, Godiva 2 
forefathers' arms and armour h. . Pri7icess, p7-o. 24 
wild woods that /; about the town ; ir i. 90 

o'er his head Uranian Venus //, . ir . 239 

H, shadow'd from the heat : . n ii. 435 

melted Florian's fancy as she h, . v iv. 351 

on my shoulder h their heavy hands, n . 531 

horse to horse we h, . . . tr v. 528 

H round the sick : the maidens came, 11 vii. 7 
on her foot she /; A moment, . it .64 

an Alpine harebell h with tears . tt . 100 

H in the shadow of a heaven? . l7zMe7n.xvi. 10 
h to hear The rapt oration . . 11 lxxxvi. 31 
On thee the loyal-hearted h, . it cix. 5 

H over her dying bed — . . Maud, I. xix. 36 
vand so the matter h ; . . The Brook 144-8 

weight and fate of Europe h. . Ode 071 Well. 240 
loosed a mighty purse, H at his belt, Enid . . 872 
no heart To wake him, but h o'er him it . 1219 

h his head, and halted in reply, . it . 1659 

carrion crows H like a cloud . Vivie7i . 449 

she turn'd away, she h her head, . it . 736 

think this fruit is h too high . Elai7te . 770 

o'er her h The silken case . . it 1142 

h upon him, play'd with him . E71. Arden . 350 

Enoch h A moment on her words, it . 873 

hall, H with a hundred shields, . Ayh7ier y s F. 15 
h With wings of brooding shelter ir . 138 

and Jenny h on his arm. . . Gra7id77iother 42 

Himgary. 
shall I shriek if a H fail? . . Maud, I. iv. 46 

hwiger (s.) 
In lis and in thirsts, fevers and cold St S. Stylites 12 
grief and mother's h in her eye. . Pri7icess, vi. 130 
in her h mouth'd and mumbled it, 
A h seized my heart ; . 
Bearing a lifelong h in his heart. . 
eyes Full of that lifelong h, . . r- 

hunger (verb.) 
Long for my life, or h for my death, E7iid 

hwigerd. 
true heart, which h for her peace . E71. Arden . 271 

hu7igry. 
Every captain waits H for honour, Pri7icess, v. 

JlU7lt (s.) 

Forgetful of the falcon and the h, E7iid 
for his leave To see the h. 
For Lancelot, and forgetful of the h ; 
"but come like you to see the h, 
while they listen'd for the distant h 
A little vext at losing of the h, 

hunt (verb.) 
Do h me, day and night.' 
Like a dog, he h's in dreams, 
They h old trails ' said Cyril 



196 

l7iMe77i.xciv. 21 

£71. Arde7i . 79 

it . 461 



930 



304 



Enid 




5i 


" 




I5S 


,' tr 




159 


IT 




179 
184 


IP 


234 


D.ofF 
Lockslt 
Prince 


JVom.256 
y H. 79 
rs, ii. 368 



h them for the beauty of their skins ; 



J49 



TENNYSON'S IVORA'S. 



209 



Enid 



Enid 



. 165 



hunted. poem. LINE. 

swallow stopt as he // the bee, . Poet's Song 9 

hunter (man.) 
with pufT'd cheek the belted // blew Pal. 0/ Art 63 
the // rued His rash intrusion, . Princess, iv. i35 
Man is the // ; woman is his game : 11 v. 147 

No keener // after glory breathes. Elaine . 156 
id a hunted creature draw Ayimer's F. 499 
her that o'er her wounded // wept Lucretius . 89 

hunter (horse.) 
And rode his ft down. . . . Talking O. 104 

hunting. 
order to let blow His horns for h . Enid . . 153 
'I he kin.; was // in the wild ; . The Victim 31 

hun ling-dress. 
wearing neither h-d Nor weapon, 

hunting-mom. 
the third day from the h-m . 

hurl. 
h their lances in (he sun ; . . Locksley II. 170 
he stopt we long'd to // together, . Vivien . 270 

hurld. 
bolts are h Far below them . 
And // the pan and kettle. 
h his huge limbs out of bed, . 
h it toward the squire. . 
h into it Against the stronger : 
Leapt on him, and k him headlong, 

hurling. 
Each h down a heap of things 

hurricane. 
like the smoke in a h whirl'd 

hurried. 
Edith's eager fancy h with him 

hur> : 
all three in h and fear Ran to her, 

hurry (verb.) 
By thirty hills I /; down, 
usly 

hurrying. 
isnf rivulets// thro' the lawn, Princess, vii. 205 
Driving, h, marrying, burying, . Maud t \\.v. 12 
Another // past, a man-at-arms, . Enid . 1375 

hurt ndj.) 
almost all that is, hurting the h — Ayimer's F. 572 

hurt \.) 
helps the // that Honour feels, 
// thai drain'd her dear lord's life. Enid . 

for his h and loss of blood, 11 

itfn leech to look into his //; it 
I of his //, 11 

1 1 his wound a little // . Elaine 

when Sir Lancelot's deadly // was 11 
And treat their loathsome lis . Guinevere 



Lotos- Es. 
The Goose 
Enid . 

Elaine 
Guinevere 


15$ 
28 
124 
872 
461 
107 


Enid . 


1442 


Boddicea 


59 


Ayimer's F. 


208 


Elaine 


1018 


The Brook 
Boddicea 


■ 27 
. 58 



Locksley H. 105 

1305 
1625 
1771 

J 779 
. 848 
. 900 
. 678 



hurl 'verb.) 
Love is h with jar and fret. . . Miller's D. . 
their own blows they// themselves. Princess, vi. 
trust thai there is no one //to death, 11 
II in his first tilt was mv son, . Elaine 
from the jousts H in the side,' 11 
1 she- would soothe, . . Guinevere . 
II in thai nii;lit of sudden ruin . En, Arden . 
by a keeper shot at, slightly A, . Ayimer's F. 548 

hurting, 

almost all that is, // the hurt— 



husband. 
•': is, the wife is : 
1 lier //'* eye, . 

1 ith her lis heart 

1 am thine h not a smaller soul. . 
0fwh.1t he »i 1 1 vour //: 

that her first // lives? 



Ayimer's F. 572 

LocksUy II. 47 
Enid . .11 

, " . 1615 

Guinevere . 562 
En. Ar.i 

II . 807 



near'd Her // inch by inch, 
' Xo trirle,' groan'd the //; 



POEM, LINE. 

Ayimer's F. 807 
Sea D reams 141 



Maud, Li. 
11 xxii. 

Lilian 

In Mem. xix. 
Ode on II 'ell. 



27 

7 

267 



husbandry. 
with equal // The woman were an . Princess, i. 129 

hush (s.) 
heard In the dead // the papers . Princess, iv. 371 
in the // of the moonless nights, 
a // with the setting moon. 

hush (verb.) 
If prayers will not // thee. 
h'es half the babbling Wye, , 
H, the Dead March wails 

hush'd. 
air is damp, and//, and close, 'A spirit haunts' etc. 13 
The town was // beneath us : . Audley Ct. . 84 

H all the groves from fear of SirL.undQ. C. 13 
The Wye is // nor moved along, . InMem.xix. 9 
// my deepest grief of all, 11 .10 

£ itself at last Hopeless of answer : Ayimer's F. 542 

husk. 
rent the veil Of his old //: . . Two Voices 11 
phantomZ/'iofsomethingfoullydone, Lucretius . 160 

// listings. 
so, when the rotten // shake . . Maud, I. vi. 

hustled, 
h together, each sex, like swine, . Maud, I. i. 

/////. 
the great river in a boatman's h. . Elaine , 278 
a//, Half//, half native cavern. . En. Arden . 560 
lis At random scatter'd, . . Ayimer's F. 149 

huzziii . 
II an' maiizin' the blessed fealds 



54 



34 



N. Farmer 62 



hyacinth. 
shectsof/zThat scem'd the heavens Guinevere 



387 



Ilyades. 
Thro' scudding drifts the rainy // Ulysses . 10 

hymn. 
sound Of pious lis and psalms, . St S. Stylites 33 
And liumm'd a surly //. . . Talking O. 300 
I hear a noise of lis: . . . Sir Galahad 28 
bearded Victor of ten-thousand lis, Princess, iii. 334 
ourself have often tried Valkyrian//'*, ■■ iv. 121 
mine own phantom chanting lis ? In Mem. evil. 10 
whose lis Are chanted in the . / 'ivien . 615 

would jar all the lis of heaven : . Sea Dreams 251 

Hyperion, 
or of older use All-seeing // — 

hypocrisy. 
II, I saw it in him at once. . 

hypothesis. 
I f that // of theirs be sound ' . 

hysterics. 
The blind // of the Celt ; 



Lucretius . 126 



Sea Dreams 64 
Princess, iv. 2 



In Mem. cviii. 16 



learns the use of ' / ' and ' me,' 



In Mem. xliv. 6 



bump'd the /'into three several stars, The Epic . J2 
goes, like glittering bergs of i, . Princess, iv. 53 
old-world mammoth Imlk'd in /', . ti v. 142 

find him dropt upon the firths of »', 11 vii. 191 
jers at the sharpen'd InMcm. cvi 7 
spires of i are toppled down, . •• exxvi. 12 
oft we saw the glisten Of » . . The Daisy . 36 
skater on / that hardly bears him, Hsttdfcasyllabict 6 

ice-ferns. 
Fine as i-fcm January panes . Ayimer's F. 223 

Jeenian, 
uchlanian, Boidieea, 10,34,47 

( tads Ii.r. I > /, , ,1 

Shout /, CaueuchUuiian, . . u .57 

O 



CONCORDANCE TO 



icicle. POEM. LINE, 

lance that splinter* d like an z, . Enid . . 938 

Ida (mountain of Phrygia.) 
There lies a vale in /, . . . CEnone . 1 

mother /, many-fountain' d /, ) 

Dear mother/, (rep.) . . f " ' * 22 
whatever Oread haunt The knolls of/, it -73 

all the pines of / shook to see . Lucretius . 86 

Ida (heroine of 'The Princess.') 

let us know The Princess/ waited : Princess, ii. 7 

affianced years ago To the Lady / : ti . 198 

silver litanies, The work of /, . tt . 454 

had the care of Lady I's youth, . ti iii. 69 

she won the heart Of /: . . if . 72 

Princess / seem'd a hollow show, 11 ^ . 169 

cast A liquid look on /, . . n iv. 350 

at eve and dawn With /, /, /, . 11 . 413 

The mellow breaker murmur'd /. . 11 . 416 

lend full tongue, O noble /, . n . 423 

now will cruel / keep her back ; . tt V. 81 

What dares not / do it . 166 

is not / right ? They worth it? . ti . 180 

much that / claims as right ir . 194 

You talk almost like /: site can talk ; 11 . 201 

Arac's word is thrice As ours with /.* 11 . 218 

if / yet would cede our claim, . tr . 323 

glance he caught Thro' open doors of / if . 333 

I's answer, in a royal hand, . 11 . 361 

With Psyche's babe, was /watching us, 11 . 501 

high upon the palace / stood . 11 vi. 14 

clamouring on, till / heard, ir . 134 

/ spoke not, rapt upon the child. . ir . 203 

*/ — 'sdeath ! you blame the man; it . 204 

/ spoke not, gazing on the ground, tt . 210 

heard her say it — ' Our /has a heart* — 11 . 218 

But / stood nor spoke, tt . 249 

'Ay so' said / with a bitter smile, it . 296 

/with a voice, that like a bell . it . 311 

Was / by the throne, ... if . 337 

Then the voice of/ sounded, . 11 __. 352 

sadness on the soul Of / fell . n vii. 14 

When Cyril pleaded, /came behind 11 . 63 

shriek ' You are not /; ' it . 80 

call her /, tho' I knew her not, . it .Si 

hollow shows : nor more Sweet /.* tt . 120 

if you be that / whom I knew, . it . 132 

spirit closed with I's at the lips ; . mi . 143 

'But I,' Said / tremulously, . it . 313 
Idalian. 

1 Aphrodite beautiful . . . CEnone . 170 

ideal. 
He worships your i* . . . Princess, ii. 38 
nurse a blind i like a girl, . . tt iii. 201 

true To that i which he bears? . In Mem. Ii. 10 

idioted. 
being much befooled and i . . Aylmer's F. 590 

idiotlike. 
mumbling, 1 it seem'd, . . . En. Arden . 640 

idle. 
manners are not i, but the fruit . Guinevere . 333 

idleness. 
hatch'd in silken-fo'lded i; . . Princess, iv. 49 

idol. 
the i of my youth, . . . Gardener 's D '.271 

wild figtree split Their monstrous ? s, Princess, iv. 62 
The rosy i of her solitudes, . . En. Arden . 90 
clasp These i's to herself? . . Lucretius . 165 

idolater. 
Count the more base i of the two ; Ayhner's P. 670 

idolatry. 
waste and -havock as the idolatries, Aytmer's F. 640 
The red fruit of an old i — ti . 762 

idol-fires. 
wind to puff your i-f, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 69 

Idris. 
pushing could move The chair of /. Enid . . 543 



Idyll. poem. ' LINE. 

she found a small Sweet /, . . Princess, vii. 176 
I consecrate withtears — These Ps. Ded. of Idylls 5 

ignominy, 

hide their faces, miserable in il . Boadicea . 51 

ignorance. 

more from i than will. . . Walk, to theM. 100 

Drink to heavy /.' . . . Visiono/Sin 193 

that where blind and naked / . Vivien . 514 

ignorant. 
/,devisingtheir own daughter's death! Aylmer'sF.'j^ 

I lion. 

Troas and Ps column'd citadel, . CEnone . 13 

/ like a mist rose into towers. . Tithonus . 63 

The fire that left a roofless /, . Lttcretius . 65 

ill. 
thro' life and death, thro' good and i, The Poet . 5 
griefbecame A solemn scorn of is. . D.o/F. Worn. 228 
then why not i for good? . Love and Duty 27 

Still heaping on the fear of i . . Tivot Voices . 107 
Will be the final goal of i, . . InMem. liii. 2 
Who loved, who suffer'd countless i's, it lv. . 17 

and all the measureless z. . . Maud, I. iv. 56 
For years, a measureless z, . . 11 II. ii. 49 
than to rail at the i ; . . . n III. vi. 57 
z'and weary, alone and cold, . The Daisy . 96 

i for him, who bettering not . . Will . . 10 
who most have done them i. . Enid . ^-l^S 

This good is in it, whatsoe'er of i, Elai7ie 1201 

ill-conte7it. 
Dwelt with eternal summer, i-c. . En. Arden . 563 

ill-fated. 
If that I am, what lot is mine Love and Duty 33 

illiterate. 
not i; nor of those Who dabbling . The Brook . 92 

ill-omen 'd. 
Remembering his i-o song, . . Princess, vi. 143 

illumined. 

A fuller light z* all, . . . Day-Dm. . 137 

illumineth. 

I saw, wherever light i, . . D.ofF. Worn. 14 

ill-usage. 
Or sicken with i-u, . . . Princess, v. ^83 

ill-used. 
Chanted from an i-u race of men . Lotos-E's. . 165 
Francis, muttering, like a man i-u, M \d 'Arthur, Ep. 12 

Illyrian. 
/woodlands, echoing falls Of water To E. L. . 1 

image. 
An z seem'd to pass the door, Mariana in the S. 65, 74 
was an z of the mighty world ; . M. d' 'Arthur ^235 
play with flying forms and i's, . Ga?-dencr'sD. 59 
Vast i's in glimmering dawn, . Two Voices 305 

An i comforting the mind, . InMem. Ixxxav. 51 

To one pure z" of regret. . . tr ci. 24 

as her i in marble above ; . . Maud'Y. iv. 58 
unconsciously Some i of himself — Ded. of Idylls ,3 
Full often the sweet i of one face, Elaine . 878 

tomb Be costly, and her i thereupon, tt T 33° 

My wistful eyes on two fair i's, . Sea Dreams 232 

imagination. 
Poet-princess with her grand Ps . Princess, iii. 257 
Ps calm and fair, .... InMem. xcin. 10 
st'rong i roll A sphere of stars . 11 exxi. 6 

imagined. 
/more than seen, the skirts of France. Princess, Con. 48 

imagining. 
feed with crude i's . ' Love t'hou thy land,' etc. 10 

imbecile. 
the man became /; Ayhner's'F. 836 

imbedded. 
with golden yolks /and injellied ; Audley Ct. 25 



TE.V.VYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



imbibing. poem. line. 

to watch the thirsty plants / .' . Princess, ii. 401 

imbower 
silent isle is The Lady of Shalott. L.o/S/ialolt, i. 17 

imbowered. 
/ vaults of pillar'd palm, . . Arabian N's. 39 

imitate. 
Ps God, and turns her face . . On a Mourner 2 

immantled. 

1 in ambrosial dark, . . In Mem. lxxxviii. 14 

immersed. 
I in rich foreshadowings of the world, Princess,v\i.ii)^ 
the CJucen i in such a trance, . Guinevere . 398 

immodesty. 
Accuse her of the least /: . . Enid . . 960 

immolation. 
than by single act Of :', . . Princess, iii. 263 

immortality. 
feel their i Die in their hearts . 7 'lie Mermaid 29 
Me only cruel 1 Consumes : . . Titlwnus . 5 
I ask'd thee, 'Give me;'.' . 11 .15 

impaled. 
The King i him for his piracy : . Vivien . 419 

impart. 
1 The life that almost dies in me ; In Mem. xviii. 15 

imperia I- moulded. 
'-'" form, And beauty . . Guinevere . 544 

imperious. 
I, and of haughtiest lineaments. . Enid . . 190 

implied. 
that vague fear i in death ; . .In Mem. xl. 14 

imply. 
to begin implies to end : . . 7":w Voices 339 

impossible. 
Things in an Aylmer deem'd «', . Aylmer's F. 305 
Such a match as this ! /.prodigious!" 11 . 315 

but him 1 pruved i; . . Lucretius . 190 

impotence. 
In 1 of fancied power. . . A Cluiracter 24 

impressions. 
took Full easily all i from below, . Guinevere . 635 

imprisoning. 
pillar'd palm / sweets, . . . ArabianWs. 40 

impulse. 
An inner i rent the veil . . Two Voices 10 

impute. 
i a crime Are pronest to it, and i . Vivien . 674 

imputing. 
Polluting, and /her whole m.1 1', . Vivien . 652 

inactive. 
lying thus i, doubt and gloom. . En. Arden . 113 

wane. 

Ruining along the illimitable /, . Lucretius . 40 

incense (s.) 

Like two streams of /' free . . F.leSnore . 58 

lour . . Pal. 0/ Art 39 

t ; rise?' . . . 11 , . 44 

l / rose and never fail'd, . 11 -45 

incense (verb.) 
I'o 1 the Head once more ; . Princess, vii. 62 

inch. 

I w\ ? . Two J 'oices 200 

' • 5-.} 

only ncar'd llcr husband /'by 1, . Aylmer's F. 807 

fed. 
each i each to noble deeds. . . / 'ivien . 364 

incline. 

> Voices 188 
Till .ill thy life one way / . . Ona Mourner 19 



incompetent. poem. line. 
must I be / of memory : . Two Voices 375 

incorporate. 
grow 1 into thee In Mem. ii. 16 

increase (s.) 
for the good and 1 of the world .£</. J/<w/s44,5i,92 
The fruitful hours of still i ; . In Mem. xlv. 10 

increase (verb.) 
While the stars bum, the moons i, To J. S. . 71 
watch her harvest ripen, her herd i, Maud,\\\.\\. 25 

increased. 
day i from heat to heat, . Mariana in f.'eS. 39 
and with each The year /. . . Gardener 'sD. 195 
the light 1 With freshness . . Two Voices 404 
Thy latter days i with peace . Will Water. 219 

For them the light of life /, . . InMem.Con. 74 
i. Upon a pastoral slope as fair, . Maud,\. xviii. 18 
/ Geraint's, who heaved his blade Enid . . 572 
His beauty still with his years i, . Tlie Victim . 35 

increasing. 
Fame again / gave me use. . . Vivien . 344 

India. 
Where some refulgent sunset of / Milton . 13 

Indian. 

/reeds blown from his silver tongue, Tlie Poet . 13 

The throne of/ Cama slowly sail'd Pal. 0/ Art 115 

less from / craft Than beelike . Princess, iv. 180 

Fire-hollowing this in / fashion, . En. Arden . 570 

My lady's /kinsman unannounced Aylmer's F. 190 

My lady's/ kinsman rushing in, . u . 593 

indifference. 
And Love the / to be, . . . InMem.xxvi. 12 
Attain the wise (' of the wise ; . A Dedication 8 

indignant. 
she returned / to the Queen ; 
That makes me most i; 
On either side the hearth, i ; 



Enid . 202 
/ 'ivien 
Aylmer's F. 

Vivien 



4'4 
191 



indignantly. 
And yet he answer'd half/. . . Vivien •. 254 

indignation. 
What heats of i when we heard . Princess, v. 365 
white neck Was rosed with i : . 11 vi. 3^4 

individual. 
And the i withers, . . . Locksley II. 142 

individuality. 
Distinct in individualities, . . Princess, vii. 275 

induce. 
persecute Opinion and «a time ' You ask mewliy,' i3 

inexorable. 
No saint — i — no tenderness — . Princess, v. 504 
fall the battle-axe, unexhausted, i. Boiidicea . 56 

infancy. 
In the silken sail of /, . 
O'er the deep mind of dauntless »'. 
With those <-ld faces of our i 
To ailing wife or wailing i . 

infant. 
■ by the hand thine (' Hope. 
more than is in their sleep. . 
An /crying in the niffht : rep.) . 
shaping an i ripe for bis birth, 
laid the feeble /' in his arms : 
Shall wc deal with it as an if 



Arabian X's. 
Ode to Mem. 
Lotos-E's. . 
Aylmer's F. 

Ode to Mem. 

Prift ss, vii. 

/;/ Mem. liii. 

Maud. I. iv. 
. En. Arden . 
. lioadicea 

infinite. 
Because the scale is i. . . . Two Voices 

infinity. 
Like emblems of ;', The trenched . Ode to Mem. 

inflame. 
twelve-divided concubine To /' the Aylmer's F. 

in/la med. 
like a rising moon, / with wrath : Princess, i. 



3fi 

1 1 1 
'77 

30 

I 

ij 

I 

15a 

33 

93 
103 
760 

59 



CONCORDANCE TO 



inflate. poem. line. 

/ themselves with some insane . Vivien . 683 

influence. 

self-same i Controlleth all the soul Elea,7iore . 114 

z of mild-minded melancholy ; . Lotos-E's. . 109 

Who forged that other i, . . Two Voices 283 

use Her i on the mind, . . Will Water. 12 

blight Of ancient z'and scorn. . Princess, ii. 153 

Twice as magnetic to sweet is . 11 v. 183 

By many a varying i 11 vi. 250 

A kindlier i reigned ; it vii. 5 

in their silent i as they sat . . if Con. 15 

Let random i's glance . . . In Mem. xlviii. 2 

Mourn for the man of amplest i, . Ode on Well. 27 

i?ifluence-rich. 
i-r to soothe and save . . . In Mem. lxxix.14 

inform. 
beauty doth i Stillness with love, Day-Din. . 91 
she goes to i The Princess : . . Princess, iii. 46 

infuse. 
Desire in me to i my tale of love . Princess, v. 230 

ingraven. 
rind i ' For the most fair,' . . CEnone . 70 

ingress. 
for your i here Upon the skirt . Princess, v. 209 

ingroove. 
be free To i itself . ' Love thou thy land* etc. 46 

inhabitant. 
liker to the i Of some clear planet Princess, ii. 21 

inlierit. 
Oursonszus : our looks are strange: Lotos-E's. . 118 

inheritance. 

some i Of such a life, . . . Ded. of Idylls 31 

inherited. 
he that next i the tale . . . Princess, iv. 569 

injellied. 
golden yolks Imbedded and z"; . Atedley Ct. . 25 

injuries. 

life-long i burning unavenged, . Enid . 1544 



Distinct with vivid stars 



'i la id. 



A rahian N's. 90 



lay. 



deep i Of braided blooms . . Arabian N's. 28 

inlet. 
glaring sand and i's bright. . Mariana in the S. 8 

inn. 

lighted at a ruin'd z", . . Vision of Sin 62 

innocent. 
had wrought on many an i. . . Enid . 1027 

innocen t-arch. 
So i-a, so cunning-simple, . . Lilian . 13 

innumerable. 
bark and blacken i, Boadicea . 13 

inosculated. 
(For so they said themselves) z ; . Princess, iii. 73 

inquire. 

Who scarcely darest to i, . . In Mem. iv. 7 

inrunning. 

at the i of a little brook . . Elaine 1379 

insanity. 

animal heat and dire z. . . . Lucretius . 163 

inscription. 

some z'ran along the front, . . Princess, 1. 209 

saw you not the i on the gate, . ri ii. 177 

'for that i there, I think 11 . 207 

I urged the fierce i on the gate, . 11 iii. 125 

insect, 

i's prick Each leaf into a gall) . Talking O. .69 

eagle's wing, or is eye ; . . hi Mem. cxxiii. 6 

lightning flash of i and of bird. , En. A rden . 576 



insipid. POEM. LINE. 

/ as the Queen upon a card ; '. Aylmer's F. 28 

insolence \ 
blustering I know not what Of i . Princess, v. 387 
Smelling of musk and of i, . . Mated, I. vi. 45 

insolent. 
I, brainless, heartless ! . . . Aylmer's F. 368 

inspiration. 
Ancient founts of z well. . . Locksley H. 188 

instance. 
deeming Merlin overborne By z, . Vivien . 650 

That wilderness of single € s, . Aylmer's F. 437 

instep. 
brandish 'd plume Brushing his i, . Enid . 1209 

instinct. 
of the moral i would she prate . Pal. of Art 205 
less from Indian craft Than beelike i Princess, iv. 181 
being, all dipt In Angel i's, . . 11 vii. 302 

that mysterious i wholly died. . En. Arden . 522 

institute. 

their/Of which he was the patron. Princess, Pro. 5 
patient leaders of their / tr . 58 

fenced it round with gallant i's, . tr v. 382 

insufficiencies. 
temperate eyes On glorious z, . In Mem. cxi. 3 

insult. 
sounds of z, shame, and wrong, . D. ofF. Worn. 19 
brook no further i but are gone/ . Princess, vi. 322 
avenge this i, noble Queen, . Enid . . 215 

this great i done the Queen.' . 11 . 425, 571 
Crave pardon for that i u 583 

wretched dress, A wretched ;*on you,u . i*77 

inswa thed. 
I sometimes in wandering mist, . SiS. Stylites 74 

intellect. 
i to part Error from crime : . . Isabel . . 14 
kingly i shall feed, ' Clear-headed friend* etc. 20 

All-subtilising z: . . . In MemAxxxiv. 48 
Or ev'n for i to reach ... 11 xciv. 47 

Seraphic z'and force ... tr cviii. 5 

who knew thee keen In z*. . . » cxii. 6 

intelligence. 
The great I's fair In Mem. Ixxxiv. 21 

intelligible. 
From over-fineness not i . . Vivien . 645 

intend. 
The thesis which thy words z'— . Two Voices 338 

intense. 
will one beam be less z, 
fraught With a passion so i . 

intensity. 
Sometimes, with most z" Gazing, 



. Two Voices 40 
. Maud, II. ii. 59 

. Eleanore . 82 



intent (adj.) 
have been z'On that veil'd picture — Gardener's D. 264 
kept mine own / on her . , Princess, ii. 419 

intent (s.) 
almost ere I knew mine own i, . Gardener" 's D '.145 
eye seem'd full Of a kind i to me . Maud, I. vi. 41 

interchange. 
met With z of gift. . . . Pal. of Art 144 

frequent z of foul and fair . . En. Arden . 529 

interest. 
To close the i's of all. ' Love thou thy land' etc. 36 
a closer i flourish'd up, . . Princess, vii. 98 

catch The far-off interest of tears ? In Mem. i. 8 

interlaced. 
shadow'd grots of arches z, . . Pal. of Art 51 

interlocked. 
My lady with herfingers 1, . . Aylmer's F. 199 

interpret.. 
True love t s — right alone. . . Miller sD.. 188 
stupid heart To i ear and eye, . Elaine . 938 



T£A r .VVSO.\"S JFOH AS. 



2J3 



interpretation. poem. LINE, 

tongue To blare its own / — . . Elaine . 939 

interpreter. 
I between the Gods and men, . Princess, vii. 303 
in the mouths of base fs, . . Vivien . 644 

interpreting. 

broke out / my thoughts : . . Princess, iii. 258 

interspace. 

I rapidly between Their fs Arabian .Vs. 84 

The lucid 1 of world and world, . Lucretius . J05 

interval. 
fiHM with li^ht The /of sound. . D.o/F.Wom. 172 
Miriam watch' d and dozed at fs, . -En. Arden . 908 

intimacy. 

Bound in an immemorial i, . Ayltncr's F. 39, 136 

intonation. 
Such happy i, .... Amphion . 18 

intone. 
Delicate-handed priest i; . Maud,\.\\\\. 11 

intrusion. 
hunter rued His rash 1, manlike, . Princess, iv. 186 

invade. 
i Even with averse your holy woe. To J. S. 7 

invaded. 
'Our land/, 'sdcath ! . . . Princess, v. 266 
Roman Cxsar fir^t / Britain, . Enid . . 746 
As this great prince 1 us, . 11 . . 747 

invalid. 
I, since my will Seal'd not the bond— Princess, v. 388 

invet t 
a tide of fierce / scem'd to wait . Princess, iv. 451 

invent. 

the years i Each month is various T-.vo Voices 73 
when did woman ever yet tr" . Princess, ii. 369 

invented. 
Was this fair charm i by yourself? Vivien . 390 

inventor. 

mighty-mouth'd 1 of harmonics Milton . j 

invested. 
Slipt round in the dark and i you, Princess, iv. 385 

invited. 
For I am not /,.... Maud, I. xx. 38 

invoke. 
That which we dare i to bless ; . InAtem. exxiii. 1 

involve. 
My love is the love before ; . . InMem.cxxxx. 9 

involved. 

in you I found My boyish dream i Princess, iv. 430 

a half-consent / In stillness, . . m vii. 67 

other shore, /in thee, In Mew. \xxx1n.40 

My mind /yoursclflhe nearest thing Vivien . 149 

inwoven. 
dusky strand of Death / here . Maud, I. xviii. 60 

inwrapt. 

1 tenfold in slothful shame, . . Pal. of Art 262 

inwrought. 

diapcr'd With 1 (lowers . . - . ArabianN's. 149 

Ionian. 
all the valleys of / hills . . (/■'none . 2 
there the / lather of the rest ; . Pal. 0/ Art 137 

ire. 
The plaintive cry jarr'd on her /; Princess, iv. 374 

iris f rainbow-hue.) 
1 changes on the burnish'd dove ; . I.ocksleylf. ig 
circled / of a night of tears ; . Princess, iii. 11 

1 n'cr.) 
glided winding urn: ,. In Mein.cn. 24 

Iris ( messenger of the God 
light-foot / brought it ycslcr-cvc, (Enone . 81 



iron. 
clad in / burst the ranks of war, . 
red-hot / to be shaped with blows, 
heard that there is / in the blood, 
/ dug from central gloom, 
with gilded arms, All shall be /;' 
laughs at /—as our warriors did — 
rustiest / of old fighters' hearts ; . 

iron-cla nging. 
an i-c anvil bang'd With hammers; 

iron-clashing. 
such a stern and i-c close, 

iron -c ra mped. 
those that i-c their women's feet ; . 

iron-Jointed. 
I-j, supple-sinew'd, they shall dive, 

iron-ivorded. 
wall about thy cause With i-w proof, 



irony. 
call her sweet, as if in /, 

irritable. 
being vicious, old and /, 



LINE> 

Princess, iv. 483 

11 v. 200 

ii vi. 213 

/«.l/.v«.cxvii. 21 

Enid . .871 

Vivien. . 279 

11 . 424 

Princess, v. 493 

Vivien . 269 

Princess, v. 366 

Locks ley H. 169 

To J. M. K. 9 

Princess, vii. 82 



. Enid . 



194 



was, and /, and will be, are but /; Princess, iii. 307 

Isabel. 
Revered /, the crown and head, . Isabel . . 10 
Crown'd /, thro' all her placid life 11 . -27 

Iscariot. 
Pontius and / by my side . . St S.Slylites 165 

Isis. 
an / hid by the veil. . . . Maud, I. iv. 43 

Islamite. 
Houris bow'd to sec The dying /, Pal. of Art 103 

island. 
Over the fs free ; . . . . Sea-Fairies 26 
Round an /there below . . L.ofShalott, i. 8 
The / of Shalott .... 11 .9 

By the /in the river ... 11 • *3 

Our / home Is far beyond the wave ; Lotos-Es. 44 
else the /princes over-bold . if 120 

Boat, /, ruins of a castle, . . Ed. Morris 6 
On from / unto / . . . . Locksley It. 158 
Thine / loves thee well, . . Ode on Well. 85 

The blaze upon his / overhead ; . En. A rden . 596 
So they past by capes and fs, . Tlie Captain 21 

island-crag. 
Set in a cataract on an i-c. . . Princess, v. 337 

island-sides. 
Far-fleeted by the purple i-s . Princess, vii. 151 

island-story. 
Not once or twice in our rough i-s, OdeonWell. 201-9 

island-valley. 
To the i-v of Avilion ; . . . M.d' Arthur 259 

isle. 
the silent /imbowers The Lady . E.ofS/talott,i.zj 
Is thure Confusion in the little it . Lotos-E's. . 124 
where the moving /'f of winter shock M. d'Art/iurno 
mellow brickwork on an /of bowers. Ed. Morris 12 
rcntroll Cupid of our rainy fs. . 11 . 103 

I leave the sceptre and the / — . Ulysses . 34 
may be wc shall touch the Happy I's, 11 . 63 

Summer i's of Eden lying . . Locksley It. 164 
Blue i's of heaven laugh'd between Sirl.aridO.d. 6 
over lake and lawn, and /V and capes — Vision 0/ Sin 1 1 
battle-clubs From the fs of palm : Princess, J 
As yet wc find in barbarous j\f, . 11 ii. 107 

tremulous fs of light Slidcd. . " vi. 65 

da h'd with wandering fs of night. In Mem. xxiv. 4 
rolling fair Knwin.l her fs, 11 xi vii. 10 
O saviour of the silver-coasted /, . OdeonWell. 136 
over all whose realms to their last /, / W. o Idylls. 1 1 

ider in a lonely /, . Enid . . 330 

had plunder' d twenty nameless fs; I 'ivten . 409 



214 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

kings of desolate i's, . . . Elaine . 526 

sent her sweetly by the golden i's, En. Arden . 532 

stranding on an i at morn 11 . 553 

in a darker z beyond the Hire ; . 11 . 606 

beauteous hateful z'Return'd upon him, 11 . 618 

Stay'd by this z", not knowing . tr . 631 

a break on the mist-wreathen i tr . 633 

did'st uphold me on my lonely z, . 11 . 7S4 

Nutmeg rocks and i's of clove . The Voyage 40 

in all that exquisite i, my dear, . The Islet . 26 

' Fear not, i of blowing woodland, Boiidicea . 38 

Streams o'er a rich ambrosial ocean i, Milton . 14 

She desires no i's of the blest, . Wages . 8 

isle (verb.) 
zs a light in the offing : . . En. Arden . 131 

isle-altar. 
Fromherz-^gazingdown, ' Of old sat Freedom? etc. 1$ 

isled. 
i in sudden seas of light, . . Fatima . 33 
Thank Him who i us here, . . OdeonWell. 154 

isle-nurtured, 
i-n e}>"es Waged such unwilling . Vivien . 420 

Isle of Wight. 
(Take it and come) to the I o W; To F.D.Maurice 12 

islet. • 

cressy i's white in flower ; . . Enid . 1324 

that i in the chesnut-bloom . . Ay liner s F. 65 
The peaky i shifted shapes, . . The Voyage 33 
A mountain i pointed and peak'd ; T/ie Islet . 15 

isolation, 
O God-like z" which art mine, . Pal. of Art . 197 

remain Orb'd in your i: . . Princess, vi. 153 
His i grows defined. . . . In Mem. xliv. 12 
shook His z" from him. . . . En. Arden . 653 

Isolt. 
Then came the sin of Tristram and/; Guinevere 484 

Israel. 
Wrestled with wandering/, ' Clear-headed friend'' 26 
torrent brooks of hallow'd. / . . D. ofF. Worn. 181 
balmy moon of blessed / . ir . 185 

/ made their gods of gold, . . In Mem. xcv. 23 

issue (s.) 

Whereof I catch the i, . . . CEnone . 244 

your great deeds For z, . . Princess, iii. 227 

float us each and all To the z", . ir iv. 53 

why she should Bide by this i: . if v. 316 

had i other than she will'd. . Vivien . 655 

noble z, sons Born to the glory . Elaine. 1362 

isszte (verb.) 
To those that seek them i forth ; . Day-Dm. . 102 

issued, 

i in a court Compact with lucid . Princess, ii. 9 

We i gorged with knowledge, . 11 . 366 

2 in the sun, that now Leapt . tr v. 40 

Whence he z" forth anew, . . Ode on Well. 107 

i from the world of wood, . . Enid . . 238 

ridge Of breaker i from the belt, . Sea Dreams 205 



zssuzng. 
i shorn and sleek, .... 
lightly i thro', I would have paid . 
voice Of Ida sounded, i ordinance : 
howlest, z out of night, . 
Geraint, who z forth That morning, 
i under open heavens beheld 
i arm'd he found the host 
i found the Lord of Astolat . 

Italian. 
Fair ship, that from the / shore 
glory fly along the / field, 

Italy. 
I to the East And he for I— 
And now it tells of /. . 

iteration. 
came Her sicklier i. 



Talking 0. . 42 

tr . 194 

Princess, vi.^ 352 

In Mem. lxxi. 2 

Enid . . 857 

if . 1045 

. _ . 1256 

Elame . 173 

In Mem. ix. 1 
Lucretius . 71 

The Brook . 2 
The Daisy . 90 

Aylmers F. 299 



Ithaceusiau. poem. line. 

Like the / suitors in old time, . Princess, iv. 100 

ivory. 
Laborious orient z sphere in sphere, Princess, Pro. 20 

ivory-beaked. 
In a shallop of crystal i-b, . . TJte Islet . 12 

ivy. 
overhead the wandering i and vine, CEnone . 97 
thro' the moss the ivies creep, . Eotos-E's. . 54 
Thorns, ivies, woodbine, mistletoes, Day-Dm. . 63 
There is Darnley bridge, Ithasmore i; The Brook 37 
wings Moved in her z, . . . Enid . . 599 

ivy-clad. 
In Autumn, parcel z'-c ; . . Aylmers F. 154 

ivy-clasped. 
High-arch'd and z'-c, Of finest Gothic Princess, Pro. 91 

ivy-net. 
Now on some twisted i-n, . SirL. andQ. G. 28 

ivy-stems. 
monstrous is Claspt the gray walls Enzd . . 322 

' ivy-tureath. 
briony-vine and i-w Ran forward . AmJ>hion . 29 

Ixionian. 
stays the rolling / wheel, . . Lucretius . 257 

Ixion-like. 
Embracing cloud, I-l; . . . Two Voices . 195 

'I will: 
I heard his deep ' Iw,' Breath'd . Gardener s D. 203 
Her sweet '/ w' has made ye one. In Mem. Con. 52 



j'acin tk- work, 
j-w Of subtlest jewellery. . . M.d 1 Arthur 57 

Jack, 
f, turn the horses' heads . Walk, to the M. 38 

yon his ale-house bench . . Maud, I. iv. 9 

jackass. 
A/ heehaws from the rick, . . Amphion . 71 

Joel. 
a cymbal'd Miriam and ay,. . Princess^ v. 500 

jail. 
scared with threats of/ and halter Aylmers F. 520 

jam. 
j the doors, and bear The keepers Lztcretius . 169 

James (see Willows.) 
Old J was with me : Golden Year 3 

in mimic cadence answer'd J — . u - 53 

y, — you know him, — old, but full m . 60 

She and y had quarrell'd. . . The Brook . 96 

no cause ; J had no cause: . . n .98 

y had flickering jealousies . n .99 

Who anger'd J ? I said. ti . too 

till I ask'd If y were coming. . v . 106 

y departed vext with him and her/ tr . no 

I saw where J Made toward us, . ir .116 

brother J is in the harvest field : . 11 . 227 



Jane. 
And what do I care for J, . 



Grandmother 51 



jangling, 
j, the casque Fell, and he started up Enid . 1237 

January. 
Fine as ice-ferns on J panes . Aylmer's F. 222 

woodlands, when they shiver in J, Boadicea . 75 



jar{s.) 
Love is hurt with/ and fret, 
hear the household./ within. 

jar (verb.) 
/all the hymns of heaven : . 
mortal motiony's The blackness 



Miller sD. . 209 
InMem. xc'ni. 16 



. Sea Dreams 251 
. On a Mourner 26 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



jarred. POEM. line. 

something/: Whether he spoke . Ed. Morris . 72 
The plaintive cry/' on her ire ; . Princess, iv. 374 

jasmine. 

Growths of/turn'd Their humid . D. of F. Worn. 69 

meshes of the/' and the rose: . Princess, i. . 216 

robe of/' sown with stars : . . Aylmer's F. 150 

jasmine-leaves. 
dawn Upon me thro' the/-/. . . Margaret . 68 

jasper. 
In the branching/"* under the sea ; The Mermaid 47 

jaundice. 
veil'd the world with /', . . Walk, to the M. 14 

javelining. 
j With darted spikes and splinters Vivien . 7S5 

jaw. 
in the ;"s Of vacant darkness . ItiMem.xxxW. 15 
Into ihcj's of Death, . . . Lt. Brigade 24 
Came thro' Hit j's of Death . . 11 .46 

jealous. 

T '', often fretful as the wind . Princess, iii. 64 

Half/' of she knows not what, . In Mem.Y\x. 7 

to what end, except a/' one, . Vivien . 388 

one to make me/' if I love, 11 . 389 

What wonder, being/", that he sent 11 . 430 

made her good man/' with good cause. 11 . 455 
be/' and hard and unkind.' . . Grandmother 54 

Never/ — not he: .... 11 . 71 

jealousy. 
avarice, pride, J, down ! . . Maud, I. x. 48 
James had flickering jealousies . The Brook . 99 
all nartov jealousies Are silent . Ded. oj 'Idylls 15 
len spurt of woman's/, — . Vivien . 374 
as to woman's/, O why not? . if . 387 

mine was/ in love.' . . Elaine 1341 

' J in 1 jve?' Nut rather dead love's 11 1388 

Queen, if I grant the/ as of love, 11 1390 

jeer. 
scoff and/ and babble of him . Enid . . 58 

Jehoz'ah. 
Stared from y^gorgcous armouries, Milton . 6 

jenneting. 
To fret the summer/. . . The Blackbird 11 

Jenny. 
J, my cousin, had come to the place Grandmother 2$ 

J had tript in her time : . . 11 . 26 

J, to slander me, who knew what y had 11 . 35 
y hunt; on his arm. ... 11 . 42 

y, the viper, made me a mocking courtscy 11 . 46 

Jeptha. 

Pale as the fs daughter, . . Aylmer's F. 280 

jessamine. 
All night has the casement/ stirr'd Maud, xxii. 15 

jest <s.) 
eves twinkle yet At his own/ — . Miller's />. 12 

if joke and/, . D.o/theO.J 

half in earnest, half in /,] . Hardener's P. 33 

1 bitter/ is dear. . Vision oj Sin 198 

:!■ fill/. . Princess, iii. 297 

■ by sMe, it iv. 541 

ith hi» vaulted palm A whutper'd/ 11 v. 31 

ere the windy/ Had labourM down » . 262 

and/. . luMem.xxix. 3 

.11 lxv. 10 

I J 11 lxxxiii. 24 

willnol . >nn ev'n in/.' F.'iid . . 311 

some light /among thcrn rose . Elaine 

\ ■ . no more : m .211 

n mg ourselves) << . 217 

All wsa/. 11 . 218 

ll ll.i.h'd about the pleader's Aylmer's F. 440 

■ 
•viKi edge-tools ! Princess, ii. 184 



jested. !. LINE, 

while he/ thus, A thought llash'd Princess, i. 191 
Drank till he / with all ease, . Enid . 11 39 

jesting. 
ill/ with edge-tools ! . . . Princess, ii. 184 

yesus. 
O y, if thou wilt not save my soul, St S. Stylites 45 

jet. 
From those four/ 's four currents Pal. of Art 33 

jet-black. 
Leading aj-b goat wnite-hom'd, . CEnone ■- 

The maiden's/-^ hair has grown, . Day-Dm. . 80 

jetted, 

A dozen angry models/ steam : . Princess, Pro. 73 

jewel, 

y or shell, or starry ore, . . Eleanore . 20 
the/That trembles at her car : . Miller's D. 171 
furs And/ "s, gifts, to fetch her : . Princess, i. 4J 
quoted odes, and/'* five-words-long 11 ii. 355 
hkea/set In the dark crag : . 11 iii. 340 

single/ on her brow Burn . . it iv. 254 

What, has he found my/' out? . Maud, I. x. 23 
And Maud will wear her/'V, . 11 xx. 27 

little save the j's they had on, . Enid . . 640 
thicker down the front With/ 's . <• . 153S 

j's, whereupon 1 chanced Divinely Elaine . 50 
wear as fair a/ as is on earth, . 11 
not won except for you, These j's, " 1176 

in rich sheath with/ "s on it . . Aylmer's F. 220 
seexn'd a fleet of j's under me, . Sea Dreams 119 
A/, a/ dear to a lover's eye I . The Window 3 

jewellery. 
jacinth-work Of subtlest/. . . M.d 'Arthur 58 

jewel-print. 
sets the j-P of your feet In violets Maud, I. xxii. 41 

jewel-thick. 

barbarous opulence/-/ . . . Maud, I. xiii. 12 

Jilt. 

White Rose, Bellerophon, the y, . The Brook . 161 

jilted. 
their pretty saying? /, is it '! y I was : Aylmcr'sF.353 

jingled. 
When armour clash'd or/, . . Princess, vi. 343 

jingling, 
j of the guinea helps the hurt . Locksley II. 105 

yoau. 
y of Arc, A light of ancient France : D. ofF. Wom.a6j 
arts of war The peasant 7 and Others ; Princessfi.147 

yotiues. 
y, as 'ant a 'aapoth o' sense, . A r . Farmer 40 

a wcant niver give it to /, . . n . 50, 

Jocky see Dawes.) 

•John. 

had let appear the brand of y— . Aylmer's F. 509 



join. 
this byway j's The turnpike? 
truths in manhood darkly/, . 
To/ the brimming river, 
as he gallop'd up To/ them, 

' /it 
in haste 10/ 1 heir luckier mates, 



Walk, to the M. 4 

. In Mcin.xxxvi. 1 

. The Brth k . 32 

. Enid . . i--- 

. 1S0 

14--' 



joined. 
with the choral starry dance y nnt Pal. of Art 2^4 
many ch try/, 'Love thou thy land,' 1 

lips, like dune, so sweetly/ f . Day-Dm. .258 

And there we/ them: Princess,! ■ 
fair charities y at her side ; . 11 vii. 51 

/ Each office of the social hour . In Mem. ex. 1 \ 



joining. 

suck'd the/ of the stones, 



Enid 



3-4 



2l6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



joint. POEM. LINE. 

work, a/ of state, * Love thou thy land? etc. 47 

all his js Are full of chalk? . . Audley Ct. . 45 
all things here are out of 7; . . Locksley H. 133 

My j" s are somewhat stiff or so. . Day-Dm. . 158 
J's of cunning workmanship. . Vision oj Sin 1S6 

joke. 
He was full of/ and jest, . D. of the O. Year 28 
all was jest and/ among ourselves) Elaine . 217 

Jonah . 
in her a J's gourd, . . . Princess, iv. 292 

Joshua. 
like J's moon in Ajalon ! . . Locksley H. 180 

journey. 
morn had died, her y done, . . D. o/F. Worn. 61 
before his/ closes, He shall find . Ode on Well. 205 
And all his/ to her, . . . Enid . 143, 845 

* Be prosperous in this/, as in all; " . . 225 
sigh'd to find Her/ done, . . Guinevere . 402 

journeying: 
Or often/ landward ; . . . En. Ardeu . 92 

joust (s.) 
might show it at a /of arms, . M.d' Arthur 102 

meadow where the j's were held, . Enid . . 537 

■when the j's were ended yesterday, ir . . 692 

haughty/'-?, and took a paramour ; 11 . 1680 

for my main purpose in these/' J, . 11 . 1685 

diamond/'.?, Which Arthur had . Elaine . 31 

a/ for one of these : .11 .62 

eight years past, eight/'.? had been, 11 . 6S 

let proclaim a/ At Camelot, .11 -77 

cannot move To these fair j's?' . ir .81 

Why go you not to these fair j's? it , 99 

hear my words : go to the j's: . 11 . 137 

triumph in our mimic wars, the j's — 11 . 312 

parted from the j's Hurt in the side,' i» .619 

joust (verb. ) 

I go to/ as one unknown . . Elaine . 190 

he will ride, J for it, and win, . 11 . 204 

That he might/ unknown of all, . 11 . 582 

jowl. 
Cheek by/, and knee by knee : 

.J >''. 

What hope or fear or j is thine ? . Adeline . 23 

■with/ Hidden in sorrow : . . Dyi?ig Swan 22 

move about the house with/, . Miller's D. . 95 

* There is no/ but calm ! ' . . Lotos-E's. . 68 
come like ghosts to trouble/. . n . 119 
emptied of all/, Leaving the dance D. ofF. Worn. 215 
sit between J and woe, . . Margaret . 64 
Such/ as you have seen with us, D.oftheO. Yearly 
scarce get out his notes for/, . Gardener's D. 89 
but could not sleep for/, n . 170 
perfect % perplex'd for utterance, " . 250 
I look'd at him with/; . . Talking O. 106 
reaps not harvest of his youthful/'.?, Locksley H. 139 
j that mixes man with Heaven : . Two Voices 210 
muse on/ that will not cease, . Sir Galahad 65 
A private lif Q was all his/, . . Will Water. 129 
souls 'hat balance/and pain, . Sir L.azidQ.G. 1 
bring m sorrow touch'd with/, . ZnMem.xxvin.xg 
doubtful/' the father move, . 11 xxxix. 9 
On som ur worthy heart with/, . ir lxi. 7 
Thy passion clasps a secret/.- . 11 lxxxvii. 8 
0/ to him in this retreat, . . n lxxxviii. 13 
As in 're former flash of/. . . n cxxi. 15 
tells The/ To every wandering breeze :n Con. 62 
tho' in silence, wishing/. , » .88 
the ringing /of the Hall, . . Maud, I. i. 70 
a/ in which I cannot rejoice, . ir v. 21 
she warbled alone in her/.' . . 11 x. 55 
Making the little one leap for/ To F. D. Maurice 4 
hut welcomed him with/. . . Enid . . 748 
I see it with/ — You sit apart, . " . 1169 
my liege, in whom I have my/, . Elaine. 1174 
I pray you : have your j's apart. . 11 . 121 1 



Vision of Siu 84 



POEM. LINE. 

beheld three spirits mad with/ . Guinevere . 250 
and rejoicing in my/.' ... 11 . 482 

not grieving at your j's, But notrejoicing; ir . 671 

madly danced our hearts with/, . The Voyage 3 
0/to thepeople and/to the throne. W. to Alexan. 29 
'O hush, my/, my sorrow. ' ' Home they brought him' 10 
The Priest exulted, And cried with/, The Victim 39 

joyance. 
To keep them in all/: . . . Elaine. 1314 

joyful. 
^and free from blame. 
More/ than the city-roar 
Took/ note of all things/, . 
J came his speech : 



joying 



. D. o/F. Worn. 80 
. Princess, Con. 101 
. Ay Inzer s F. 67 
. The Captain 30 

. Pal. of Art. 178 



y to feel herself alive, 

joyous. 
A/ to dilate, as toward the light. . Ayhners F. 77 

jubilee. 
With pleasure and love and/; . Sea-Fairies . 36 
Utter your/, steeple and spire ! . W. to Alexazi. 17 

judged.) 
Himself the/ and jury, . . . Sea Dreams 171 
God, not man, is the y of us all . Grandmother 95 

judge (verb.) 

see thy Paris/ of Gods. . . CEnone . 88 

y thou me by what I am, . . rr . . 152 

mortal eyes are frail to/ of fair, ir . 155 
' Let the Princess/ Of that ' . Princess, ii. 216 

not to/ their cause from her . ti vii. 220 

/ all nature from her feet of clay, . Vivien. . 684 

may/ the living by the dead, . Elaine . 1359 

judged. 
now the Priest has /for me.' . The Victim 60 

judger. 
hasty/ would have call'd her guilt, Enid . 1282 

judgment. 
pick'd offenders from the mass For/. Princess, \. 30 
You shame your mother's/ too. . n vi. 244 

would not make hisj blind, . . In Mem. xcv. 14 
Shalt abide her/ on it ; . . . Enid . . 584 
hear the/ of the King,' u 1647 

hears the 7 of the King of Kings,' 11 . 1648 

naked Ignorance Delivers brawling/'.? Vivien . 515 
Rash were my/ then, . . . Elaine . 239 
hollow like a Ghost's Denouncing/, Guinevere . 418 



couch'd behind a y, 



yudith. 



. Princess, iv. 207 



juggle. 
&J born of the brain? . . . Maud, II. ii. 42 

juice. 
Till all his/is dried, . . . Audley Ct. . 45 

Juliet. 

y, she So light of foot, . . . Gardener's D. 13 
y, answer'd laughing, ■ Go and see n . 29 

Will you match My J? . . it .168 

jumbled. 
every clime and age y together ; . Princess, Pro. 17 

yune. 
Their meetings made December y, In Mem. xcvi. 11 

Junius (see Brutus.) 

junketing. 

growth Of spirit than toj and love. Princess, iv. 124 

y?cno. 
charm Pallas and y sitting by : . A Character 15 



Himself the judge and/, 



Sea Dreams 171 



just. 



A man more pure and bold and/ . To J. S. . 31 
Hears little of the false or/.' . Two Voices 117 

'tis but .7 The many-headed ' You might have won,' 19 



IE XX VSOX'S WORKS. 



217 



POEM. LINE. 

all comes round soy and fair : . Lady Clare 18 

Virtue !— to be good and /— . . VisionofSen in 
woman's state in each, How farfrom/; Priucess,u. ti6 

thou hast made him : thou arty. . In Mem. I'ro. 12 

battled for the True, the J, . « Iv. 18 

strike, for we held Thee/, . . Maud, II. i. 45 

be sane and crowns be/. . . Odeon Well. 169 

no quiet seau of they, . . . Wages . 8 

justice. 

social truth shall spread And /, . In Mem. cxxvi 6 

all llyers from tic hand Of J, . Enid . . 37 

to guard the/ of the King: 11 X782 

there he kept the/ of the King . 11 . 1804 

A silent court of/ in his breast, . Sea Dreams 170 

justified, 
scem'd So/ by that necessity, . Enid . 1245 

justify. 
every face she look'd ony it) 



Princess , v. 12S 



justly. 
How/, after that vile term of yours, Vivien 



770 



M (s.) 
zig-zag paths, andy 's of pointed rock, M.aVArthurso 
based His feet on/'s of slippery crag 11 . 189 

jut verb.) 
diamond-ledges that/ from the dells ; TlteMermaid\o 

K 

Kaffir. 

not the A', Hottentot, Malay, . Princess, ii. 142 

Kale. 
there's A" and Caroline : . . May Queen, i. 

Katie (see Willows.) 

Sweet K, once I did her a good turn, The Brook 74 

■'.here in the walks below . 11 . 86 

' Run K !' A' never ran : she moved 11 . 87 

i:nt than sense Had A'; 11 . 92 

A' snatch'd her eyes at once from mine, 11 . 101 

O A', what I suffer'd for your sake ! 11 .119 

■ content Re-risen in A".r eyes, 11 . 169 

A" walks By the long wash . . 11 . 193 

u?' ' A'.' . 11 .211 

A" laugh'd, and laughing blush'd . 11 . 214 

keiiper. 
K's it wur ; fo' they fun un theer N. Farmer 33 

keel. 

round about the k with faces pale, I.otos-E's. . 25 

rustic round the shelving k ; . Id. Morris no 

r air perplex Thy sliding /■, In Mem. ix. 10 

thy*; . n x. 1 

ell'd to meet the k, , The Voyage 13 

keen, 

k thro' wordy snares to track . In Mem. xciv. 31 

lew thee k . 11 c.vii. 5 

tho' k and bold and soldierly, . Aylmer's I-'. 192 

keenly. 
glancing all at once as * at her, . Enid . 773, 179 

keep (s.) 
there is the *; He shall not cross us Enid 1190 

keep verb.) 

A' measure with thine own? . . Adeline . 27 

So h t» : . . . Pott'* Mind 36 

ned slumber k's, . EU&nore , 128 

ith, and Ait . Lotas-Es. . 153 

K's real sorrow far away. . Margaret . 44 

ird 3 

A dry their light from ' 0/ old tat Freedom,' etc. 20 

'•'ke ihi warm, . ThcGoose . 7 

I I. "r /.• you warm, . 11 -43 

. The F.pic . 42 
'Tliisw.nl / . Gardener' sD.wi 

* me from that Eden where she dwelt. •• 187 

fj us all 111 order mure or less— Walk, to the M. 17 



POEM. LIKE. 

trims us up. And k's us tight ; . Ed. Morris 47 
try If yet he k's the power. . . Tal 
to k My own full-tuned — . Love and Ditty 39 

all Should k within, door shut, . Godiva . 41 
Nor any train of reason k : . . Two Voices , 50 
His state the king reposing k's. . Day-Dm. . 59 
k I fair thro' faith and prayer . Sir Galahad 23 
K nothing sacred : ' You might have 
k the best man under the sun . Lady Clare 31 
k the secret for your life, . . " 34-42 

While we k a little breath ! . . Vision of.'. 
k a chronicle With all about him' Princess t Pro, 27 
love to £ us children I . . . ■> . 133 

k your hoods about the face ; . 11 ii. 337 

if your Highness k Your purport, » i 

broke the letter of it to k the sense " iv. 319 
k's me hostage for his son.' 11 . 386 

but k you surety for our son, . 11 v. 24 

will cruel Ida k her back ; . . 11 . ^1 

she would not k Her compact.' . 11 . 313 

if, I say, you k One pulse . 11 vi. il 3 
cannot k her mind an hour : . n . 269 
What use to k them here now? . 11 . 285 

1 cannot k My heart an eddy . " . 301 
willing she should k Court-favour : 11 vii. 42 
seem to k her up but drag her down — 11 . 254 
herself her own To give or k, . 11 . 257 
k's his wing'd affections dipt . 11 . 297 
the narrow sea which k's her off, . 11 Con. 51 
k's our Britain, whole within herself, 11 . 52 
Let darkness /• her raven gloss : . In Mem. i. 10 
k's the keys of all the creeds, 11 xxiii. 5 
How dare we k our Christmas-eve; " xxix. 4 
k so sweet a thing alive :' . . « xxxv. 7 
' Wh.it k's a spirit wholly true " . n li. 9 
She k's the gift of years before, . 11 xcvi. 25 
who would k an ancient form . 11 civ. 19 
We k the day. With festal cheer, 11 cvi. 21 
k's A thousand pulses dancing . 11 exxiv. 15 
tho' as yet I k Within his court . >i exxv. 6 
I /■ but a man and a maid, . . Maud, I. iv. 19 
but /■ a temperate brain ; . . " -40 
Should Nature k me alive, . . 11 vi. 32 
Her brother, from whom I k aloof, " . 46 
A" watch and ward, k watch and " . 58 
* it ours, O God, from brute . Ode on Well. 159 
k our noble England whole, . 11 . 161 

Idier firm, the statesman . " . 222 

k's me in this ruinous castle here, . Enid . . 462 
k's the wear and polish of the wave. " . . 682 
dress her beautifully and k her 11 . 889 

not to speak to me, And thus you k 11 . 928 

/' them in the wild ways of the wood, 11 . 1036 

/• a touch of sweet civility 1161 

if it were so do not k it back : . » . 1165 
k him bright and clean as heretofore, " . 1785 
We could not /' him silent, . . I 'ivien . 266 

To k me all to your own self, . 11 . 373 

no charm to k them mine Uut youth n . 397 

Might k her all his own : . . 11 . 435 

k it like a puzzle chest in chest, . 11 . 504 

But k that oath you swore, " . 538 

Then must she k it safelier. . . Elaine . 218 

you k So much of what is graceful : n . 1212 

To k them in all joyance : . . » . 1314 

ks the rust of murder on the walls Guinevere . 74 

Not only to /• down the base in man, 11 . 476 

k the house while he was gone. . En. Arden 

A' a clean hearth and a clear lire . " . 192 

K everything shipshape " . 220 

Not /.• it noble, make it nobler? . Aylmer's F. 386 

thank God that I Amy eyes, . Crandmotktr\e6 

k him from the lust of blood . . Lucretius . 83 

keeper. 
the k was one, so full of pride, . Maud, II • 
by a /•• shot at. slightly hurt. . . Aylmer's P. 548 

His Ms, and the silence . n . 839 

jam the doors, and bear The Hi . Lucretius . 170 

keeping. 
did Enid, k watch behold . . Enid . . 967 



218 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

It is not worth the k: let it go: . Vivien . 246 

have my shield In k till I come." . Elaine . 382 

children play'd at k house . . En. A rden . 24 

Kent. 
lands in K and messuages in York, Ed. Morris 127 



kep (kept.] 
'Siver, I k un, I k un, my lass, 



N. Farmer. 23 



. To tJte Queen 
. CEnone 



" . • 336 

it iv. 321 

11 v. 74 

, 485 

InMem.lxxxlv. 1 7 

it xciv. 23 

Maud, I. vi. 18 

Ode on Well. 91 



Vivien 



Elaine 



kept, 
k her throne unshaken still. 
Swatch, waiting decision, 
this£, Stored in some treasure-house M. d' Arthur 100 
we k her till she pigg'd. . Walk, to the M. 84 

His worst he k, . ' You 7night have ivou,' etc.26 

his heavy rider k him. down. . Vision of Sin 4 

k the book and had my finger in it) Princess, Pro. 53 
k mine own Intent on her, . . n ii. 418 

k her state, and left the drunken king tr iii. 213 
Cyril k With Psyche, . 
they k apart, no mischief done ; 
why k ye not your faith ? 
part reeFd but k their seats : 
My blood an even tenor k, . 
fall'n leaves which k their green, 
K itself warm in the heart of my 
His foes were thine ; he k us free 
great men who fought, and -tit ours. 
Like ballad-burthen music, k . The Daisy 
k them folded reverently , . E7iid . 
k her off and gazed upon her face n 
k it for a sweet surprise at morn. . n 
Enid ever k the faded silk, . . ir . 
Because she k the letter of his word 11 
k the heart of Eden green . . u 
k myself aloof till I was changed ; tr 
he k the justice of the King . . ti 
some stolen, some as relics k, 
k his mind on one sole aim . 
k him sunder'd from his wife : 
took the shield There k it, . 
Might well have k his secret. 
k The one-day-seen Sir Lancelot . if 
faith unfaithful k him falsely true. 11 
two stood arm'd, and k the door ; tr 
this he k Thro' all his future ; . En. Arden 
as having k aloof so long. . . 11 

he was gone Who k it ; . . . tr 

little ones to school, And k them in it, 11 
K him a living soul. ... 11 

k the house, his chair, ... 11 

his resolve, And how he k it. . tr 

sow'd her name and k it green 
worldless heart had k it warm, 
yet her cheek K colour : wondrous ! 
A" to the garden now, and grove of pines,i. . 550 

she, who k a tender Christian hope, Sea Dreams 41 
good things have not k aloof, ' My life is full* 2 

kerchief 
about them, ribbon, glove, Or k; Aylmer's F. 621 

kernel. 
trash ' he said * but with a h in it. 

kestrel. 
Kite and k, wolf and wolf kin, 

kettle. 
hurl'd the pan and k. 

kex. 
tho' the rough k break The starr'd Princess, iv. 

key. 
opens but to golden k's. . . Locksley H. 100 

Keeps the k's of all the creeds, . InMem.xxui. 5 
That Shadow waiting with the k's, 11 xxvi. 15 

lives to clutch the golden k's, . tr lxiii. 10 

With half a sigh she turn'd the k t TJte Letters 18 

keys fof a piano. ) 
Turn'd as he sat, and struck the k's The Islet . 7 

kick. 
all v/omen k against their Lords . Princess, iv. 393 



77 

J 37 

5i9 

703 

841 

1304 

1618 

1720 

1804 

303 
476 
565 
397 
59i 
742 

873 

1240 

235 

273 



. 708 

tt . 805 

H . 827 

t. . S65 

Aylmer's F. SS 

• 47i 

. 5° 6 



Princess, ii. 373 



Boadicea 



The Goose 



15 



59 



kid. 
like the k in its own mother's milk ! Vivien 

kill. 
k Time by the fire in winter.' 
' A" him now, The tyrant ! k him . " , 

A" us with pity, break us with ourselves rr ii: 

grand fight to k and make an end : tt i\ 

tenderness, not yours, that could not k, 11 v; 
that Which k's me with myself, . tr 

k's her babe for a burial fee, . Maud, I. i. 

churchmen fain would k their church tr II. v. 
speak, and tho' he k me for it, . Enid . 
child k me with her innocent talk V Guinevere 
child k me with her foolish prate ?* n 

shall I k myself? What help in that : tr 
I cannot k my sin If soul be soul ; it 

nor can I k my shame ; n 

why should you k yourself . . En. Arde?i 

kill'd. 
I have k my son. I have k him — Dora . 
k with some luxurious agony, . Vision of Sin 4 
truthful change in thee has k it. . Princess, vii. 329 
k in falling from his horse. . . hi Mem. vi. 40 
I should not less have k him. . Enid . 1693 

K with a word worse than a life of blows ! Visvien 719 
K with unutterable unkindliness.' tr . 735 

here a thrust that might have k . Elaine . 25 
A" in a tilt, come next, five summers Gui?iez>ere 319 
k In such a bottom : Aylmer's F. 253 

bees are still'd, and the flies are k, The Window 52 

kit lest. 
O thou that k, had'st thou known, Aylmer's F. 738 

kin (see kith and kin.) 
lift His axe to slay my k. . . Talking- O, 
gentle satire, k to charity, . . Princess, ii, 
give back their earldom to thy k. Enid . 
little cause for laughter : his own k — Elaine 



718 



Princess, Pro. 200 
ir . 201 

241 
568 
170 
288 
45 
28 



613 
614 
615 

39i 

156 



236 
445 
5S5 
595 



xix. 



II. V. 



up the still rich city to his k, . n 798, 841 

I am well-to-do— no k, no care, . En. Arde?i . 415 

kind (adj.) 
a nature never k / . . . Walk, to the M. 54 

Her kisses were so close and k, . Talking O. 169 
love her, as I knew her, k ? . . Locksley H. 
But may she still be k, . . Will Water. 

all men rate as k and hospitable : Princess, i. 
ourselves but half as good, as k . n v. 

Is it k ? Speak to her I say : . rr vi. 231 

' How good ! how k ! and he is gone.' InMem.xx. 20 
looks so cold : she thinks him k. . rr xcvi. 24 

we cannot be k to each other here Maud, I 
who is neither courtly nor k, . 11 

says he is rough but k, 
K ? but the deathbed desire 
Rough but k? yet I know . 
K to Maud ? that were not amiss, 
rough but k ; why let it be so : 
Not beautiful now, not even k ; 
k to have made me a grave so rough 
Manners so k, yet stately, . 
silence is more wise than k.' 
A", like a man, was he ; 
Stiles where we stay'd to be k, 

kind (s.) 
She had the passions of her k, L. C. V. de Vere 35 
serve his k in deed and ( Love thou thy laud ' etc. £6 
all k's of thought, That verged upon Gardener's D. 69 
Yet is there plenty of the k ? . Tivo Voices 33 

Lucius Junius Brutus of my k. . Princess, ii. 264 
According to the coarseness of their k, 11 iv. 327 
Another k of beauty in detail . 11 . 428 

made me kindly with my k . .In Mem. Ixv. 7 
thou and I are one in k, . . rr lxxviii. 5 

What k of life is that I lead ; . 11 Ixxxiv. 8 

I will not shut me from my k, . rr cvii. r 

of a k The viler, as underhand, . Maud, I. i. 27 
I am one with my k, . tr III. vi. 5S 

think what k of bird it is . . Enid . . 331 
purer pleasures unto mortal k » 11 . 1613 



70 



*93 



28 

27 
70 
77 
79 
82 

83 

66 
97 

Enid . 1709 

Vivien . 1 33 

Grandmother 70 
The Window 1S4 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



219 



POEM. 

Elaine 



LINE. 

. 265 
321 



. En. Arden . 42 
. Tithonus 54 



Enid . 



1024 
1142 

. 856 



In Mem. lxv. 7 
Did. 0/ Idylls 17 



Enid 



5'4 



kindly man moving among his * 

mirthful he but in a stately*- • ~" Ds '„ 6 

e ver cared to better 1 toajrn *, . >%£%£, %, 

kinder. 

the girl Seem'd * unto Philip 

kindle. 
diai curls * into sunny rings ; 

kindled. 

voice in battle, and be * by it, 
wine and free companions * him, . 

kindlier. 

kindly. ,„ , . , 

Proudly turns he round and *, . L. of Burleigh 55 
made me * with my kind, . 
modest, *, all-accomplish d, . 

kindly-hearted. 
So spake the *-* Earl, . 

*/W««J- 
1 could trust Your k. . 

ing ancient * on thy pain, 
in ft than in love, . . •,',;; "r'laine ' w 

faded love, Or ordeal by * ; . 

kindred. 
Grate her harsh * in the grass : 
Thy * with the great of old . 
craft of * and the Godless hosts 

kine. 
browsed by deep-udder' d ft. 
couch'd at case, The white * 

ting. , _ 

Cive the warrior*", of old. . To the Queen 4 

5r7have no such conchas thine, . ^f r>) ,^ 
k „f them all would carp- me, ■ The Mi rmau A , 
Reign thou apart, a quiet *, . Pal. «f * n *« 

stay'd the Ausoman * to hear . ■ 

S^heard^^w^heye^.^^.;;' 
hearts Of captains and of /.i. . • ■ ' 

with one arm about her *. . • • ' 

took it, and have worn it, like \* -M * ****** % 
not meet, Sir A', to leave thee thus, 
back slow to the wounded A. • 
if a * demand An act unprintable 
A" is sick, and knows not what he does. 11 
reasure-housc of mighty * s, » 

Authority forgets a dying*. • 

lightly went the other to the A . . 
sigh'd 1 the A', Muttering and murmuring .. 
Put forth their hands, and took the A , 11 
like a shatter' d column lay the A ; 
the eyes of ladies and ol * J. 
came again together on the* 
cam ken from the* 

It little pi ifits that an idle*. 
1 • old portraits of old k s, 
11, .he* reposing keeps. . 

He must have been a jovial *. . " 
I'll these the* awoke, . " 

. 1UI „ |,e, nor U. ' You m„h harc,von etc 
I « and crown the ft Slept down, Beggar MautS 

i k and Vivat Rex ! ■ ' »""' "/>'" ' » 

■ s Who laid about them Prmcev.Pro. 3° 



LINE, 
i. 112 
. 117 



To the Queen 20 

Locks ley II. 85 

Vivien . 756 



, 561 

. Princess, iv. 107 
. In Mem. lxxiii. 8 
. Guinevere . 424 

. Gardener's D. 45 
In Mem. xciv. 15-51 



in the imperial palace found the *. Princess, 
without a star, Not like a *. . " 

show'd the late-writ letters of the *. 
' lfthc*,'hesaid, ' Had given us letters," 
The * would bear him out ; ■ " 

when the k Kiss'd her pale cheek . « 

'Our* expects- was there no precontract, 
kept her state, and left the drunken * " 
tumult and the ks Were shadows : 11 
old Us Began to wag their baldness » 

' A', you are free ! • • ■ 

[thus the K RoarM) . • 

Found the gray * t at parte : 

' Not war, if possible, O *, . 

I hold her, ft, '1 rue woman : 

with the old * across the lawns . 

tale of love In the old ks ears, . 

a cry As if to greet the * ; . • 

"hen took the ft His three broad sons ; ., 

Hungry' for honour, angry for hi. ft. 

•Hoys!' shriek'd the old *, 

told the * that 1 was pledged . 

Upon a kS right hand in thunder-storms „ 

the spindling *, This Gama . •' 

Thus the hard old * . • • 
thought on all the wrathful * had 
A', camp and college turned to . 

* in bitter scorn Drew from my neck 
small k moved beyond his wont. . 
Before these ks we embrace you . 
brother, help ; speak to the * 
tears FollcVd : the * replied not. 

* her father charm'd Her wounded 
ft is scared, the sold.er will not fight, 
city-roar that hails Premier or ft / 
plaVd at counsellors and ks, . In Mi /». ixu. |3 
shadow on the blaze of** . • xcv £ } 

barking for the thrones of ft s ; . ■ - 

loyal passion for our. temperate Vs, « f/ .^ > 
reverenced his conscience as his * , Dt&Jt J'b 1 



. 180 
ii. 244 
iii. 191 

- 213 
iv. 542 
v. 17 

. 23 

• 33 
. no 
. 120 

• I? fi 

. 220 

■ 231 
. 239 
. 258 
. 3 C 4 

• 318 

■ 342 
. 4=9 

• 43 fi 
. 450 

. 462 

■ 467 



VL 



Con. 



93 
248 
276 
2S6 
292 
3=5 

60 
102 



40 
65-112 

• 95 

• 97 
. 101 
. 121 
. 147 

• 178 
. 206 
. 221 



AudlyCt. . 
Ed. Morris. 

tes 
Day-Din. . 



35 

M- 

I 

4', 

59 

60 

149 

24 



strait this wild* 

my good father thought a ft 1 *; • 
lw the * ; he took thi 
he kt letter, snow'd 
In thil report, this answer 

I the rough *, . 



goingtothe"*. Hemade this . Enid 
ft himself should please 1 o cleanse 
ft Mused for a Utile on his plea, . 
Forgetful of his promise to the ft . 
these things he told the ft. • 
good ft gave order to let blow . 
not mindful of Ins face In the*, . 
were she the daughter of a*, . 
I n the great battle fighting for the ft. 
this was in the garden of a * ; . 
children of the* in cloth 01 

mouthpiece of our A' to Doorm . 
(The A" is close behind me) . 
hear the judgment of the A. . 
hears the judgment of the AofA 
in the A""* own ear Speak what has 
mild face of the blameless A, . 
A' himself Advanced to greet them 
So spake the A ; low bow d the Prince 
A"/own leech to look int.. his hurt 
A' went forth an. I cast his eves . 
to guard the justice of the A : 
fiehtine for the blameless K. ■ . 

!?Halgazed upon her blankly . Vpnen 
.A 11 

Had built the Jfhisl 

f*/ loving in pupillage . 
lived a* in th m East, 

A' impaled him for his piracy ; 
That carry Mm in castles, • • ' 
a wizard who might teach the A . 
promi 1 '^ k "»* K ' vcn ' 

lunced a dismal sentence, 

like a*, not ' " ll j V 

by force they dragg'd him to the A. • 
taught the if to charm the Queen 

e A", who wrought the charm, " 



32 
38 

■ 41 

• 50 
. 151 

■ 152 
. 192 
. 229 

• 596 
. 656 
. 664 

1644 
J645 
1647 
1648 
1656 
j66o 
1726 
1768 
177' 
1780 
1782, 1804 
1818 

. 20 

• 2+ 
. 367 

• 405 
. 4W 

• 427 

• 43 1 

• 43" 

• 440 
. 4 13 
■ 490 

• 49" 

• 493 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 

K Made proffer of the league . Vivien 
holy k, whose hymns Are chanted 11 

she took him for the K ; . . u 

blameless A' and stainless man?' ti 

good k means to blind himself, . u 

were he not crown" d/&, coward and fool.' u 
true and tender ! O my liege and kl ?/ 
the court, the k, dark in your light, u 
ere the people chose him for their k, Elaine 
two brothers, one a k, had met . n 

he, that once was k> had on a crown ti 
'lo, thou likewise shalt be k.' . m 

when a k, he had the gems Pluck'd m 
are the kingdom's not the k's — . u 

Lancelot, where he stood beside the AT. u 
Sir K, mine ancient wound is hardly ir 
K Glanced first at him, then her, n 

pastime now the trustful k is gone ! ' w 
the k Would listen smiling .. . m 

a k who honours his own word . n 

our true k Will then allow your . ii 

chief of those After the k, ir 

castle Gurnion where the glorious K if 
beheld the K Charge at the head ti 

the A', However mild he seems at home, n 
The dread Pendragon, Britain's k of k's, ir 
Until they found the clear-faced K, n 
the last diamond of the nameless k. ir 
K, duke, earl, Count, baron — . m 

k's of desolate isles, ... n 

knights and k's, there breathes not one ti 
Wroth at the k's command to sally forth h 
banquet, and concourse of knights andk's. it 
ridd'n away to die?' So fear'd the A", ir 
when the K demanded how she knew, m 
hide his name From all men, ev'n the k, w 
Surely his k and most familiar friend ir 
Down on the great K's couch, . tt 

O loyal nephew of our noble AT", . 11 

Why slight your K, And lose the quest ir 
'Right was the Kl our Lancelot! n 

there told the K What the K knew u 
The seldom-frowning K frown' d . it 

Obedience is the courtesy due to k's.' ir 
Some read the K's face, some the Queen's n 
the diamond sent you by the K :' tr 

all the tale Of K and Prince, . n 

Until we found the palace of the k. u 
the AT will know me and my love, ti 

come to take the K to fairy land? n 

babbled of the K, the A' Came . u 

Low in the dust of half-forgotten k's t n 
* Fair she was, my K, . . . ?r 

Why did the AT dwell on my name u 

fair, my child, As a k's son . . n 

nearest to the King, His nephew, Guinevere 
chill' d the popular praises of the K w 

reverencing k's blood in a bad man, n 

he was answer'd softly by the K . n 

Beside the placid breathings of the AT", m 
the clear face of the guileless K, . 11 

Before the people and our Lord the K* n 
(When the good K should not be there) u 
K Was waging war on Lancelot . n 

people and the K Must hate me . if 

your sorrows with our lord the Ks, if 

the Ks grief For his own self, . n 

the good K and his wicked Queen ti 

■were I such a K with such a Queen, 11 
were I such a ATit could not be.' . n 

What canst thou know of K's . 11 

K As well-nigh more than man, . n 

by miracle was approven£.* . if 

Lancelot or our Lord the K?' . tr 

the K In open battle or the tilting-field it 
Sir Lancelot's, were as noble as the k's, » 
crown'd the state pavilion of the K, i» 

first she saw the K Ride toward her it 
on a sudden a cry, ' the AV . tr 

her face a darkness from the K ; . if 

but tho* changed the K's. . . if 



495 
615 

625 

628 

632 

638 

640 

724 

35 

40 

46 

56 

57 

60 

86 
94 
95 
102 
116 
144 
152 
184 
293 
3°3 
310 
423 
43i 
443 
463 
526 
539 
559 
561 
567 
574 
580 

59° 

607 

649 

651 

662 

702 

711 

714 

723 

817 

820 

1038-45 

1052 

1250 

1253 

1328 

1365 

1393 

1400 

10 

14 

38 

45 

69 

85 

92 

97 
'53 
"■55 
189 
194 
207 
208 
210 
226 
284 
294 
324 
329 
349 
396 
400 
408 
414 
418 



POEM. LINE. 

spared to lift his hand against the K. Guinevere . 434 
that 1 the K should greatly care to live ; ti . 449 

I was first of all the k's who drew 11 . 457 

swear To reverence the K . ir . 465 

and their conscience as their K, . 11 . 466 

K's waste hearth and aching heart ti . 520 

nay, they never were the K's. . ti . 548 

They summon me their K to lead ti . 566 

K's breath wander o'er her neck, . n . 576 

moony vapour rolling round the A", ir . 595 

Gone, my lord the K, . ir 609 

he, the K, Call' d me polluted : . 11 . 612 

blessed be the K , who hath forgiven 11 . 627 

none Will tell the K 1 love him . ti . 644 

vast design and purpose of the K. tr . 662 

wrought the ruin of my lord the AV 11 . 681 

that long-buried body of the k, . Aylmer's F. 3 
from the midriff of a prostrate k — 11 . 16 

voice that calls Doom upon k's, . 11 . 742 

statues, k or saint, or founder fell. Sea Dreams 217 
Brideof theheir ofthe k'sv{ thesea IV. to Alexan. 28 
The K is happy In child and wife ; Tlie Victim . 25 
The K was hunting in the wild . ri -31 

The K return'd from out the wild ti . 43 

The K bent low, with hand on brow, m . 57 

The K was shaken with holy fear ; 11 . 61 

K of the East altho' he seem, . Lucretius . 133 
struck the dateless doom of k's . 11 . 233 

I '11 be the A' of the Queen ofthe wrens The Window 84 
The fire-crown 'd k of the wrens , pi . 151 

flit like the k of the wrens . . 11 . 159 

king-born. 

k-b, A shepherd all thy life but yet k-b, QZnone . 125 

kingcup. 
The gold-eyed k's fine . . . A Dirge . 36 

kingdom. 
divided quite The k of her thought Pal. of Art 228 
But thou, while k's overset, . . Talking O.. 257 
A k topples over with a shriek : Princess, Con. 62 
are the k's not the king's — . . Elaine . 60 

Until it came a k's curse with thee^ — Guinevere . 546 

King-like. 
K-l, wears the crown : ' Of old sat Freedom? etc. 16 

kinship. 
A distant k to the gracious blood . Aylmer's F. 62 

kinsman. 

With many kins-men gay, . . Will Water. 90 

k thou to death and trance . . In Mem. lxx. 1 

k left him watcher o'er his wife . Vivien . 536 

His k travelling on his own affair n . . 567 

My lady's Indian k unannounced . Aylmer's F. 190 

' Good ! my lady's k ! good ! ' . 11 . 198 

Once with this k, ah so long ago, . ti . 206 

My lady's Indian k rushing in, . 11 . 593 

kirtle. 

blood Was sprinkled on your k . Princess, ii. 255 

kiss (s.) 
kiss sweet k y es, and speak sweet words: Sea-Fairies^ 
fill my glass : give me one k: . Miller's D. 17 
The k, The woven arms, 11 . 231 

once he drew With one long k . Fatima . 20 
quick-falling dew Of fruitful k'es, OSuone . 201 

Seal'd it with k'es ? n . 230 

wild£,when fresh from war's alarms, D. of F. Worn. 149 
k he gave me, ere I fell, . . 11 235 

worth a hundred //^press'd on lips Gardener 'sD '.149 
k'es, where the heart on one wild leap 11 . 254 
Her k'es were so close and kind, . Talking O. 169 
I would have paid her k for k, h . 195 

that last k, which never was the last, Love andDutyb$ 
His own are pouted to a k: . . Day-Dm. . 51 
A touch, a k ! the charm was snapt. n . 133 

O love, for such another k ; * . 11 . 174 

' O happy k, that woke thy sleep V 11 . 183 

' O love, thy k would wake the dead ! ' 11 . 184 

And evermore a costly k . . u . 251 

A sleep by k'es undissolved, . 11 . 263 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

I never felt the k oflove . . Sir Galahad 19 
e one k to your mother dear Lady Clare 49 
here's a /' for my mother dear, . » • 53 

waste his whole heart in one It Sir L. andQ. G. 44 
little maid That ever crow'd for /Vs.' Princess, ii. 261 
I )car as remember'd ties after death, 11 iv. 36 
her mother shore the tress With ties, 11 vi. 98 
glance and smile, and clasp and k, In Mem. lxxxiii. 7 
every ft of toothed wheels, . . ti cxvi. 11 

She took the k sedately . . Maud, I. xii. 14 

my Maud by that long lover's ti, . 11 xviii. 58 
Mixt with ties sweeter sweeter . t< II. iv. 9 
I am silent then And ask noi;' . Vivien . 103 

Win! by this ti you will : . . Elaine . 152 
rosy-kindled with her brother's k — it . 392 

sad k by day by night rcnew'd . En. Arden . 161 
Never : no father's ti for me — . n . 791 

t hat one* Was Leolin's one strong rival Ayhuer'sF. 556 
ties balmier than half-opening buds Titlionus . 59 
a doubt will only come for a ti, . The Kinglet 21 
ran To greet him with a k . Lucretius . 7 

tiiss (verb.) 
When I would k thy hand, . . Madeline . 31 
If my lips should dare to k . n -43 

1 kisses, and speak sweet words : Sea-Fairies^ 
would k them often under the sea, The Merma/115-34 
ti them again till they kiss'd me . 11 10_ 35 

You'll ti me, my own mother, . May Queen, ii. 34 
have been to blame. A' me, my children.' Dora 159 

k him once for me. . . . Talking 0. 240 
ti him twice and thrice for me, . 11 , 241 
That have no lips to ti, . 11 . 242 

1 k it twice, I k it thrice, 11 . 253 
Go to him : it is thy duty : k him : Locksley H. 52 
He stoops — to k her — on his knee. JJay-Dm. . 130 
That I might h those eyes awake I " . 240 
I k the lips 1 once have kiss'd ; . Will Water. 37 
And k again with tears ! , . Princess, i. 254 
He reddens what he ties : . . 11 v. 158 
k her : take her hand, she weeps : 11 vi. 208 
K and be friends, like children . 11 . 271 
seem to k me ere I die ... 11 vii. 135 
Farewell, we k, and they are gone. In Mem. Con. 92 
k the tender little thumb, . . Enid . . 395 
tread me down And I will * you for it ;' Vivien 78 
down the silken thread to It each other 11 305 
ti the child That does the ta.sk . Elaine . 824 
let us in, tho' late, to It his feet ! . Guinevere . 176 
but one, To /• it night and day . The Kinglet 4 
'Then It it, love, and put it by : . 11 23, 41 

thee To * thy Mavors, . Lucretius . 82 

id twine and clasp and k, A',*, Tlie Window^ 

a flower, a flower to It, K, It, . 11 . 31 

kissed. 
winds of dawn have It, . . . Ode to Mem. 14 
kiss them again till they It me . The Merman 35 
* by all who would list, . The Mermaid 41 
I It away before they fell. . . Miller s I). . i 5 j 
I k his eyelids into rest : . . The Sisters. 19 

tirls all* Beneath the sacred bush The Epic . 2 
women It F.ach other, . Dora . . 125 
ck. and* him many times, n . . 160 
e*, swore faith, . Ed. Morris . 114 
1 1 ne she found, Talking O. . 1 59 
She It me once again, ... 11 , 168 

■ ct face He It, Two Voices. 254 
1 the lips I once have*; . Will W,,: 
turn, I .ml It h cr where she stood : Lady Clare 82 
And It a,-... 11 with tears. . . Pril 

• le check . « ii. 245 

v His forehead . 11 

11 
k it : then— 'All good . 1. 

1 > hand, . . . Maud, I 

»» I "ii either cheek, Enid . . 517 

ind * her, an. I th> ■■. , . 825 

K the white star in runt 11 

I /• her climbing 11 1609 

k hei »iiu all pureucss, brulucr-likc, 11 . 17 3a 



POEM. LINE. 


Vivien . 


68 


Elaine 


7S 

3S8 


" 


835 


„' 


1144 
11C6 


Guinevere 


1399 
124 


En. A rdeu 


228 


Ayltner's F 


233 
430 


" 


555 



all her length and k his feet, . 

/■ them, crying. 'Trample me, 

/.'her, and Sir Lancelot hisown "hand, Elaine 

k the hand to which he gave, 

task assign'd, he k her face. . 

And ti her quiet brows, 

wcllnigh k her feet For loyal awe 

/' me saying thou art fair 

There k, and parted weeping : 

k his wonder-stricken little ones ; . 

* him in his cot 

as they /reach other In darkness, . 

look'd so sweet, he k her tenderly, 

could hear the lips that/" Whispering Titlionus . 60 

And a fear to be /■ away.' . . The Kinglet 22 

O Ringlet, 1 k you night and day . 11 . 26 

if you k her feet a thousand years, . Coquette, ii. 13 

Clasp'd, k him, wailed : . . Lucretius . 276 

kissing'. 
K the rose she gave me o'er and o'er, Gardener' sD. 172 
satisfy my soul with k her : . . Princess, v. 100 
A" his vows upon it like a knight. . Aylmer's F. 472 

kitchen. 
hall must also serve For k, . . Enid . . 391 

£»'r>(bird.) 
A' and kestrel, wolf and wolf kin, . Boadicea . 15 

kite (toy.) 
Flung ball, flew/-, and raced thcpurp]c/V7>K-«r,ii.230 
Had tost his ball and flown his /', . Aylmer's F. 84 

kith and kin. 
in the field were Lancelot's /• a k, . Elaine . 463 
drave his^rtX- And all the Table Round 11 . . 497 
k a k, not knowing, set upon him ; « 597 

all his k a k Clave to him, . . Guinez'ere . 436 

kitten. 
laugh As those that watch a ti ; . Vivien . 33 

kittenlike. 
A'heroH'dAndpaw'dabouthcrsandal./ , r;'«f«j,iii. 165 

kittle. 
ater meii mayhap wi' 'is /■ o' steam A^. Parmer. 61 

kfiMve. 
neither /■ nor clown Shall hold ' You might have won' 1 1 
Shakespeare's curse on clown and k n .27 

A "s are men That lute and flute . Princess, iv. 110 

knaw (know. ) 
Doctors, they k's nowt, . . A'. Farmer. 5 

Thof a tis I nallus vcatcd wi' Squoire 11 .15 

tha tis she laaid it to mea. . . 11 .21 

Do godamoighty /• what a's doing 11 . 45 

k's what I bean to Squoire . n .55 

a k's naw moor nor a floy ; . . n .67 

knaw'd (knew. ) 
An' I nivcr ti what a mean'd . N. Farmer. 19 

knee. 
Low on her tis herself she cast, Mariana in the S. 27 
took with care, and kneeling on one /•, M. d'Arthurvj^ 
see My grandchild on my k's . Dora . .11 
set up betwixt his grandsire's tis, . n . . 128 
with his boy Betwixt his iis. Walk, te the M. 33 
Hail, hidden to the k's in fern, . Talking O. 29 
hide thy knotted k's in fern, . . n -93 

mu flic round thy k's with fern . 11 . 149 

round These knotted k's of mine, . ■> . 158 

shower d the rippled ringlets to her /• ; Godiva . 47 
upon the k's of men . . Two Voices 323 
flask lietween his/'".c, half-drained ; Day-lhn. . 46 
He stoops — to kiss her — on his /•. » . 130 

k's are bow'd in crypt and shrine : SirGalahadit 
Cheek by jowl, and *by ki I Sin 84 

held her round thi t his waist, Pruuiss, it 349 

Hi. 177 
iv. 448 
> 
v. 5-15 
vi. 75 
. I ) 



lent my /■ desire 10 kneel, 
On one /• Kneeling, I gave it, 
sees bis brood about thy /■; . 
Sel his child upon her /• — 
Knell "ii one * the child on one — 
Trail d himself up on one k : 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

takes the children on his k, . . In Mem. lxv. n 
At one dear k we proffer'd vows, . n lxxviii. 13 
Had babbled ' Uncle ' on my k; . 11 lxxxiii. 13 
I that danced her on my k, . v Con. 45 

toil of heart and k's and hands, . Ode on Well. 212 
one about whose patriarchal k . tt . 236 

riveting a helmet on his k, . . JE?iid . . 268 
on her k's, Who knows ? another gift n . . 820 
slided up his k and sat, . . Vivien . 88 

Across her neck and bosom to her k, 11 . 106 

bow'd black k's Of homage, ?r . 427 

half-falling from his k's, Half-nestled n . 753 

Sat on his k, stroked his gray face Elaine . 745 
Full sharply smote his k's, and smiled Guinevere 48 
God bless him, he shall sit upon my HsEn. Arden 197 
rosy, with his babe across his k's; w . 747 

Hers, yet not his upon the father's k, 11 . 761 

knelt, but that his k's Were feeble, 11 . 779 

rotatory thumbs on silken k's, . Aylmer*s F. 200 
scoundrel in the supple-sliding k.' Sea Dreams 164 
little babes about thy k: ' Lady, let the rolling,' etc. 6 
He stay'd his arms upon his k . The Victim 58 

knee-deep. 
seem'd k-d in mountain grass, Mariana in the S. 42 
Full k-d lies the winter snow, . D. oftJie 0. Year 1 

kneel. 
you do ill to k to me. . . . StS. Stylites 131 
in your looking you may k to God. n . 139 

lent my knee desire to k, . . Princess, iii. 177 

kneeled. 
A red-cross knight for ever k L. ofSJiallot, iii. 6 

kneeler. 
I loved you like this k, . . Princess, iv. 277 

kneeling, 
k, with one arm about her king, D. o/F. TVom. 270 
took with care, and k on one knee, M. d' Arthur 173 
On one knee K, I gave it, . . Princess, iv. 449 
And offer' d you it k : . . . Vivien. . 125 
Lancelot k utter' d, 'Queen, . Elaine 1173 

knell. 
every hoof a k to my desires, . Princess, iv.i$6 
the silver k Of twelve sweet hours Maud, I. xviii.64 
a deeper k in the heart be knoll'd ; Ode on Well. 59 

knelt. 
as he £ beside my bed. . . . MayQ7teeu.iu.16 
shaken with her sobs Melissa k ; . Princess, iv. 271 
Florian k, and ' Come' he whisper' d. 11 v. 60 

K on one knee — the child on one — " vi. 75 

cried, or k, or pray'd to me, . . Enid . 1692 

camels k Unbidden, . . _ . Vivien . 425 

k Full lowly by the corners of his bed, Elaine . 822 
have/t, but that his knees Were feeble En. Arden jjq 

knew. 
7c the seasons when to take Occasion To the Queen 30 
Dreaming, she k it was a dream : Mariana in the S. 49 
■who that k him could forget . Miller's D. 3 

I k your taper far away, 11 . 109 

k you could not look but well ; . u . 150 

Dear eyes, since first I k them well. 11 . 222 

I k the flowers, I k the leaves, I k D. o/F. Worn. 73 
Touch'd ; and I /^ no more.' . 11 116 

When she made pause I k not . n . 169 

k that Love can vanquish Death, . ir . 269 

I k your brother : his mute dust . To J. S. . 29 
I k an old wife lean and poor, . The Goose . 1 
k your gift that way At college : . The Epic . 24 
almost ere I k mine own intent, . Garde7ier > sD.i$$ 
tho' I knew it was mine own, . ir . 222 

beheld her ere she k my heart, . tr . 270 

You k my word was law, . . Dora . . 96 
from his father's vats, Prime, which I k ; Audley Ct.2j 
set the words and added names I k. 11 . 60 

built When men k how to build, . Ed. Morris . 7 
k the names, Long learned names tr . 16 

since I k the right And did it ; Love and Duty 29 
the great Achilles, whom we fc. , Ulysses . 64 



POEM, LINE. 

Locksley H. 70 



Godiva 
Two Voices 



Princess, 



love her, as I k her, kind ? . 

Mother-Age (for mine I k not) 

And she, that k not, pass'd : 

place he k forgetteth him.' . 

A shadow on the graves I k, 

1 I k you at the first : 

I never k my father, but she says 

knowing, saying not she k; . 

since I k No rock so hard 

stammer'd that I k him — could have wish'di 

alien lips, And k not what they meant ; 1 

She, question'd if she k us men, . 1 

then, demanded if her mother k, . 1 

came these wolves ; they k her : . 1 

We k not your ungracious laws, . 1 

nor k There dwelt an iron nature . 1 

nor cared Nor k it, clamouring on, t 

had been wedded wife, I k mankind, t 

Nor k what eye was on me, . 

call her Ida tho' I k her not, . 

I k not where I was : . 

if you be that Ida whom I k, 

she k it, she had fail'd . 

never k the sacred dust : 

never k the summer woods : . 

I know not : one indeed I k . 

soften'd, and he k not why ; . 

can I doubt, who /&thee keen 

k that the death-white curtain meant Maud, I. xiv. 37 

O, if she k it, To know her beauty ti xvi. 

He k the man; the colt would fetch The Brook . 

if you k her in her English daySj 



185 

73 

264 

272 

ii. 285 

iii. 66 

. 132 

• 1.37 
. 190 

iv. 102 
. 212 
. 214 

• 30 2 
. 380 

vi. 33 

• 134 
..* 3°7 



118 
132 



In Mem. xxi. 



1 xxvn. 
1 xcv. 

cix. 

cxii. 



Ode on Well. 



Lt. Brigade 
Etiid 



Elai7ie 



good gray head which all men k, 

He k their voices of old 

Nor k we well what pleased us most, The Daisy . 

k Some one had blunder'd. . 

k him fierce and turbulent 

the goodly places that she k; 

she k That all was bright : . 

suddenly she k it and rejoiced, 

Enid all abash'd she k not why, 

k her sitting sad and solitary. 

surely k my lord was dead,' . 

k this Earl, when I myself Was half 

Because I k my deeds were known, 

k the range of all their arts, . . Vivien 

Bard, and k the starry heavens 

then you drank And k no more, 

as tho* you k this cursed charm, 

either slept, nor k of other there 

she that k not ev'n his name ? 

when none k from whence he came, 

Sir Lancelot k there lived a knight 1 

sally forth In quest of whom hek not, 1 

King demanded how she k, . . 1 

' He won.' 'I k it,' she said. . 1 

talk'd, Meseem'd, of what they k not ; 1 

k you what all others know, . . 1 

told the King What the King k . t 

k right well What the rough sickness 11 

what this meant She k not, . . t 

Lancelot k the little clinking sound t 

k that she was looking at him. . t 

k the Prince tho' marr'd with dust, G7ti7ievere 

no man k from whence he came ; . tr 

indeed I k Of no more subtle martef 11 

loved Enoch ; tho' she£ it not, . En. Arden 

he k the man and valued him, . 11 

k her, as a horseman knows his horse — u 

had loved her longer than she k, . 11 

she k that she was bound — . . ?f 

folk that k not their own minds . 11 

beside her path, She k not whence ; 11 

whisper on her ear, She k not what ; t» 

Philip thought he k: . . ti 

tho' he k not wherefore, started up 11 

making signs They k not what : . n 

a tavern which of old he k, . . v 

'Know him?' she said ' I£him far away. 11 

dead, Who hardly k me living . u 

one they k — Raw from the nursery — Aylmer*s F. 



224 
35 
63 
25 



• 447 
. 646 
■ 6S7 
. 687 

• 765 
]"i3i 
1569 
1642 
1706 

2 3 

25 

126 

285 

588 

29 

34 

400 

560 

574 
619 
672 
677 
703 



977 

979 

37 

287 

473 
43 
121 
136 
452 
459 
475' 
5ii 
512 
5i6 

617 
642 
692 
847 
S90 
253 



TEX.VySO.Y'S WORKS. 



ii . 231 

Sir Galahad 6 1 
79 



POEM. LINE. 

might be entangled ere she k. . Aylmer's F. 272 

he had powers, he k it : . . 11 

■': he wherefore he hud made the cry ; 11 . 589 

all but those who k the living God — " . 637 

always with her, whom you also k. 11 . 711 

Poor souls, and k not what they did, n . 782 

I lost it, k him less ; . . . Sea Dreams 72 

In her strange dream, she k not why, n . 223 

on your forgiving him llcfore you k. n . 261 

k right well That Jenny had tript Grandmother 25 

■it 1 would not tell. . 11 .26 

who k what Jenny had been ! . 11 -35 

started, and spoke I scarce k how ; 11 . 43 

I k them all as babies, ... 11 .88 

the merry world was round, The Voyage 7 

that was mine, my dream, I k it — Lucretius . 43 

knife. 

tr with falsehood to the k, . Two Voices. 131 

with a k's haft hard against the board, Enid 1448 

with k in meat and wine in horn. . Vivien . 544 

The k uprising toward the blow, . The Victim. 71 

his dearest I ' rushed on the k. <> . 77 

drove the k into his side . . Lucretius . 271 

knight. 
The k's come riding two and two : L.o/Shalott,\i. 25 
She hath no loyal k and true, . 11 .26 

A red-cross k for everkneel'd . 11 iii. 6 

burgher, lord and dame, . 11 iv. 43 

All the k's at Camelot: . . n -50 

Sir Bedivere, the last ofall his k's, M. d' Arthur 7 

goodliest fellowship of famous k's . 11 .15 

f ancient men, Old k's, . 11 .48 

nor like a noble k : ... 11 . 75 

the latest-left ofall my k's, 11 . 124 

chance brought out a noble k. 
n k~ to me is given . 
just and faithful k of God ! . 

. k he ! we keep a chronicle . Princess, Pro. 27 
■ tales that dealt with k's . 
feudal k in silken masquerade, 

. 1 mr /*, and light your battle 
bold A started up 
and all the good k's maim'd. 
other than my own ideal k, . 
Gcraint, a k of Arthur's court, 
bandit carls, and caitiff k's . 
fifty k's rode with them, 

ay k in Arthur's hall.' 
ly, an I dwarf; . 
the k Had visor up, and show'd . 
toward the k, . 
1 me, O stranger /.•; . 

in the court : 
. 
be in field 
errant k's And ladies came, . 

i.e surprise, and thrice 
Enid was aware of tliree tall k's . 
said the second, ' yonder comes a k' 
h, and thought himself a k, 
•irt, who laid his lance 
f 1 1 the k ; . 

. ■ 1 1 >■ orm . 
1 '.• of Arthur's Table Round, 

ht him, ' Follow me, 
■ his life 
til the*' j, . 
aftcru , italwart k , 

The I: 

■ I 
them our enei 
' I n nlenoe 

d us . 
I of k's 

fl > my k, As all for 

I 
'■' ' 
this noble A' 

for, i, the maiden drcam'd, 



29 

. 227 

iv. 572 

11 v. 349 

11 vi. 224 

Dcd.of Idylls 6 

Enid . . i 

" • -35 
11 44, 1S02 

11 . . 118 
.1 . . 107 
11 . . 188 
11 . 200-6 
11 . . 286 
11 . . 370 
11 . . 406 
n . . 486 

• S4S 

• 556 

• 9°S 

• 975 
1091 
1623 
1628 
1634 
1641 
1655 
J763 

• 7 

• 332 
. 724 

• 53 

• 93 
. 109 

• "5 
141-87 

• "53 

• '57 

. 201 
. 208 
. 211 



Vivien 



Elaine 



I'OEM. LINE. 

ride to Camelot with this noble k : Elaine. 

disparagement Before the stranger k, 11 .' 275 

the great k, the darling of the court, 11 . 261 

if his own k cast him down, . . 11 . -13 

his k's are better men than he — . 11 . 314 

lived a k Not far from Camelot, . 11 . 400 

wrathful that a stranger k Should do 11 . 467 

bore a k of old repute to the earth 11 . 491 

all the k's His party, cried 'Advance 11 . 501 

k's of utmost North and West, . 11 . 523 

I our k thro' whom we won the day 11 . 528 

'■ So great a k as we have seen to-day — 11 . 532 

1 ide forth and find the k. . . 11 . 536 

k's and kings, there breathes not one 11 . 539 

since the k Came not to us, . . 11 . 542 

good k, but therewithal Sir Modred's 11 . 556 

banquet, and concourse ot k's and kings 11 . 561 

Albeit I know my k's fantastical, 11 . 592 

What of the k with the red sleeve? 11 . CiS 

Here was the k, and here he left 11 . 631 

dream'd my k the greatest* of all. 11 . 664 

that you love This greatest k . 11 . 666 

Where your great k is hidden, . 11 . 687 

King knew ' Sir Lancelot is the k.' 11 . 703 

k's at banquet twice or thrice . 11 . 732 

serviceable To noble k's in sickness 11 . 764 

fain were I to learn this k were whole, >• . 768 

Woke the sick k 11 . 815 

the great k in his mid-sickness . 11 . 874 

should your good k be poor . . 11 . 952 

In all quarrels will 1 be your A . 11 . 957 

the King Came girt with k's: . 1, 1254 

As thou art a k peerless.' . . i, 1275 

will be to your worship, as my /•, n 1317 

k's had laid her comely head . 11 1327 

the lusty and long-practised k, . 11 1351 

My /.-, the great Sir Lancelot of the 11 1364 

Pure, as you ever wish your k's to be. 11 1366 

profits me my name Of greatest A? 11 1404 

Alas for Arthur's greatest /.•, . 11 1409 
/.• of Arthur's noblest dealt in scorn; Guinevere 41 

said my father, and himself was k 11 . 232 

every /„• Had whatsoever meat . 11 . 262 

' Sir Lancelot, as became a noble k, 11 . 326 

If ever Lancelot, that most noble k, 11 . 343 

Reputed the best k and goodliest man, 11 . 379 

my right arm, The mightiest of my k's 11 . 427 

against the King Who made him k : 11 . 435 

but many a /.■ was slain ; u . 435 

following these my mightiest k's . 11 . 485 

miss the wonted number of my k's, 11 . 404 

White Horse and k's Once mine, 11 . 569 

Among his warring senses, to thy k's 11 . 633 

Kissing his vows upon it like a k. Aylmer's F. 472 

knighthood. 

I swear by truth and k that 1 gave Elaine 1289 

knighthood-errant. 

drew The k-e of this realm . . Guinevere . 458 

knightlike, 

k in his cap instead of casque, . Princess, iv. 577 

knightly. 

Full k without scorn ; . . . Guinevere . 40 

knit. 

I hold (hem exquisitely k, . . Talking O. 91 

A" land to land, and blowing havenward Golden 1 'eorjj 

I k a hundred others new : . « 234 

message /• below . In Mem. xii. 3 
k The generations each with each; nxxxix. 15 

k themselves for summer shadow, Aylmer's . 

knob. 

A man with k's and wires and vials Princess, Pro. 65 

knock'd. 
volume, all of songs, A'down to me, AudleyCt.. 57 

1 k and, bidden, enter'd ; . . Princess, iii. 114 

knoll. 

Oread haunt The k's of Ida. . CF.HOtu . 71 

about the Ht A dozeu angry model* J'ruiecss, J'rj. jj 



224 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

From k to k, where, couch' d at ease, In Mem. xciv. 14 
dusk revealed The k's once more . n -50 

Nor hoary k of ash and haw . it xcix. g 

on a little k beside it, stay'd . Enid . . 162 

and so gallop 'd up the k. 
on this little k, if anywhere, 
huddled here and there on mound and£, h 1651 

ks That dimpling died into each other AylmersF. 148 

knotted. 

a deeper knell in the heart be it; . Ode on Well. 59 

knelling. 

heavy clocks k the drowsy hours. . Gardener s £\i8o 

knot (s.) 
rusted nails fell from the k's . . Mariana . 3 

Hs that tangle human creeds, ' Clear-headed friend* 3 
I must gather k's of flowers, . Jllay Queen, i. n 

palms in cluster, k's of Paradise. . Locksley H. 160 
broke and buzz'd in k'soi talk ; . Princess, i. 132 
More soluble is this k, By gentleness tr v. 129 

look'd A k, beneath, of snakes, . Enid . . 325 
k's and loops and folds innumerable Elaine . 438 
felt the k Climb in her throat, . 11 . 736 

knot (verb.) 
as tight as I could k the noose ; . StS. Stylites 64 

knout. 
he ruled with rod or with k ? . Maud, I. iv. 47 

know. 
who may k Whether smile or frown Madeline . 11 
k's not what the curse may be, . L.ofShalott,\\.6 
night comes on that k's not morn, Mariana in the S.g^ 
I should k if it beat right, . . Miller's D. . 179 
I k He cometh quickly : . . Fatinia . 22 
this may be I k not, but I k . . CEnone . 262 
The first of those who k. . . Pal. of Art . 164 

k's not if it be thunder 11 . 281 

I k you, Clara Vere de Vere, L. C. V. de Vere 57 
You k so ill to deal with time . if .63 

I k not what was said ; . . May Queen, iii.34 

I k The blessed music went that way 11 . 41 

fields, and all of them I k. . tr . 50 

k not how, All those sharp fancies, D. ofF. Wont. 48 
I wrote I k not what. . . . To J. S. .57 
God &s : he has a mint of reasons : The Epic . 33 
sick, and k's not what he does. . M. d' Arthur 97 
I k not : but we sitting ... u Ep. 9 

.AT you not Such touches are but . Gardener's D. 17 
nor did they k Who sent it ; . . Dora . . 51 
k there has not been for these five years h . . 63 
never £ The troubles I have gone throM'tr . . 146 
bloody trench Where no one k's? . Audley Ct. . 42 
Nay, who k's ? he's here and there. Walk, to t/ieM.ig 
What k we of the secret of a man ? 11 . 94 

Heaven k's — as much within ; . Ed. Morris. 82 
recognise the fields I k; . .StS. Stylites 39 
k not well, For that the evil ones . n -95 

k I have some power with Heaven if . 141 

I k thy glittering face. if . 202 

James, — you^him, — old, but full . Golden Year 60 
I k That unto him who works, . n . 71 

sleep, and feed, and k not me. . Ulysses . 5 
but I k my words are wild, . . Locksley H. 173 
would have said, Thou canst not k,' Two Voices 43 
K I not Death ?the outward signs? 11 . 270 

He k's a baseness >n his blood . ti . 301 

something done, I k not where ; . if . 383 

* I see the end, and k the good.' . 11 . 432 

may not speak of what I k.' . . ti . 435 

Such hope, J k not fear; . . Sir Galahad 62 
hair Is gray before I k it. . . Will Water. 168 
We k not what we k. it . 178 

many-headed beast should k.' 1 You might have won,' 2.0 
will k If there be any faith in man.' Eady Clare 43 
Well I k, when I am gone, . . Vision of Sin 109 
For they k not what they mean. . if . 126 

k the hue Of that cap 11 . 141 

Madam — if I k your sex, n . 181 

k The shadow from the substance, Princess, i. . 8 



POEM. LINE. 

weird seizures, Heaven k's what : . Princess, i. 14 

they that k such things— I sought but n . 143 

and mere We /t not, — only this : . tr . 151 

we fell out I k not why, 11 . 249 
let us k The Princess Ida waited : if ii. 6 
answer'd, 'Then ye k the Prince?* 11 . 35 

1 k the substance when I see it. . 1 . 391 
fly, while yet you may ! My mother ^'.r: 11 Hi. 13 
Ishudder'd; ' and you k it.' . 11 .42 
she k's too, And she conceals it.' . 11 - 43 
calls her plagiarist ; I k not what : ti -78 
At no man's beck, but k ourself . 11 . 211 
I k the Prince, I prize his truth : . 11 . 216 
so far In high desire, they k not . n . 263 
yet we k Knowledge is knowledge, n . 298 
idle tears, I k not what they mean, it iv. 21 
* K you no song of your own land,' 11 . 66 
A* you no song, the true growth . tr . 132 
I — you k it — I will not boast : . it . 334 
We did not k the real light, it . 338 
k Your faces there in the crowd — 11 . 488 
'Tut, you k them not, the girls . it v. 144 
something may be done — I k not what — 11 . 219 
who k's ? we four may build some plan n . 221 
What k I of these things? 11 . 274 
blustering I k not what Of insolence 11 . 386 
whereas I k Your prowess, Arac, . 11 . 393 
name is yoked with children's, <£ herself. 11 . 408 
right ascension, Heaven k's what ; n vi. 240 
weight of gratitude, I k it ; . . 11 . 281 
k The woman's cause is man's : . if vii. 242 
'from earlier than I k, Immersed 11 . 292 
across the wild That no man k's. . 11 . 342 
madest man, he k's not why ; . InMe?n.Pro. 10 
Our wills are ours, we k not how ; 11 15 
We have but faith : we cannot k ; 11 . 21 
k no more than I who wrought . 11 vi. 17 
beckoning unto those they k; . n xiv. 8 
k's no more of transient form . if xvi. 7 
I k that this was Life, — . . 11 xxv. 1 
Half-dead to k that I shall die/ . ir xxxv. 16 
My paths are in the fields Ik . 11 xxxix. 31 
one that loves but k's not, . . it xli. 11 
truth from one that loves and k's ? ti .12 
(he k's not whence) A little flash, . it xliii. 7 
I shall k him when we meet : . it xlvi. 8 
Behold, we k not anything ; . . 11 liii. 13 
mean the breath : I k no more.' . M lv. 8 
howsoe'er I k thee, some . . ti lviii. 15 
Half jealous of she k's not what, . 11 lix. 7 
I k that in thy place of rest . . 11 Ixvi. 2 
then I k the mist is drawn it . 13 
Death's twin-brother, k's not Death, 11 lxvii. 3 
makes me sad I k not why, . .11 .11 
strive to paint The face Ik; . it Ixix. 3 
How k I what had need of thee, . it lxxii. 3 
k Thy likeness to the wise below, »r lxxiii. 7 
I k thee of what force thou art . it lxxviii. 3 
I k transplanted human worth . it Ixxxi. 11 
none could better k than I, . .11 lxxxiv. 37 
form by which I k Thy spirit . 11 xc. 5 
tell me, doubt is Devil-born. I£not: u xcv. 5 
She k's not what his greatness is ; h xcvi. 27 
She k's but matters of the house, .11 . 31 
he, he k's a thousand things. .11 32 
They k me not, but mourn with me. n xcviii. 20 
these are not the bells I k. . . if ciii. 8 
Let her k her place ; . .11 cxiii. 15 
crying, k's his father near ; . .11 exxiii. 20 
fling himself down? who k's? . Maud, I. i. . 9 
who k's ? we are ashes and dust .11 32 
I have heard, I k not whence, . ti . 67 
the fiend best k's whether woman 11 . 75 
I k it, and smile a hard-set smile, 11 iv. 20 
Who k's the ways of the world, it -44 
doze Long since, I k not where? . 11 vii. 2 
I k the way she went ... if xii. 21 
To k her beauty might half undo it it xvi. 19 
I k it the one bright thing to save it . 20 
I k He has plotted against me . tr xix. 79 
Now I k her but in two, . . 11 xx. 15 



T£.YXVSOX'S WORK'S. 



22; 



ror.M. line. 
I k her own rose-garden, . . Maud, I. XX. 41 
ghastly Wraith of one that I k; . 11 II. i. 32 

hearts that A not how to forgive : . ir . 44 

k Is a juggle born of ihc brain? . 11 ii. 41 

Who ks if he be dead? " . 71 

<fc not whether he came in the Hanover » v. 59 

I A- that he lies and listens mute .11 .60 

I k where a garden grows ; . . n .72 

What A- we greater than the soul ? Ode on Well. 265 
me: We k him now:. . Ded. 0/ Idylls 15 



r sharply that she should not k. Enid 

Arms? truth ! I /.• not : . . ir 

rage?truth. good truth, I£not,<i 
k Where 1 can light on arms, . » 
be he dead I A- not, . . .11 
Mori 1 whether 1 be very base . 11 
this I /.• That whatsoever evil . » 
tell me if you A- it.' ...» 
I k it : your good gift, . 11 

1 my dear child is set forth " 
' another giftof the high I 
] ■ . A' When men of mark . 11 

1 k's, too much of palaces ! n 
victual for these men, and let Us/.'. 11 
a little happier : let me k it : .11 

' men may bicker . . 11 
k it — pall'd — For 1 A- men : 11 
'Yea, my lord, 1 k Your wish . » 
in a far land and he k's it not, . 11 
hardly /• the tender rhyme . . Vivien 
K well that Envy calls you . . 11 
k I that Fame is half-disfame . u 
:nsel ; let me k it at once : » 
I 1 k. Set up the charge you /-, 11 

answer' d Merlin ' Nay, 1 X- the tale. 11 

wrong'd his bride. I k the talc. 11 
whisper'd in the corner? do you k it?' 11 
answer'd sadly, ' Yea I k it. . . >• 

man at all, who k's and winks? . u 
I /-the Table Round, my friends of old ; 11 
I will not let her /• : . . 11 

believe you then, Who k's ? once more. <• 
' S 1. lord,' she -aid, 'you k it.' . Elaine 
yours, Not Arthur's, as you k, . 11 

k right well, how mecksoe'er he seem, » 
Hereafter you shall k me — . . 11 

you k Of Arthur's glorious wars.' 11 

'Fair lord, whose name I A- not — » 

my wont, as those, who /• me, A:' 11 

That those who k should k you.' . 11 

to k well I am not great : . . 11 

his wont, as we, that k him, /.-.' . n 

Albeit I k my knights fantastical o 

your pardon ! lo, you k it ! . . 11 

I /. not if 1 k what true love is, 

But if I A 11 . ( 73 

knew you what all others k . . 11 . ( 77 

k full well Where your great knight 11 . 686 

1 -.hall k each other.' ti . 697 

by mine head she k's his hiding-place.' 11 . 710 

fou my lord's name is Lancelot? ' u . 793 

yea I k it of mine own self: n . 946 

I /■ not which is sweeter, no, not I. 11 1003-9 

dwell upon a word we /-■ 11 1021 

till the word we * so well . . » 1022 

I a wonder and wc k not why, 11 1023 

, will k me and my love, . 11 1052 

, for all the people k it, . 11 1075 

I k What tho 1 hast been in battle. 11 1348 

1 id as yet, and gentle, as I k* » 1377 

if iXdit? nay, Who k's t . 11 1413 

knowing nothing ks but to obey, Guinevere . 184 

s it, and my tears have brought 11 . 200 

in'st thou k of Kings . 11 . 226 

it I k: the land was full . 11 . 230 

Howbcit I /■, if ancient prophecies 11 . 446 

the wife Whom he k's false, abide 11 . 511 

and /■ I am thine husband — . 11 . 561 

I k not what mysterious doom. . 11 . 571 

Ye k mc then, that wicked one, . '• . I 1 

a^ a horseman k's liia horse — . En. Ardcit . 136 



. 196 



• 4=1 
. 443 

. 468 

. 688 
. 7=7 

. S.-i 
1 '77 
1085 
1089 
IlC6 

"73 
1180 
1267 
1346 

• =33 

• 317 

• 354 

• 5°3 
. 552 
. 563 
. 580 
. 622 

• 623 
. 630 
. 665 
. 672 
■ 772 
. 81 
. .36 

• "55 
. 192 
. 2S4 

• 359 
. 364 

• 367 

• 45o 

• 474 

• 59= 
. 666 



StS.Stylites 27 
11 
•1 . 82 



LINE. 

be back, my girl, before you k it.' En. Arden . 193 
for all your wisdom well k 1 . . n .211 

k his babes were running wild . 11 . 303 
of an avenue, Going we k not where : 11 

I k not why — Their voices make me v . 393 

k not when it first came there, . 11 . 398 
I /.' that it will out at last. ■• 

Perhaps you /'what I would have you /' — » . 406 

loved you longer than you A: . 11 . 418 

aught of what he cared to /•. . . 11 . 653 

face again And A- that she is happy.' 11 . 7:0 
Not to tell her, never to let her k. 11 787-99 

not speak to these? They k me not, 11 . 790 

Lord has call'd me she shall k, . 11 . £11 

k Enoch Arden of this town?' . 11 . 846 

'A* him?' she said ' I knew him . 11 . 847 
k you that I am he Who married — » 

fro, We k not wherefore j . Aylmer's F. 74 

I k not, for he spoke not, . . » . 213 

I A- not whence at first, . . 11 . 223 

rAylmerX That great pock-pittcn 11 . 255 

girl and boy, Sir, k their differences !' n . 274 
Ik her: the worst thought she has 11 

let them A themselves betrayed . 11 . 524 

came To k him more, I lost it, Sea Dreams 72 
/. for a truth, There's none of them Grand/net* 
We k the merry world is round, . The I <■•,..' 

sweet little Eden on earth that I £ The Islet . 14 

then shall 1 k it is all true gold . The Ringlet 7 
far down, but I shall k Thy voice, t MylifeisfulV 9 
if it be so, so it is. you k ; . . Spiteful L 

Nor k's he what he sees ; . . Lucretius . 132 

ye Gods, I /• you careless, . 11 

1 k thou surely must be mine . o 

flitted I k not where ! . . . The Window 41 
somebody k's that she'll say ay.' . 11 -93 

kncr.vest. 
k I bore this better at the first 
whereof, God, thou k all. . 
Thou, o God, A' alone . 

thou k what a man [an; . . » . ii> 

my doom and thine : thou /• it all. Love and Duty 53 
or if oblique Thou k not. . . Two Voices 194 
'What is it thou /", sweet voice?' 11 . 440 

tell her Swallow, thou that k each, Princess, iv. 78 
What /-■ thou of the world, . . Guinevere . 341 
k thou now from whence I come — 11 . 430 

knowing. 

/■God, they lift not hands of prayer, M.d' Arthur 253 
Spoke I /.' not tlie things that were Ed. Mori 
/• all Life needs for life . . . Love and Duty 82 
k not the universe, . . . T-vo Voices 230 
comes, scarce k what he seeks : . Day- Dm. . 117 
Shame might befall Melissa, /■, . Princess, iii. 132 
Made them worth A ; ... 11 iv. 4.) 

/• Death has made His darkness In Mem. l.vxiii. 11 
A" the primrose yet is dear . . 11 Ixxxiv. 118 
smilcst, A- all is well. ...» exxvi. 2 > 
r promise to mc ; . . Maud, I. xxii. 50 

A" I tarry for thee,' . . . »11I. vi. 13 
what ail'd him, hardly A it himself, Enid . 
let you rest, k you mine, . . I 'Men 
at a touch But * you are Lancelot ; Elaine 1 
kith and kin, not A\ set upon him. » . 597 

Nol /.' he should die a holy man. . 11 141 > 

Who k nothing knows but to obey, Guinevere . 184 
with which I used to play Not k! 11 

She fail'd and sadden d it it; . En. Ard. ■: 

not k where she lay : . » 631 

annals of the port. Not /• — ■ » . 704 

irtsnot/ithal they loved, Aylmer's F. 1 t 
Not A what possess'd him : . . » 

aught that is worth the k ! . . 1865-1866 

kno-.i 
k of their own supremacy. . . CEnone . 1 - 1 
K for its beauty ; . . To With Pal. of ArtZ 

Beauty. Good, and A", arc three sisters 1. , 10 

the k of his an Held mc . . D. of P. Wont, 9 
mc this k bolder made, . . To J. S. . $ 

V 



226 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

k circle with the winds : 'Love tJwu thy land* etc. 17 
Certain, if k bring the sword, , 11 . -87 
k takes the sword away — . tr . .88 

flower of k changed to fruit . Love and Duty 24 
yearning in desire To follow k . Ulysses . 31 
A"comes, but wisdom lingers, . Locksley H. 141-3 
In midst of k, dream'd not yet. . Two Voices . 90 
men with k merely playM, u . 172 

newer k, drawing nigh . . . Day-Dm. . 71 
k, so my daughter held, Was all in all, Pri?icess,\. 134 
arguing love of k and of power ; . tr ii. 43 

K is now no more a fountain seal'd : ir -7^ 

We issued gorged with k, . 11 . 366 

yet we know K is k, . . ir iii. 299 

each Disclaimed all kof us : . . 11 iv. 210 

K in our own land make her free, ti v. 409 

less for truth than power In k : . ir vii. 222 

gTeater than all k beat her down. if . 223 

k is of things we see ; . . .In Mem. Pro. 22 
Let k grow from more to more . ir . 25 

all my k of myself ; ... if xvi. 16 

all k that the sons of flesh Shall gather tr lxxxiv. 27 
Who loves not K? ... u cxiii. 1 

not alone in power And k, , . 11 . 27 

eye to eye, shall look On k; . . 11 Coji. 130 

Without k, without pity, . . Maud, II. iv. 53 
Withoutthe captain's £;hope withme. Ayhner^sF.jij 
Like Virtue firm, like K fair . The Voyage 68 

known. 

is she k in all the land, . . . L. ofShalott,'i.26 
In aftertime, this also shall be k; . M, d' Arthur 35 
one that never can be wholly k, Gardener s D. 201 
Much have I seen and£," . . Ulysses . 13 
having k me — to decline . . Locksley H. 43 
To perish, wept for, honour'd, k, . Two Voices . 149 
whatsoever can be taught and k; . Princess, ii. 363 
falling on my face was caught and k. 11 iv. 251 
bore up in hope she would be k: . i» . 301 

public use required she should be k; ir . 317 

and k at last (my work) m . 328 

when k, there grew Another kind . if . 427 

you have k the pangs we felt, . ir v. 364 

makes by force his merit k . . In Mem. lxiii. 9 
which, tho' veil'd, was k to me, . tr cii. 13 

that dear voice, I once have k . if cxv. n 

iT and unknown ; human, divine ; ir cxxviii. 5 

singing an air that is k to me, . Maud, I. v. 3 
Everything came to be k : . . n II. v. 51 

' No more of love ; your sex is k : . The Letters 29 
be made k to the stately Queen, . Enid . . 607 
Because I knew my deeds were k, 11 . 1706 

not willing to be k He left the . Elaine . 160 
.ATasthey are, tome they areunknown.'u . . 186 
K am I, and of Arthur's hall, and k, n . 188 

in red samite, easily to be k, . 11 . 432 

women, whomsoever I have k if 1286 

men worse by making my sin k ? . it . 1407 

surely was my profit had I k .* . Guinevere . 651 
Not only to the market-cross were k, En. A rden 96 
k each other all our lives? . . 11 305, 417 

k Far in a darker isle ... n . 605 

He must have k, himself had k: . Ay Inzer's F. 346 
had k a man, a quintessence of man, 11 . 388 

a language k but smatteringly . if . 433 

had k Edith among the hamlets . ir . 614 

As with the mother he had never k, 11 . 690 

thou that killest, hadst thou k, . it . 738 

knuckled. 
boy That k at the taw : . . . Will Water. 132 

Kyfiris. 
Ay, and this iTalso — . . . Lucretius . 95 



L 

la did. 

tha khaws she / it to mea. . . N. Farmer. 21 

laborious. 

L for her people and her poor— . Ded. oj 'Idylls 34 



labour (s.) poem. line. 

prime / of thine early days : . . Ode to Mem. 94 

why Should life all / be ? . . Lotos-E's. . 87 

Long / unto aged breath, 11 . 130 

I'm the deep mid-ocean 11 . 172 

And rested from her Is. . . The Goose . 16 

discerning to fulfil This /, . . Ulysses . 36 

So were thy / little-worth. . . Two Voices ijx 

A /working to an end. tr . 297 

A present, a great / of the loom, . Princess, i. . 43 

blessing on her Is for the world. . ti ii. 455 

health, and wind, and rain, And /. tr iv. 261 

all her I was but as a block . . ir vii. 215 

reaps the I of his hands . In Mem. lxiii. 26 

prosperous I fills The lips of men . 11 Ixxxiii. 25 

on mind and art, And /, . .11 lxxxvi. 23 
/and the mattock -harden'd hand . Mawd 9 \.xvm. 34 

Or it may be the / of his hands, . Enid . . 341 

The dew of their great /, . . 11 . . 568 

Her own poor work, her empty /, Elaine . 985 

Confused the chemic / of the blood Lucretius . 20 

labour (verb.) 
No memory Is longer . . . D. of F. Worn. "27^ 
he that Is for the sparrow-hawk . E?iid . . 271 
since he did but / for himself, . En. A rden . 820 
would go L for his own Edith, . Aylmer's F. 420 

laboured. 

I down within his ample lungs, . Princess, v. 263 

The bosom with long sighs /; . 11 vii. 210 

hermit, who had pray'd, /and . Elaine . 402 

/thro' His brief prayer-prelude . Aylmer's F. 628 

labourer. 

woo'd and wed A Is daughter, . Dora . . 38 

the / tills His wonted glebe . . In Mem. c. . 21 

sallowy rims, arose the Is' homes Aylmer's F. 147 

labotiring. 

The giant / in his youth ; . . InMem.cxvii. 2 

lusty mowers / dinnerless . . Enid . 1100 

Arthur came, and / up the pass . Elaine . 48 

ever / had scooped himself . tr . . 403 

lab7trmt?n. 
L's, dropping- wells of fire. . . In3f em.lxxxii.12 

■ labyrinth. 
He thrids the /of the mind, . . InMemxcvi. 21 
Charm'd him thro' every / . . Aylmer's F. ^-jg 

lace (net- work.) 
shadow of a piece of pointed /, . Elaine 1168 

lace (a string.) 
burst The Is toward her babe ; . Princess, vi. 133 

lace (verb.) 
holp To /us up, .... Princess, i. . 199 

lack (s.) 
tinged with wan from / of sleep, . Princess, iii. 9 
for / of gentle maiden's aid . . Elaine , 761 

lack (verb.) 
We / not rhymes and reasons, . Will Water. 62 

lacked. 
have not / thy mild reproof, ' My life is full* etc. 4 

lackest. 
what thou /, thought resign 'd, . Two Voices 98 

lack-lustre. 
a /-/ dead-blue eye, . . . A Character 17 

lad. 
many a bolder / 'ill woo me . . May Queen,\. 23 
shepherd Is on every side 'ill come 11 . 27 

the /stretch'd out And babbled . Dora . . 131 
O well for the sailor /, . . l Break, break* etc. 7 
long-limb'd /that had a Psyche too; Princess, ii. 384 
would tilt it out among the Is: . u v. 345 

Poor /, he died at Florence, . . The Brook . 35 
Enoch Arden, a rough sailor's / . En. Arden . 14 
Leolin's emissary, A crippled /, . Aylmer's F. ,5T9 
a / may wink, and a girl may hint, The Ringlet 17 

ladder- 

lean a / on the shaft, . . , StS. Stylites 213 



TE.\\VYSO.\ 'S WOK AS. 



227 



laden. POEM. LINE. 

enchanted stem L with flower and fruit Lotos-E's. 29 
Two sets of three / with jingling arms, Enid 1037 
came the children / with their spoil ; En. Arden 442 

lading. 
The /of a single pain, . . . InMetn.xxv. n 
/ and unlading the tall barks, . En.Arden . 817 

lady. 

The sweetest / of the time, . . Arabian ATs. 141 

The L of Shalott. L.o/Shalott,i.g,etpass. 

knccl'd To a / in his shield . . 11 iii. 7 

Our L murmur'd she ; Mariana in the S. 28 

bore a / from a leaguer'd town ; . D.ofp. Worn. 47 

I / within call, ... 11 .85 

irvel, sovereign /: in fair field ir . 97 

Kise from the feast of sorrow, /, . Margaret . 62 

f ladies and of kings. . . M. d Arthur 225 

I met my / once : . . . Ii 'alk. tot/te .J/.40 

rain from ladies' hands. . Sir Galaluid 12 

sweet are looks that ladies bend . 11 . 13 

he shall have it,' the /rq/lied, . Lady Clare 47 

■ .t homes of lord and /, . L. of Burleigh 3: 

That she grew a noble /, . 11 .75 

with these, a /, one that arm'd . Princess, Pro. 32 

takes a Is finger with all care . 11 . 171 

talk of college and of ladies rights 11 . 226 

let the ladies sing us, if they will . 11 . 233 

/of three castles in that land : . 11 i. -ji 

'Three ladies of the Northern empire 11 . 235 

r land so tall?' . . u ii. 33 

, Ladies, in entering here 11 .45 

: the L glanced : 11 .96 

.'., pray you fear me not, 11 • 3'^ 

all the ladies, each at each, . . ■■ iv. 99 

experiences Unmeet for ladies ■■ . 141 

d a vulture throat, . ir . 344 

live, dear /, for your child ! . . 11 v. 77 

fluttering scarfs and ladies' n -498 

hrother, L — Florian, — ask 11 vi. 293 

•..■ight, /, and dwarl . Enid . . 187 

the /tie loves best be there. 11 481 

claim to for the / at his side, . n . .487 

ever won it for the /with him, . ir . .490 

re no /, cannot fight.' 11 . .493 

11 . . 546 

fwithhimandproclaim'dti . .552 

. thy /, and thy dwarf, 11 581 

lies of the high court 11 . .662 

' /, never sine- I lirst drew . it . 1467 

the Fair 11 . 1810 

one verse more— the / speaks it — Vivien .295 

The / never made unwilling war 11 453 

everai H . Elaine .' 255 

ur L's Head, 11 . 294 

of any /in the lists. ,, 363,473 

/., my liege, in whom I have my joy, 11 1174 

I lies I make moan. . 11 127a 

!' the Lake Stole . 11 

're ; . Guinevere . 182 

I /, the Kind's grief . 11 . 194 

vex .111 car . 11 . 312 

. . . 11 127 

would he 



en M y / ; Ay liner's F. 1 1 7 

111 kinsman, unannounced 11 . 190 

11 198 

11 . 199 

." a /, this ! ' 11 . 240 

if' . 11 . 243 

11 . 461 

I to my /,— 11 c-12 

fer my . .... 11 ' 558 

11 rushing in, 11 , 593 

Lady, let the rolling,' etc. 1 

IC trumpets ,, , 

. The Window 96 

i ine from my / yet, . 11 , 120 

lady-dad. 
The feudal warrior /-f ; . . Princcss,Pro.ii? 



Lady's-Ifead. 
The L-H upon the prow 



POEM, LINE. 

The Voyage 11 
lady-sister. 
I bow'd to his l-s . . . . Maud, I. iv. 15 

lag. 
To / behind, scared by the cry . Princess, v. 91 

laggard. 
a / hanging down his head, . . Enid . . 509 

lagged. 
I /in answer loth to render up . Princess, v. 289 
Whereof the dwarf / latest, . . Enid . . 188 

laid. 
Upon my lap he /his head: . . The Sisters 17 



/ him at his mother's feet. 



3S 



strong foundation-stones were / . Pal. of Art 235 
see me where I am lowly /. . . May Queen, ii. 30 
breast to sight L bare. . . E>. of P. IVom. 159 
L by the tumult of the fight. . Margaret . 26 

the more the white goose / . . The Goose . 23 
L widow'd of the power in his eye M. d Arthur 122 
/ his head upon her lap, . . 11 . 208 

Francis /A damask napkin . . Audley Ct. . 19 
and the winds are / with sound. . Locksley If. 104 
/a tax Upon his town . . . Godha . 13 
eyes long / in happy sleep !' . . Day-Dm. .181 
arms across her breast she /; . Beggar Maid 1 

And is lightly / again. . . Vision of Sin 134,170 
/ about them at their wills and died ; Princess, Pro. 31 
her likeness out ; L it on (lowers, „ j. ' g 2 

creature / his muzzle on your lap, *■ ii. 253 

were / up like winter bats, . . 1, i v . 126 

/A feeling finger on my brows, . 11 v i. 104 

L the soft babe in his hard-mailed 11 . 191 

And others otherwhere they /; 11 . 357 

Where he in English earth is /, In Mem. xviii. 2 
They / him by the pleasant shore, n xix 3 

L their dark arms about the field. 11 xciv. 16, 52 

spectres of the mind And / them : 11 xcv. 16 

/ On the hasp of the window Maud.I.xiv. 18 

He /a cruel snare in a pit . . n II. v. 84 

An 1 worthy to be /by thee ; . Ode on Well. 94 

because his bones arc / by thine. . 11 .141 

where you tenderly /it by: . . The Daisy . 100 
better were I / in the dark earth. . Enid . . 97 
sprigs of summer /between the folds, 11 . . 138 
everywhere Was hammer /to hoof, 11 . . 256 
crost the trencher as she / it down : 11 . . 396 
over these is /a silver wand, . 11 . .483 

On either shining shoulder /a hand, 11 . . 518 
apparel, which she /Flat on the couch.n . .678 
with this and / it in my hand, .11.. 699 
Z. from her limbs the costly-broidcr'd 11 . . 769 
command I /upon ymi, not to speak u . . 927 

raised and /him on a httcr-bier, 11 . 1^1^ 

/him on it All in the hollow of his 11 . 1416 

/his lance In rest, and made asif. 11 . 1623 

penance the Queen / upon me . n . 1702 

/ the diamond in his open hand. . Elaine . 823 

Her father / the letter in her hand, 11 1128 

on the black decks / her . . n u*j 

Received at once and /aside the gems 11 1196 

knights had / her comely head . 11 1327 

/ her hands about his feet. . . Guinevere . 524 
/the feeble infant in his arms ; . En.Arden . 152 
when she / her head beside my own 11 . 882 

yet had / No bar between them : . Aylmcr's F. 117 
( his feverous pillow smooth I . 11 . 701 

/. Wifelike, her hand in one of his, 11 7 

beautiful, when all the winds arc /. Spec of Iliad 12 
A famine after /them low, . . 'the Victim . 2 
With neighbours /along the grass, Lucretius '. 211 
bones long /within the grave, . 11 . 252 

lain, 
and /in the lilies of life. . . Maud,\. \ 

Had I / for a century dead ; . 11 xjrii, ;j 

lake. 
Sec ' Lancelot of the Lake ' under 'Lai 

1 /. . ArabianN's. 46 
countcrchanged The level / . . 11 



223 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

from out the bosom of the /, . M. d Arthur 30 

on the shining levels of the /. . ti . 51 

Wrought by the lonely maiden of the L. 11 . 104 

on a sudden, lo ! the level /, . ir , 191 

my pleasant rambles by the /, . Ed. Morris 1, 13 
ripply shallows of the lisping /, . ti .98 

mist of morn Clung to the /. . ir . 108 

taper glimmer'd in the /below : . u , 135 

moves among my visions of the /, tr . 144 

then we crost Between the l's, . Golden Year 6 
Deep in the garden /withdrawn. . Day-Dm. . 32 
Dreams over / and lawn, . . Vision of Sin n 
the / A little clock-work steamer . Pri?icess,Pro. 70 
long light shakes across the l's . u iii. 350 

quenching / by / and tarn by tarn tr vii. 25 

slips into the bosom of the /; . 11 . 172 

dead / That holds the shadow . I?i Me??z.xv\. 8 
long by the garden / I stood, . Maud,l.xxii. 35 
From the / to the meadow, and on 11 . 37 

white lake-blossom fell into the /. 11 . 47 

blown the /beyond his limit, . The Daisy . 71 
One tall Agave above the /. . . 11 .84 

Bala / Fills all the sacred Dee. . Enid . 1777 

/ whiten'd and the pinewood roar'd Vivien . 487 

whom the Lady of the L Stole . Elaine *395 

lake-blossom. 
The while l-b fell into the lake . Maud,\.xx\\. 47 

lamb. 
bird would sing, nor /would bleat, Mariana in theS. 37 
I hear the bleating of the /. . . JlIayQueen } iii. 2 
sweeter is the young l's voice . tr .6 

this lost / (she pointed to the child) Princess, iv. 342 
at once the lost / at her feet 11 . 372 

youth, the spotless /of Christ, . Vivien . 599 

whitest / in all my fold Loves you : Aylmer's F. 361 
light is large and l's are glad . Lucretius . 99 

Lamb (Christ.) 
So shows my soul before the L, St Agues' Eve ij 

lame, 
abidest /and poor, . . . Two Voices 197 

I wander, often falling /, . . fuMem.xxiu. 6 
would work eye dim, and finger /, Enid . . 628 
mate is blind and captain /, . . The Voyage 91 
But blind or / or sick or sound . i» -93 

Lamech* 
But that of L is mine. . . . Maud, II. ii. 48 

lamed. 
spear Down-glancing /the charger, Elaine . 487 

all my faculties are I. . . , Lucretius . 123 

lameness. 
Cured /, palsies, cancers. . . StS.Stylites 81 

lament. 
And loudly did /. .... Dying Siuan 7 
soul l's, which hath been blest, . D-.ofF. Worn. 281 

lamentation. 
/and an ancient tale of wrong, . Lotos-E's. . 163 
as it were one voice, an agony Of/, J\T.d 'Arthur 201 
Great Duke With an empire's /, . Ode o?i Well. 2 

L amo 7'ack. 
Lancelot, Tristram,andGeraint,Andi Elaine . 556 

lamp. 
1 by that /,' I thought, ' she sits ! ' Miller's D. 114 
tho' my / was lighted late, . , May Queen, in. jQ 
lit L's which outburn'd Canopus. . D. o/F. lVom.146 
burn a fragrant / before my bones, StS. Stylites 193 
yearning toward the l's of night. . Tivo Voices 363 
l's blazon' d like Heaven and Earth Princess, i. . 220 
above her droop'd a /, . . . ir iv. 253 

When all is gay with /* s, . . InMem. xcvii. 27 

lamplight. 
Gold glittering thro' /dim, . . ArabianN's. 18 

lamp-lit. 
shone the tent L-l from the inner. Princess, iv. 8 

Lancaster. 
York's white rose as red as L's, . Aylmers F. 51 



hi Mem.x 


van. 3 


Enid . 


• 49 6 


?f 


. Q3« 


ti 


1006 


if 


1028 



lance. POEM. LINE. 

L's in ambush set ; . . . D. o/F. Worn. 28 
that Arthur who, with I in rest, . M. d Arthur 222 
hurl their l's in the sun ; . . Locksley H. 170 
My tough I thrusteth sure, . . Sir Galahad 2 
push'd with l's from the rock, . Princess,Pro. 46 
into fiery splinters leapt the /, 
Like light in many a shiver'd / 
Let me lay / in rest, O noble host. 
A / that splinter'd like an icicle, 
Aim'd at the helm, his / err'd ; 
pick'd the /That pleased him best 
the points of l's bicker m it . 
Down by the length of I and arm 
riding with a hundred l's up ; 
cast his / aside And doff 'd his helm 
I In rest, and made as if to fall 
every scratch a / had made upon it, Elaine 
but God Broke the strong / . 
the truer seat, The firmer /; 
Set / in rest, strike spur, 
she felt the sharp / go ; 

lance-head. 
Gasping to Sir Lavaine, ' draw the l-h' Elaine 

Lancelot. 
brazen greaves Of bold Sir L. . L..cfShalott,iu. 5 
by the river Sang Sir L. . . rr . 36 

L mused a little space ; 11 iv. 51 

Sir L and Queen Guinevere Rode SirL.andQ.G. 20 



1443 

1623 

20 

26 

446 

455 

621 



5io 



Touching her guilty love for L, . Enid 

dreaming of her love For L . ir . 

heard the great Sir L sing it once, Vivien. 

what say ye to Sir L, friend? . 11 

Sir L went ambassador, at first, . 11 
Not even L brave, nor Gahalad clean rr 
Guarded the sacred shield ofZ.; . Elaine 

maid by that good shield of L, . rr 

L won the diamond of the year, . rr 

great deeds Of L, and his prowess 11 

they dwelt languidly On L, . . u 

To blame, my lord Sir L, . . rr 

L vext at having lied in vain : rr 

L, the flower of bravery, . . rr 

L, the chief of knights, . . rr 

at a touch But knowing you are L ; rr 

got Sir L suddenly to horse . rr 

L marveJl'd at the wordless man ; 11 

L, when they glanced at Guinevere, rr 

L spoke And answered him at full, ir 

heard Sir L cry in the court, . rr 

to his proud horse L tum'd . . ir 

His brother's ; which he gave to L, ir 

kiss'd her, and Sir L his own hand, ir 

Sir L knew there lived a knight . rr 

you ride with L of the Lake . rr 

after muttering ' the great L ' . rr 

L bode a little, till he saw . . rr 
little need to speak Of L in his glory: 11 

in the field were L's kith and kin, rr 

almost overdo the deeds Of L ; . rr 

Is it not L !' ' When has L worn rr 

family passion for the name Of L, rr 

overbore Sir L and his charger, . rr 

brought his horse to L where he lay rr 

day when L fled the lists . . rr 

He seem'd to me another L — . rr 

twenty times I thought him L — . rr 

after L, Tristram, and Geraint . rr 

L who has come Despite the wound rr 

'Nay, Lord,' she said. AndwhereisZ. ?'n 

L told me of a common talk . 11 

Far lovelier in our L had it been rr 

So fine a fear in our large L . 11 

L is no more a lonely heart. . 11 

Gawain saw Sir L's azure lions, . 11 

' Right was the King ! our L ! 11 

cross our mighty L in his loves ! . 11 

What the King knew ' Sir L is the 11 

'The maid of Astolat loves Sir L, 11 

Sir L loves the maid of Astolat.' . 11 
sorrowing L should have stoop'd so low, n 



- 25 

• i59 

• 235 
. 6ig 
. 624 

• 654 

4 

• 29 
. 6 9 

• 83 



■ 103 

■ 114 
141-87 

150, 573 

• 159, 
. 172 
. ^70 
. 28s 

• 343 

■ 346 

■ 379 
. 3 8s 
. 400 
. 416 
. 420 
. 460 

• 463 

• 4 6 5 

• 469 

• 472 

• 477 
. 486 

• 492 

• 524 

• 533 

• 534 
. 555 

• S64 

■ 57i 

• 576 

• 587 

• 593 
. 600 
. 660 
. 662 
. 68s 

■ 7°3 
. 721 
, 722 
. 728 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

Forgot to drink to L and the Queen, Elaine . 733 

pledging Z and the lily maid . 11 . 734 

one-day-seen Sir L in her heart . ti . 743 

ires my lord Sir Z ?' . 11 . 791 
Sir Z / How know you my lord's 

name is LV 11 . 792 

Saw the casque Of Z on the wall : - ir . 802 

Z. look'd and was perplext in mind, 11 . 834 

£ Would tho' he call'd his wound 11 . 847 

when Sir Us deadly hurt was whole, 11 . 900 

came before Sir Z, for .she thought 11 . 904 

L evcrprest upon the maid . . ir . 907 

lw that she withheld her wish, »f . 916 

Too courteous are you, fair Lord L. 11 

L knew the little clinking sound ; 11 .977 

L knew that she was looking at him. 11 7 1 

there the great Sir Z muse at me ; 11 1049 

Z, who coldly went nor bad me one : 11 1051 

it is no more Sir L's fault . . ir 1069 

r Z, is it for my dear lord ? 11 J099 

' Fori and the Queen and all the world 11 not 

on which I died For L's love, . ir 1112 

Sir L at the palace craved Audience 11 1156 

/- kneeling utter'd, 'Queen, . 11 1173 

1 you believe me, L of the Lake 11 J199 

while Sir Z leant, in half di 11 1231 

L later came and mused at her, . 11 

t noble lord, Sir Z of the Lake, ir 1265 

Pray for my soul thou too, Sir Z, if 2274 

freely spoke Sir Z to them all ; . ir 1281 

ud his wont, . . 11 2323 

shield of A at her feet lie carven, 11 1331 

mark'd Sir A where he moved apart 11 1339 

' A, Forgive ; m 1340 

ny /., thou in whom 1 have .Most n 1347 
My knight, the great Sir A of the Lake 11 

Z answer' d nothing, but he went 11 1378 

Z. whom the Lady of the Lake Stole 11 1395 

groan'd Sir A, in remorseful pain, 11 

en'd by strong hate for A. . Guinevere . 21 

Sir Z. passing by Spied where . 11 .31 

/. pluck'd him by the heel, . . 11 .35 

r A holp 1 o rai e the Prince, 11 . 46 

Sir A told The matter to the Queen, 11 . 53 

'0 A., get thee hence. ... 11 88, 95 

Z ever promised, but remain M, . „ .93 

Z, who rushing outward lionlike . » . 106 

'Z, wilt thou hold me so? . . u . 115 

• horse, ... 11 

King Was waging war on I* : . n . 154 

tge grim war against Sir I. . 11 . 191 

This evil work of/, and the Queen? 1 » . 305 

id the noblest ; 11 . 318 

ur lord the King?' 11 . 324 

'Sir /., as became ht, n . 326 

Us needs must be a thousand-fold 11 . 336 

If ever Z, that most noble knight, 11 . 343 

Sir Z'i, were as noble as the Kings, 11 . 349 

Reputed the best knight 11 . 378 

not like him, ' Not like my Z '— 11 . 404 

while yet Sir L, my right arm, . 11 . 426 

thy shameful sin with Z ; . n . 483 

they arc not mine, ButZ'r: . 11 . 548 

nota mailer soul, Nor Z, nor another, n . 563 

d In Z — . 11 . 641 

in., 1 human too, Not L, nor another. 11 643-54 

tan 

greenish glimmerings thro' the /, Aylmer's F. 622 

land, 

ive her peace : her /reposed ; Tot 

n ih- / . Sea-Fairi 
', nown in all the /, . . L.e/SAa/ott,L'6 

■' . . Ele&nori . 1 1 

1 the A . . 11 . 11? 

lent br t fs, . Pa/, of Art 30 

1 ring /, 11 67 

1 every / S 1 wrought, . 11 . 147 

1 from the / . 11 . 251 

■ .1 traveller walking . 11 . 277 

mod A new /, but I die.' . 11 , 284 



POEM. LINE. 

any poor about your Vs ? . L.C.I '. tie Vere 68 
as little Alice ii. all the / they say, May Queen, i. 7 
sweet is all the /about ... 11 iii. 7 

and pointed toward the /, . . Lotos-E's. . 1 
In the afternoon they came unto a/, n . 3 

A / of streams ! .... • 14* 

seaward flow From the inner /: . 11 . • 5 

/where all things always seem'd . n -24 

looking over wasted ts t . . v . 159 

In every / I saw, wherever light . D. ofF. Worn. 13 
when to / Bluster the winds and tides 11 . 37 

' !, my /, my father — . 11 . 209 

the / that freemen till ; ' Youaskmewhy' etc. 5 
/, where girt with friends or foes .11 .7 

A / of settled government, u -9 

A /of just and old renown, 11 .10 

Tho' Power should make from / to / i» . 21 

Love thou thy /, with love ' Love tlion thyland,'etc. 1 
pace the troubled /, like Peace ; . 11 .84 

on a dark strait of barren /. . . M. d Arthur 10 
waste /, where no one comes, . 11 . 202 

All the / in flowery squares, . Gardiner's D. 75 

and he died In foreign I's; . . Dora . . 17 
sun fell, and all the /was dark. . 11 . 77, 107 
cliffs that guard my native /, . Audley Ct. . 48 

voice fled always thro' the summer /; Ed. Morris 67 
I's in Kent and messuages in York, 11 . 127 

will leave my relics in your /, . StS.Stylites 191 
A babbler in the /. ... TalkingO. . 24 

nor yet Thine acorn in the /. . n 260 

streams to fatten lower /'.\-, . . Golden Year 34 
Knit / to /, and blowing havenward 11 . 44 

like a shaft of light across the A . 11 . 49 

like a fruitful / reposed ; . . Locksley II. 1 3 
Just breaking over /and main . Two Voices 84 
It is not bad but good /, . . Amphion . 6 
road and fair ; . Lady C tare 10 
Lord Ronald is heir of all your I's, 11 . 19 

murmur in the A . . Z. of Burleigh 20 
In all that /had never been : . Beggar Maid 14 

an answer peal'd from that high/, Vision of Sin 221 
Close to the sun in lonely Is, . The Eagle . 2 
lady of three castles in that /: . Princess, i. 78 
seizures come Upon you in those I's : 11 . 82 

then we crost To a livelier /; . 11 . 109 

hills, that look'd across a /of hope, 11 . 167 

/, he understood, for miles about . 11 . 189 

thro' the / at eve we went, • 11 . 246 

are the ladies of your /so tall?' . 11 ii. 33 

falling in a / Of promise ; 11 . 123 

you Some palace in our /, 11 iii. 146 

we should find the / Worth seeing ; <• . 155 

no song of your own /' . . n iv. 66 

swallow winging south From mine own /,n . 72 

Strove to buffet to / in vain. . 11 . 167 

like a spire of /that stands apart . 11 . 262 

crying there was an army in the /, 11 . 463 

fled away Thro' the dark /, . . 11 v. 47 

skirt and fringe of our fair /, . . 11 . 210 

' Our / invaded, 'sdcath I 11 . 266 

Of I's in which at the altar . . 11 . 367 

Knowledge in our own / make her free, 11 . 409 

a wild horn in a / Of echoes . . 11 . 475 

I go to mine own / For ever: . 11 vi. 109 

a peak to gaze O'er /and main, . 11 vii. 21 

' loin -I lln: Poets of her I \ . II . 159 

a /of peace; Gray halls . . n Con. 42 

' i. ■ ii reign I's . In Mem. x. 6 

thou hadst touch'd the / to-day, . 11 xiv. 2 

lot of his native /. . . 11 xviii. 4 

I's where not a leaf was dumb ; . 11 xxiii. xo 

heard them sweep the winter /; . •• xxx. 10 

thine in undiscover'd lands. . . 11 xx.xix. 32 

Whose feet are guided thro' the /, 11 lxv. 9 

all the framework of the /; . . nlxxxvi 24 

hard heir strides about their Ps . nlxxxix 15 

stays him from the native /, . 11 xcii. 3 

I's where not a memory strays, . r ciii. 10 

W,- live within the stranger's /, . n civ. 3 

Ring out the darkness of the /, . " cv. 31 

live their lives From / to /; . . 11 cxiv. 17 



230 



CONCORDANCE TO 



TOEM. LINE. 

melt like mist, the solid Ts, . In Mem. cxxii. 7 

loud war by I and by sea, . . Maud, I 

sapphire-spangled marriage ring of the / 1 tt 

To the death, for their native /. . tt 

Over the dark moor I . . 11 

still strong man in a blatant /, . it 

I past him, I was crossing his Ts ; 

underneath in the darkening / — . 

High over the shadowy /. 

Flying along the / and the main — 

/ that has lost for a little her lust . 

I have felt with my native /, 

praised his /, his horses, his machines The Brook 



xni. 
II. i. 



III. vi. 



Was great by / as thou by sea. Ode oil Well. 84, 90 

Follow'd by the brave of other Ts, it . 194 

stand Colossal seen of every /, . ir . 221 

in all I's and thro' all human story ir . 223 
/ whose hearths he saved from shame 11 _ . 225 
In I's of palm and southern pine; . The Daisy . 2 

In Ts of palm, of orange-blossom, ir . 3 

To Ts of summer across the sea ; . if .92 

o'er a weary sultry /, . . Will . .17 
Pear to thy / and ours, . . Ded. of Idylls 40 
and they past to their own / / . Enid . 45,1803 

and we smile, the lords of many Ts, 11 . . 353 

I know not, but he past to the wild /. 11 . -443 

dreadful loss Falls in a far / . . 11 . 1346 

hollow /, From which old fires . 11 . 1669 

my leave To move to your own /, " . 1737 

I will weed this / before I go. . 11 . 1755 

the bandit holds and cleansed the I. u . 1792 

slipt away Thro' the dim /; . . Vivien . 274 

all day long we rode Thro' the dim / it . 275 

two fair babes, and went to distant Ts; 11 .557 

Moaning and calling out of other Ts, 11 . 811 

who, some say, shall rule the / . Elaine . 66 

Lord am I In mine own I, . _ . 11 . 913 

Endow you with broad /and territory ir . 953 

to take the King to fairy I? . . 11 1250 

that he passes into fairy /.' . . 11 1252 

Estate then with large land territory 11 1312 
the dead earth, and the / was still. Guinevere . 8 

blackening, swallow'd all the /, . it . 82 

get thee hence to thine own /, . tt . 88 

Back to his / ; but she to Almesbury 11 . 126 

slay the folk, and spoil the /.' . ir . 136 

/was full of signs And wonders . if . 230 

sent a deep sea-voice thro' all the /, 11 . 245 

for all the I was full of life if . 257 

everywhere about this I of Christ . n . 428 

abode in his own /. . . . it . 437 
Enoch at times to go by / or sea ; En. Arden . 104 



left his hearth and native /, 

ran Ev'n to the limit of the I, . tr 

/ of hops and poppy-mingled corn, Aylmer's F. 

sleepy /where under the same wheel f 

so sleepy was the /..._. ti 

he must — the / was ringing of it — 11 

succeeder to their wealth, their Ts, 11 

crashing with long echoes thro' the /, n 

The / all shambles— ... 11 

such a tide swelling toward the /, Sea Dreams 

a / all sun and blossom, ft 

Break, happy /, intoearlierflowers! W. toAlexan 

Melt into stars for the Ts desire ! . ir 

as the sea when he welcomes the /, ft 

welcome her, welcome the Ts desire it 

Thine the Ts of lasting summer, . Boddicea 

Ran the / with Roman slaughter, 

woke her with a lay from fairy /. 

at twilight in a / of reeds. 

To every / beneath the skies, 

Gods are moved against the /.' 

To spill his blood and heal the I: 

I is sick, the people diseased, 

the best and stateliest of the / ? 

landed. 
moving up the coast they / him, 

lander. 
Heard by the / in a lonely isle, 



Coquette, i. 8 

tt . 14 

On a Mourner 3 

The Victim 6 

. 46 



L ucretius 



Eji. Arden . 666 



Enid 



POEM. LINE. 

En. Arden . 635 



landing. 
sent a crew that / burst away 

lajidbig-place. 
Some l-p, to clasp and say, 'Farewell!' InJITew.xtvi. 15 

lajidlike. 
cloud That /slept along the deep In Mem. cli. 56 

lajidjjzark. 
Nor / breathes of ether days, . In Mem. ciii. 11 

landscape. 
Nor these alone, but every / fair, Pal. of Art 89 
The eternal / of the past : . . In Mem. xlv. 8 
The / winking thro* the heat : . ir lxxxviii. j6 
Of all the /underneath , . . ir xcix. 2 
/grow Familiar to the stranger's child; ir c. 20 

the Lord of all the /round . . Aylmer's F. 815 

la nds cape-pa in ter. 
He is but a /-/, . . . . L. of Burleigh 7 
that he Were once more that l-p, . ir , 83 

landskip. 
man and woman, town And /, . Princess, iv. 426 

laJidslip. 
Like some great /, tree by tree, . Amphion . 51 

landward. 
The latest house to /; . . . En. Arden . 733 

lane, 
rs, you know, were white with may, Miller's D. . 130 
a / of beams athwart the sea, . Golden Year 50 
Long Fs of splendour slanted . Princess, W. 457 
glimmering I's and walls of canvas, m v. 6 

light-blue /of early dawn, . . InMem. cxviii. 7 
thro' the short sweet-smelling Fs . The Brook . 122 
in the leafy Fs behind the down . En. Arden . 97 
climbing street, the mill, the leafy Fs, ?r . 608 

Lane (surname.) 
kept it ; and his widow Miriam L Eji. Arden . 696 
Miriam L was good and garrulous, tt . 701 

tho' Miriam L had told him all, . it . 766 

call'd aloud for Miriam L tr . 837 

Miriam L Made such a voluble . if . 902 

language. 
/wherewith Spring Letters cowslips Adeline . 61 

Such as no /may declare.' . . Two Voices 384 

Your /proves you still the child. . Princess, ii. 44 

A use in measur'd / lies ; . .In Mem. v. 6 

with no / but a cry. ir liii. 20 

/rife With rugged maxims . . Ode o?i Well. 183 

in a / that has long gone by . . Vivien . 524 

a/knownbutsmatteringly . . Aylmer's F. 433 

languid. 
And myself so /and base . . Maud, I. v. 18 

languish. 
And so would / evermore, . . Elednore . 120 
/ for the purple seas ? . ' You ask me why J etc. 4 

languor. 

art not steep'd in golden Fs, . . Madeline . 1 

The Fs of thy love-deep eyes . Elednore . 76 

thro' her limbs a drooping / wept : Princess, vi. 251 

all for / and self-pity ran Mine . ir vii. 124 

out of / leapt a cry n . 140 

a / came Upon him, . . . En. Arden . 824 

lantern. 

round the lighted / of the hall ; . Guinevere . 260 

lap. 

Upon my / he laid his head : . The Sisters 17 

in whose Fs our limbs are nursed, To J S. . 10 

fairest, laid his head upon her /, . M. d Arthur 208 

My beard has grown into my /.' . Day-Dm. . 154 

creature laid his muzzle on your /, Princess, ii. 253 

Leapt from her session on his /; . Vivien . 6g-$ 

Too ragged to be fondled on her /, Aylmer's F. 686 

Lapidoih. 

Like that great dame of L . . Princess, vi. 16 

lapping. 
the wild water / on the crag." M t cFAriliur 71, n6 



TE.WVYSOiV'S WORK'S. 



lapse ;'s.) POEM. line. 

No /of moons can canker Love, In Hem. xxvi. 3 

lapse 'verb.) 
overset, Or / from hand to hand, . Talking O. . 258 

lapsed. 
if I / from nobler place, . . Tiuo Voices 358 

/ in;o so long a pause again . . Aylmer's F. 630 

lapt. 
slunber, / in universal law. . . Loeksley H. 130 
/ In the arms of leisure. . . Princess, ii. 151 
/ in vreaths of glowworm light . 11 iv. 415 

lapwing. 
I gets himself another crest ; . Loeksley II. 18 

Lar. 
lay at wine with L and Lucumo ; Princess, ii. 113 

larboard. 
RolI'd to starboard, roll'd to /, . Lotos-Es. . 131 

larch. 
rosy plumelets tufts the /, . . In Mem. xc. 1 
There amid perky I'es and pine, . Maud, I. x. 20 

larded. 

Old boxes, / with the steam . . Will Water. 223 

larder. 

And a whirlwind clear' d the /: . The Coose . 52 

large. 

Wait : my faith is / in Time, . Love and Duty?*, 

Love, thy province were not /, In Mem. xlv. 13 
/ and lucid round thy brow. . n xc. 8 
thrice as / as man he bent . . 11 cii. 42 
light is / and lambs are glad. .Lucretius . 99 

large-brow d. 

Plato the wise, and l-b Vcrulam, . Pal. 0/ Art 163 

large-moulded. 

that l-m man, His visage all agrin Princess, v. 509 

larger. 

light that grows L and clearer, . CEnone . 107 
L than human on the frozen hills. M. d' Arthur 183 

one seem'd far / than her lord, . Enid . . 971 

black eyes, Vet /thro' his leanness, Elaine . 831 

larger-limbed. 
one Is /-/ than you are, . . Enid . . 993 

every man were /-/ than I . .11 . . 997 

largess. 
With showcrM /of delight, . . In Mem. xxix. 7 
golden / of thy praise. . ' My life is full,' etc. 5 

Lariano. 
The L crept To that fair port . The Daisy . 7S 

Lari Maxume. 

Yirgilian rustic measure Of L M . The Daisy . 76 

lark. 

1 could scarce get out his notes . Gardener's D. 89 
quail and pigeon, / and leveret lay, Audtey Ct. 23 
And livelier than a /, . . . Talking O. 122 

irit flutters like a / . . Day-Dm. . 129 
And the / drop down at his feet. . Poet's Song 8 
the / Shot up and shrill'd . . Princess, vii. 30 

'lie shadow of a / . . In Mem. xvi. 9 

ere the / hath left the lea. . . 11 lxvii. 13 

/ becomes a sightless song. . . 11 cxiv. 8 

■-■ / in heaven, . . Elaine . 656 

merry in heaven, O I's, and far away The Window 146 

larkspur. 
The / listens, ' I hear, I hear ; ' . Maud, I. xxii. 65 

tarn learn.) 
I reckons I 'annot sa mooch to / . A*. Parmer 13 

lam'd. 
L a ma* bca. .... A^. Farmer 13 

lash (of the eye.) 
I'es like to rays Of darknc - , . . ; t.ilian STs. 136 

lash whip.) 
Doom'd them to the / . . The Captain 12 



lash (verb ) poem. line. 
like a pedant's wand To / offence, Princess, i . J 
/ with storm the streaming pane? In Mem. lxxi. 4 
war's avenging rod Shall /all ToF. D. Maurice 34 
/ you from them like a dog ; . Aylmer's F. 323 

L the maiden into swooning, . Boadicea . C7 

las/id. 
dishorsed and drawing, / at each . Enid . . 563 
/ it at the base with slanting storm ; Vivien . 485 

me they / and humiliated, . . Boadicea 49, 67 

lass. 
'Siver, I kep un, I kep un, my /, . A". Farmer 23 
1)' ya moind the wakste, my / .' . 11 -29 

Doctor's a 'tottler, /, . . . 11 .66 

last (adj. ) 
Bedivere, the / of all his knights, M. a" Arthur 7 
I, the /, go forth companionless, . u . 236 

/ kiss, which never was the /, . Love andDutyts 
He now is first, but is he the /? . Maud, I. iv. 36 
Mourn, for to us he seems the /, . Odeon Well. 19 
all day long till Enoch's / at home, En. Arden . 172 
when the / of those /moments came, » . 217 

might have been together till the /. Aylmer's F. 714 
made by these the /of all my race n . 791 

cry to these the / of theirs . . 11 . 792 

last (verb.) 
What is it that will /? . . . Lotos-Es. . 90 
without help I cannot / till mom . . M . d' Arthur 26 
should I prize thee, couldst thou /, Wilt Water. 203 
Bare of the body, might it /, . InMem.xYu. 6 

love will / as pure and whole . 11 • x 3 

there no shade can / . . . 11 xlv. 5 

raise a cry that I's not long, . . 11 lxxiv. 10 

woke The darkness of our planet, /, u lxxv. 10 
In words whose echo/" s, . Enid . . 782 

beyond his object Love can /: . Coquette, iii. 5 
I / but a moment longer. . . Spiteful Let. 12 

latch. 
Unlifted was the clinking /; . . Mariana . 6 
merry milkmaids click the /, . The Owl, i. 8 

door was off the /: they peep'd . Dora . . 127 
hand dwelt lingcringly on the /, . En. Arden . 515 

late. 
I fear it is too /, and I shall die.' . Sf. d' Arthur 180 
' Liut I was born too /: . . Golden Year 15 

not too / to seek a newer world. . Ulysses . 57 
out so / is out of rules. . . J'rincess, iv. 200 

They rise, but linger ; it is/; > . In Mem. Con. qz 
white rose weeps, 'She is /; . Maud, I. xxii. 64 

he for Italy — too/ — too /: . . The Brook . 2 
'/../, Sir Prince,' she said . . Enid . . 177 
so / That I but come like you . 11 . . 17J 
in herself she moaned 'too /, too I ! Guinevere . 130 
'/.' so/.' What hour I wonder . 11 . 158 

air the nuns had taught her ; 'I, sol!' 11 . 161 

L, I, so /.' and dark irep. ) . . 11 . 166 

Too/, too /.' ye cannot enter now (rep.) ti . . x68 
hoping, fearing ' is it yet too /? ' . 11 . 683 

too / .' they come too / for use. . Sea Dreams 67 

late-left. 
L-l an orphan of the squire, . Miller's D. . 34 

late-lost. 
A /-/ form that sleep reveals, . In Mem. xiii. 2 

later. 
Sir Prince,' she said '/ than we ! ' Enid . . 177 
or else he forged Hut that was /, . Aylmer's F. 97 
/ by an hour Here than ourselves, .SV<z Dreams 254 

talest-l'orn. 
Nursing the sickly babe, her l-b. . En. Arden . 150 

latest-left. 
thou, the /-/ of all my knights, . M. d' Arthur 124 

late-.vrit. 
show'd the /-to letters of the king . Princess, i. 173 

Latin. 
in flagrante— what's the L word? Walk totheM.26 
in the L song 1 learnt at school . Ed. Morris 79 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

. Eleajiore . 23 
. Day-Din. . 5 
. Princess, ii. 15 
82 



lattice 
Thro' half-open Ts 
As by the /you reclined, 
here and there on /edges lay 
follow, and light Upon her /, 
thro' a/on the soul Looks thy fairface/«.fl/««.lxix. 15 

lattice-blind. 
Backward the l-b she flung, . Mariana in the S. 87 

laugh (s.) 
Thereto she pointed with a /, . D. ofF. JVom.isg 
He laugh'd a / of merry scorn : . Lady Clare . 81 
■with a low and chuckling /; . . Vivien . 629 

broke into a little scornful/. . . Elaine . 121 

a /Ringing like proven golden coinage AyhnersF. 181 

laugh (verb.) 
We did so / and cry with you, D. of the O. Year 25 
Baby lips will / me down : 
she Ts at you and man : 
/ As those who watch a kitten 
the fairy well That Fs at iron — 
and cry, l L, little well,* 
l's Saying his knights are better men Elaine . 313 
and /at all your fears.' . . En. Arden . 216 

the neighbours come and /and gossip Grandmothergi 
a tale To /at — more to /at in myself — Litcretlus . 183 



Locksley H. 

Pri?icess, v. 112 

Vivien . 32 

11 . 279 



laughable. 
not make them / in all eyes . . Enid . 1175 

laugh 7 d. 
She spoke and /: I shut my sight CEnone -. . 184 
He /, and I, though sleepy . . The Epic . 44 
/, as one that read my thought, . Gardener* sD. 105 
heated faces ; till he /aloud ; . AudleyCt. . 36 
And I and Edwin /; . . Ed. Morris 93 

/, and swore by Peter and hy Paul : Godiva . 24 
The still voice /. ' I talk,' said he, Two Voices 385 
/ a laugh of merry scorn : . . Lady Clare 81 

Blue isles of heaven / between, SirL.andQ.G. 6 
she spoke, and at herself she /; . Princess, Pro. 152 
something so mock-solemn, that I / 
flat hand against his face and /; . 
make me hotter, till she /; . 
/ with alien lips, .... 
little seed they / at in the dark, . 
This brother had / her down, 
Katie /, and laughing blush'd, till 

he L also 

/ the father saying ' Fie, Sir Churl Elaine 

and in her heart she /, . . . n 

to the Queen, at first she / Lightly, Gtd?ievere 

Then /again, but faintlier, 11 

He /, and yielded readily . . En, Arden . 

others / at her and Philip too, . it 

ever miss'd it, and they / : 







. 209 


IF 




w. 345 


It 




111. 31 


ir 




IV. 10 1 


11 




vi. 18 


Maud, 


1 


xix. 60 


The Brook . 214 



54 
58 

367 
n . 474 

" - 753 

Aylniers F. 402 



forgives it as his own, He /; 

laughing. 
L all she can ; Lilian . 5 

L and clapping their hands between, The Merman 29 
Francis, /, clapt his hand . . The Epic . 21 
Juliet answer'd /, ' Go and see . Gardener sD. 29 
I ' what, if these weird seizures . Princess, i. 81 
Katie laugh'd, and / blush'd, . The Brook . 214 
He answer'd /, ' Nay, not like to me Vivie?i . 468 
Lavaine said, /, ' Lily maid, . Elaine . 384 

parted, /in his courtly heart. . n 1170 

/ at things that have long gone by. Grandmother 92 

la ugh ing-stock. 
drunkard's football, l-s's of Time . Princess, iv. 496 

laughter. 
Till the lightning Ts dimple . . Lilian . 16 

Silver-treble / trilleth : . . . ti .24 

scorn, Edged with sharp /, * Clear-headed friend* 2 
With her / or her sighs, . . Miller's D. 184 

their shrill happy / come to me, . (E?ione . 254_ 
L at her self-scorn. . . . Pal. of Art 232" 
/ dimpled in his swarthy cheek ; . Ed. Morris 61 
Marrow of mirth and /; . . Will Water. 214 

Dislink'd with shrieks and /: . Princess, Pro. 70 

shake The midriff of despair with / 11 i. 198 



POEM. 


LINE. 


. Princess, 


11. 


438 


it 


IV. 


2*3 

534 


re. 11 


V. 


21 


11 


VI. 


121 


. Maud, I] 


. IV 


• 2 9 


. Enid . 




114S 


. Vivien 




iq 


. Elaine 
11 




[79 

594 
595 



and back again With /: 

secret / tickled all my soul. 

with grim / thrust us out at gates. 

slain with / roll'd the gilded Squire. 

began A blind and babbling / 

The delight of happy /, 

thus he moved the Prince To / 

It made the / of an afternoon 

jest among them rose With / 

Must needs have moved my /: 

now remains But little cause for /; 

Save, as his Annie's, were a / . En. Arden , 

And / to their lords : Ayhner's F. 498 

children's /in their hall . . ir 787 

Waking / in indolent reviewers. He?idecasyllabics 8 

la ugh ter-stirred. 

his deep eye l-s . . . Arabian N* s. 150 

Launcelot see Lancelot, 

laurel. 
This /greener from the brows 
twinkling / scatter'd silver lights, 
dips Her / in the wine, 
gain'd a / for your brow 'You mig 
porch, the bases lost In /; 
porch, that sang All round with / 
hear thy / whisper sweet 
ungather'd let us leave This / 
dry-longued l's pattering talk 
Cameglimmering thro' the fs 
cavern-shadowing l's, hide ! 

la u re I- shrubs. 
the l-s that hedge it around. . 



. To the Quee?i 7 
Gardeiier 'sD .117 
. Will Water. 18 
■Jit have won,' etc. 3 
. Princess, i. 228 
11 ii. 9 
In Mem.xxxvn. 7 

11 civ. 2 

. Maud, J. xviii. 8 

11 II. iv. 77 

. Lucretius . 202 



Poet's Mind 14 

Laurence. 
Since I beheld young L dead. L. C. V. de Vere 28 

lava. 
Claymore and snowshoe, toys in /, Princess, Pro. 18 

Lavaijie. 

two strong sons, SirTorre and Sir L, Elaine . 174 

L, my younger here, He is so full tt . 202 

needs must bid farewell to sweet L. tt . 340 

L Past inward, as she came .it . 344 

L Returningbroughttheyet-unblazon'dn . 377 

L said, laughing, Lily maid . ti . 384 

Abash'dZ, whose instant reverence u . 417 

So spake L, and when they reach'd it . 427 

Lancelot answer'd young L and said n . 444 

And L gaped upon him . . 11 . 451 

Sir L did well and worshipfully ; . 11 . 490 

With young L into the poplar grove 11 . 508 

Gasping to Sir L 'draw . . n .510 

L drew, and that other gave . it . 514 

'and find out our d:ar L' u . 750 

will not lose your wits for dear L : 11 . 751 

l L,' she cried * L, How fares my lord it . 790 

L across the poplar grove Led .it . 800 

Besought L to write as she devised ir 1097 

lave, 
l's The lawn by some cathedral, . D. ofF. Wont. 189 

lavender. 
Purple-spiked/: .... Ode to Mem. no 

law. 
l's of marriage character'd in gold Isabel . 
giving light To read those l's ; . n 
live by / Acting the / we live by . CEnone 
Circled thro' all experiences, pure /, 11 
to hear Of wisdom and of /. . . Pal. of Art 
Roll'd round by one fix'd I. . , it 

in its season bring the / ; ( Love tho7t thy land,' etc. 32 
by some / that holds in love, . Gardener's D. 9 

a father's word was /, . . . Dora . . 25 
home is none of yours. My will is /.' it . . 43 
You knew my word was /, . . tt .96 

but there was / for us ; . . Walk, to the M. 7 7 
by Nature's /, Have faded long ago ; Talking O. 73 
to / System and empire ? . . Love and Duty 7 
dole Unequal l's unto a savage race, Ulysses . 4 



16 
19 
145 
163 
112 
256 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



POEM. LINE. 

lapt in universal /. LocksUy 11. 130 

reach the / within the/: . . I wo Voices . 141 
fulminedout herscornof /\r Salique Princess, 11. 117 
Electric, chemic/f, and all the rest, " .362 

.uld 1 fight with iron is ^ . 11 IV. 57 

We knew not your ungracious i's, 11 . 380 

truer to the /within? ... » v. 181 

biting is to scare the beasts of prey, " .- 383 

sanctuary Is violate, our is broken : ■■ VI. 44 
is arc broken : let him enter too.' . n . 297 

We break our i's with ease, " . 3°3 

lli^hncssdidnotmake . 11 ... 3°° 

order lived again with other /\s . " vu. 4 

storm'd At the Oppian /. . . " .109 

sons of men, and barbarous I's . " 219,240 

reverence for the I's ourselves have made 11 Con. 55 
In holding by the / within . Ik Mem. xxxiii. 14 
better serves a wholesome /, . 11 xlvii. 10 

1 . I rcation's final /— . . » Iv. 14 

.; is that errs from /. . . " Ixxil. 8 

loyal unto kindly /V . . • iilxxxiv. 16 

1,1 the bounds of/, . . iilxxxvi. 34 

dusty purlieus of the /. . . . iilxxxvui. 12 

sweeter manners, purer is . . i> cv. 16 

In all her motion one with / . . " cxxi. 8 

■ 'd, one /, one clement . » Con. 142 

the / that I made, . . Jl fault, I. i. 55 
whatever loathes a /.- . . . Enid . . 37 
clear' tl the dark places and letin the/. 11 . 1791 

Deeming our courtesy is the truest /. Elaine . 708 
ruin and the breaking up of I's, . Guinevere . 423 
their / relaxed its hold on us 11 . 453 

forced my thoughts on that fierce /, " . 533 

the lawless science of our/, . . Aylmer't F. 435 
is of nature were our scorn ; . The Voyage 84 
Not fullow the great /? . .Lucretius .116 

lawn (grassy level.) 
many a shadow-chequer'd / . . Arabian N's.zaa 
springs on a level of bowery /, . Poet's Mind 31 
Is and meadow-ledges midway down (Enoue . 6 

untain /was dewy -dark, .11 .47 

In each a squared /, . . . Pal. of Art 22 
Leading from / to /. . ... D. of P. Worn. 76 

f some one coming thro' the /, 11 . 178 

1 1 1'he / by some cathedral, . " . 190 
Or only look across the /, . . Margaret . 65 
the range of /and park: . . The Blackbird 6 
Flow, softly flow, by /and lea, . A Farewell 5 
Dreams over lake and /. . . Vision of Sin n 
girt the region with high cliff and /: 11 . 47 
his broad I's until the set of sun . Princess,Pro. 2 
sward was trim as any garden /: . " . 95 
others lay about the is, . . 11 ii. 438 
lovelier not the Llysian is, . . 11 Hi. 324 

heights came out above the is, 11 . 347 

with the old king across the is . " y. 226 

rivulets hurrying thro' the / . 11 vii. 205 

the floor Of this flat/ . . JnMem.]x3umii.a 

fhe Tuscan poets on the /." . 11 .. 24 

red on the /, . 11 xciv. 1 

Ins on /and lea, >r cxiv. 9 

And lilies fair on a /: . . . Maud,l.x\v. 2 

Hut the rivulet on from the / " .29 

1 steal by is and grassy plots . The Brook . 170 

the/ with rime Top. D. Maurice 41 

Is And winding glades high up . . En. An/en . 573 

thro' the bright is to his brother's Aylmer's F. 341 

halls, and f.mns, and flowing is, . 11 . 654 

lawn 'linen.) 

Slow-dropping veils of thinnest /, . Lotos-Es. . 11 

Lawrence, sec Aylmer. 

lawyer. 

was a Cod. and is a is clerk, . Ed. Mom's 102 
Vext with is and harass' d with debt Maud,l. xix. 22 

lay it.) 

I !.e my /, . . Day-Dm. 197,269 

orrow born, . InMem.xWu. 1 

iS or dare she trust a larger /, .11 . 13 



LIME. 

lo, thy deepest is are dumb . InMcmAxxv. 7 
Demand not thou a marriage / . •• Con. 2 

link'd our names together in his /, Elaine .113 
many a mystic /of life and death. Guinevere 
woke her with a /from fairy land ..a 

Ps that will outlast thy Deity? .Lucretius . 72 

lay (to place, etc.) 
you may / me low i' the mould . MayQiteenfi. 4 
none of mine ; L it not to me. . StS.Stylites 122 
is it thrice upon my lips, . . Will Hater. 19 
/ your hand upon my head, . . Lady Clare 
L out the viands.' .... Princess, in. 3m 
And / me on her bosom . . " iv. 85 

/ my little blossom at my feet, . 11 v. 97 

is on every side A thousand arms 11 vi. 20 

or if you scorn to /it, Yourself . » ... 167 

L thy sweet hands in mine . . " vii. 345 

Till growing winters / me low . fuMeitt.xxxix. 30 
/ their eggs, and sting and sing . 11 xlix. 11 

Then to Strike him and / him low, Maud, 1 1. v. 90 
/ the man whom we deplore? . Ode on Well. 8 
L your earthly fancies down, . " . 279 

L's claim to for the lady at his side, Enid . .487 
/ lance in rest, O noble host . . " . . 49-6 
lose his bone, and is his foot upon it, " . 14'° 

here I /this penance on myself " . 17 

/the letter in my hand . . .Elaine 1107 

all 1 have of rich, and /me on it. . 11. . 1114 

/ their hands in mine and swear . Guinevere . 4' t 
on thy heart a finger l's . . On a Mourner w 
is His vast and filthy hands .Lucretius .216 

lay (prct. of lie.) 
the thick-motcd sunbeam / . . Mariana . ■j'i 
An open scroll Before him/: . The Poet . 9 
should have stabb'd me where I /, Oriana . 5; 
loosed the chain, and down she /; L.tfSAalo/t.iv. 16 
/ Upon the freshly-flowerd slope. Miller s D. . in 
To win his love 1 /in wait : . . The Sisters it 
L, dozing in the vale of Avalon, . Pal. of Art 107 
/. there exiled from eternal God, 11 • 263 

masts flicker'd as they / afloat ; . D.ofF. V. 'om. 1 1 3 
On one side /the Ocean, . . .U.J Arthur 11 
on one L a great water, . . 11 1 - 

/the mighty bones of ancient men, 11 . 47 

like a shatter'd column / the K. ; . 11 . 221 

quail and pigeon, lark and leveret /, Audley Ct. 23 
L great with pig, wallowing in sun Walk. tot:. 
I Pent in a roofless close . . St S. Sty lit es 72 
On the coals 1 /, A vessel full of sin : 11 .166 

at my feet she /..... Talking 0. 208 
but a moment / Where fairer fruit 11 . 250 

The dewy sister-eyelids /. . . Pay-Put. . 4 
On the mossy stone, as 1 /, . . Ed. Gray . 26 
Leapt up from where she /, . . Lady Clare 62 
L betwixt his home and hers ; . /-. if Burleigh 28 
on the pavement / Carved stones Princess, Pro. 13 
about it / the guests, ... 11 . 106 

patting LUia'snead (she / Beside him) 11 .. 125 
on lattice edges /Or book . . 11 ii. 15 

/at wine with Lar and Lucumo ; 11 . 113 

others /about the lawns . . 11 ... 438 

/three parts In shadow, . . n iii. 4 

/The lily-shining child ; . . " iv .• j 

glove upon the tomb L by her . 11 . 574 

fair length upon the ground she /: 11 y. 56 

in some mystic middle stale 1 /, . " v i. 2, 

To where her wounded brethren /; ti . 74 

L like a new-fall'n meteor " . 119 

he that / Beside us, Cyril, . . " .137 

two hosts that /beside the walls . 11 . 302 

L silent in the muffled cage of life 11 vii. 32 

/ Quite sunder'd from the moving 11 . 36 

I /still, and oft with me she sat : . " 

/like one in trance, ..." . 136 

with shut eves 1 / Listening ; . 11 . 208 

/and read The Tuscan poi 1 1 In Mem.lxxxwu. 23 
l little shallop /At anchor " cii. w 

ce, with a tear of worse . Ma.-t.t,\. \\x. ;.■ 

\\ p 11 In! / there with a lading eye.' " 1 1 

When he /dying there, . .11 ii. ' 7 



234 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Sun-smitten Alps before me I . The Daisy . 62 
his princedom I Close on the borders Enid . 33 
Guinevere /late into the morn . ir . 157 

/ Contemplating her own unworthiness ; n . 532 

/With her fair head in the dim-yellow 11 . 599 

tho' she /in the dark pool, 11 . 657 

Enid listen' d brightening as she /; n . 733 

his enemy roll'd, And there / still ; if 1010 

So / the man transfixt. ... 11 1015 

cast him and the bier in which he / 11 1420 

/still, and feign' d himself as dead, it *436 

/beside him in the hollow shield) 11 1 574 

huge Earl /slain within his hall. . 11 1654 

Geraint / healing of his hurt, . " 1779 

At Merlin's feet the wily Vivien / Vivien . 5 
/as dead And lost to life . . if 62, 818 

/ she all her length and kiss'd .11 .68 

/ Foot-gilt with all the blossom-dust m . 130 

/ And felt them slowly ebbing. . tr . 286 

/as dead And lost all use . . t> . 495 

there / the reckling, one But one hour ir . 559 

/till all their bones were bleach'd Elaine . 44 
L like a rainbow fall'n upon the grass, it . 430 

his horse to Lancelot where he /, tr . 492 

hands L naked on the wolfskin . tf . 809 

/, Speaking a still good-morrow . 11 1026 

all its length in blackest samite, /. if 1136 

and /as tho' she smiled - . " i*55 

lily maid of Astolat / smiling . if 1235 

To hers which / so silent . . n 1278 

like a subtle beast L couchant . Guinevere . 12 
■while he /recovering there, . . En. Arden . 108 
Enoch / long-pondering on his plans ; if . 133 

L lingering out a three-years' . if . 566 

this isle, not knowing where she /; n . 631 

fail'd a little, And he / tranced ; . i> 794 

L hidden as the music of the moon Aylmer's F. 102 
E deeper than to wear it as his ring — 11 . 122 
silenced by that silence / the wife, Sea Dreams 46 
I /,' said he, ' And mused upon it, 11 . 103 

right across its track there /, . n . 122 

belt, it seem'd, of luminous vapour, /, 11 . 202 

There / the sweet little body . Gra7idmother 62 

I /, Mouth, forehead, eyelids . Tithonus . 57 
there at tables of ebony /, . . Boadicea . 61 
In their blood, as they / dying, . The Captain 55 
dead men / all over the way, . The Victim 21 

layer. 
spread his dark-green I's of shade. Gardener" 'sD. 115 

lay-hearth. 
one l-h would give you welcome To F.D.Maurice 11 

laying. 
/down an unctuous lease Of life . Will Water. 243 
Autumn /here and there A fiery . InMem. xcviii. 11 
/his trams in a poison'd gloom . Maud, I. x. 8 
flaws in summer / lusty corn : . Enid . . 764 
/ there thy golden head, . . Guinevere . 531 

lazar. 
And him, the /, in his rags . . InMem.cxxvi. 10 

Lazarus. 
When L left his charnel-cave, , InMem. xxxi. 1 

lea. 
From wandering over the /; . Sea-Fairies 11 

mad pranks along the heathy Vs; Circumsta?ice 2 
pipe along the fallow /, . . . MayQuee7i,i\. 18 
And overlook the /, . . . Talking O. * 198 
never yet was oak on / . . . ti . 243 

him that on the mountain / . 
Flow, softly flow, by lawn and /, 
cattle huddled on the /; 
ploughs with pain his native / 
ere the lark hath left the / . 
dance the lights on lawn and /, 
the pimpernel dozed on the /; 
blight and famine on all the /; 

lead (s.) 
on the Vs we kept her . 
tempest crackles on the I's, . 
clog of / was round my feet, 



. ToE. L. . 
. A Farewell 
. InMem, xv. 

11 lxiii. 

ir lxvii. 

11 cxiv. 
. Afaud,!. xxii. 
. The Victim . 



Walk.t0theM.S4 
Sir Galahad 53 
The Letters 5 



POEM. LINE- 

Ode to Mem. 64 

(Eno?ie . 143 

St S. Stylites 220 

Locks ley H. 68 

E>ay-D7n. . 207 

St Agnes Eve 8 

L. of Burleigh 11 

Vision of Sin 65 

Priiicess, ii. 326 

In Mem. ix. 7 

11 xxiii. 8 

ti xxxiii. 8 

ir lxxxiv. 8 



lead (verb.) 

! hither / thy feet ! . . 
/ life to sovereign power 
/them to thy light. 
Is the clanging rookery home. 
According as his humours /, . 
That / me to my Lord : 
L's her to the village altar, . 
Take my brute, and / him in, 
still may / The new light up, 
/ Thro 5 prosperous floods 
on to where the pathway Vs ; 
life that l's melodious days. . 
What kind of life is that 11; 

1 The closing cycle rich in good . 
It l's me forth at evening 
L out the pageant : sad and slow, 
Thro' which he bade her / him 
to / her to his lord Arthur, . 
/ sweet lives in purest chastity, 
their King to / mine hosts 
With fuller profits / an easier life, 
The babe shall / the lion, 
/an errant passion home again. . 
meant Surely to /my Memnius . 

leadeu-colo u red. 
the low moan of l-c seas. . . En. Arden . 613 

leader. 
patient l's of their Institute . . Princess, Pro. 58 
/ wildswan in among the stars . ir iv. 414 

as the / of a herd That holds 
For a man and / of men. 
Mourning when their l's fall, 
the / in these glorious wars . 
ever-loyal iron l's fame . 
there lives No greater /.' 

leading. 
/a jet-black goat .... CEnone . 50 
L from lawn to lawn. . . . D. ofF. Worn. 76 
/ up the golden year. . . Golden Year 26, 41 
L on from hall to hall. . . , L. oj Burleigh 52 
Enid / down the tracks . . . Enid . . 877 
disappear'd, L the horse, ir *c>93 

Arthur /, slowly went Themarshall'd Elaine 1321 
/ evermore Low miserable lives . En. Arden . 1 15 



II CIV. 


27 


Mand,\\.i\. 


17 


Ode on Well. 


n 


Enid . 


878 


Guinevere . 


380 


11 


470 


11 


S66 


En. Arden . 


14=; 


Ayhner's E. 


648 


L-ucretius . 


17 


ti • 


119 



Maud, I. x. 
Ode on Well. 



Elaine 



69 

59 
S 
192 
229 
317 



those /-/ tons of sin, 



lead-like. 



StS. Stylites 25 



leaf. 



Flush'd all the leaves . . . Arabian N^s. 82 

rich smell of the rotting leaves, * A spirit haunts' 17 

came dazzling thro' the leaves, L. ofShalott, iii. 3 

leaves upon her falling light — 

like leaves in roaring wind. . 

blackthorn, the /upon the tree. 

/ is woo'd from out the bud . 

I knew the leaves, I knew . 

for want, ere leaves are new, 

sitting muffled in dark leaves, 

like the whispers of the leaves 

rain'd about the / Twilights . 

prick Each / into a gall) 

swear, by /, and wind, and rain. 

that, which breathes within the /, 

all the summer of my leaves 

Thy / shall never fail, nor yet 

Alternate / and acorn-ball 

The memory of the wither'd / 

rests the sap within the /, 

dash'd about the drunken leaves 

sounder / than I can claim. ' You 

And the / is stamp'd in clay. 

lisping of the innumerous / 

first snowdrop's inner leaves , 

leaves were wet with women's tears 

only thro' the faded / . 

leaves that redden to the fall : 

last red / is whirl'd away. 

lands where not a / was dumb ; 

In many a figured / enrolls ; 



tl IV 


21 


. Eat una 


7 


. May Queen, ii 


. 8 


. Lotos-Es. . 


7 1 


. D. o/E. Worn 


• 73 


. The Blackbird 23 


. Gardener's D 


37 


11 


2 + 3 


. AndleyCt. . 


80 


. Talking 0. . 


70 


ti 


81 


11 


187 


11 


211 


ti 


2 59 


11 


287 


. Two Voices . 


112 


. Day-Dm. . 


23 


. Ampkion 


55 


'. m ig/i t have wot 


- 4 


. Vision of Sin 


82 


. Princess, v. 


13 


11 


189 


ars : n vi. 


23 


. In Mem. xi. 


3 


tr . 


14 


II XV. 


3 


11 xxiii. 


10 


11 xlii. 


11 



TEXXYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

secm'd to touch it into /.* . InMemAxvm. iS 
Thy /has perish'd in the green, . n lxxiv. 13 

Thy spirits in the darkening /, . nlxxxvii. 6 

fall'n haves which kept their green, 11 xciv. 23 
large leaves of the sycamore, . 11 .55 

under brown Of lustier leaves; . 11 xcvii. 25 

A fiery finger on the leaves ; . 11 xcviii. 12 

admits not flowers or leaves . . 1, cvi. 5 

dead / trembles to the bells. . . 11 Cert. 64 

shiver of dancing leaves is thrown Maud, I. vi. 73 
such a time as goes before the/, . The Brook . 13 
as a / in mid- November is . . Enid . . 611 
worm draws in the wither'd / . n . 1481 
from his mighty shoulder, as a /, . Vivien . 92 
true man change like a / . . Elaine . 683 
L after /, and tore, and cast them 11 1193 

thatch'dwith leaves of palm, ahut . En. Arden . 560 
the smell of dying leaves, 11 . 612 

the / in a roaring whirlwind . . Boadicea . 59 
fallen /, isn't fame as brief? (rep.) Spiteful Let. 9 
yellow / hates the greener /, 11 . 15 

Spring is here with / and grass : . The Window 98 

leafless. 
wish — What? that the bush were I? Lucretius . 203 

league. 
For rs no other tree did mark . Mariana . 43 
A /of grass, wash'd by a slow . Gardener's D. 40 
Many a long / back to the North . Frincess, i. 166 
heave and thump A /of street . 11 iii. 112 

we rode a / beyond, 11 . 316 

Isoi odour streaming far, . In Mem. lxxxv. 14 

At the shouts, the I's of lights, . Maud, 11. iv. 21 
Haifa/, half a/, rep.) . Lt. Brigade 1 

/of mountain full of golden mines Vivien . 437 

proffer of the /of golden mines, . 11 . 496 

rs along that breaker-beaten coast En. A rden . 5 1 

leagued. 
And /him with the heathen, . Guinevere . 153 

L with the lords of White Horse . ir . 569 

league-long. 
/-/roller thundering on the reef . En. Arden . 585 

leaguer. 
for hours On that disastrous /, . Princess, vii. 18 

leal. 
fain Have all men true and /, . Vivien . 643 

lean 'adj.) 
gap-tooth'd man as / as death, . Vision of Sin 60 
lists were swell'd and mine were /; Princess, iv. 300 
So / his eyes were monstrous : . / 'ivien . 474 

smile That makes the widow /. . Sea Dreams 152 

lean {verb.) 
And a rose-bush I's upon, . . Adeline . 14 
/ out from the hollow sphere . The M 'erniaid 54 

elmtree-bolcs did stoop and / . D. off. Worn. 57 
from a casement I's his head, . 11 . 246 

those we / on most, . . . To J. S. . 9 
/a ladder on the shaft, . . StS. Stylites 213 

On that which I's to you. . . Princess, iii. 216 
/ on our fair father Christ, . . Guinevere . 558 

lean'd. 
/ upon the balcony. . . Mariana in the S. 88 
from the bridge I / to hear . . Miller's D. 49 
a golden cloud, and / Upon him, . CEnone . 103 
r of his blood L on him, . Two Voices 416 
!ic/on me, Descending; . Princess, iv. 8 
/not on his fathers but himself. . Ay-liner's F. 56 

lean-headed. 
L-h Eagles yelp alone . . . Princess, vii. 196 

leaning. 
fruit-bunches /on each other— . Isabel . . 37 
I. his check upon his hand, . . Eleduore . 118 

you were / from the ledge : . . Miller's D. 84 
i on a fragment twined with vine, (/'none . 19 
< her pearly shoulder / cold, 11 . 138 

/on the bridge . . . May Quern, 1. i| 
L his horns into the neighbour field. Gardener'sD.86 



POEM. LINE. 

/ there on those balusters . . Frincess, iii. 103 

/ deep in broider'd down . . 11 iv. 14 

replied, L a little toward him, . Enid . . 495 

speaking not, but / over him, . Vivien . 327 

leanness. 
black eyes Yet larger thro' his /, . Elaine . 831 

leant, 
on her lover's arm she /, . . Dav-Din. . 165 
What reed was that on which II? InMcm. lxxxiii 45 
Sir Lancelot /, in half disgust . Elaine 1231 

lea/- 
heart on one wild / Hung tranced Gardener sD. 254 
stirs the pulse With devil's Is . Guinevere . 5x8 

leap (verb.) 
In the middle Is a fountain . . Poet's Mind 24 
like a wave I would / . . . The Mermaid 39 
/ forth and fall about thy neck, . Love and Duty+i 
And his spirit Is within him . Locksleyll. 115 

/the rainbows of the brooks, . 11 . 171 

still the first to / to light . . Day-Dnt. . 239 
I / on board : no helmsman steers : Sir Galahad 39 
/ the rotten pales of prejudice, . Princess, ii. 126 
wild cataract Is in glory. . . 11 iii. 351 

Is in Among the women, snares them " v. 155 
/ the grades of life and light, . In Mem. xl. ji 

at his footstep Is no more, . . 11 lxxxiv. 112 
Is into the future chance, . . 11 cxiii. 7 
/ from his counter and till. . . Maud, I. i. 51 
red man's babe L, beyond the sea. 11 xvii. 20 

darkness into the light shall /, . i» III. vi. 46 
grigs that / in summer grass. . The Brook . 54 

Whatever record / to light . . Ode on Well. 190 
Making the little one /for joy To F. D. Maurice 4 
boy began to /and prance, ' I I ome they brought him' 7 

leaped. 
About mc / and laugh'd . . Talking O. 66 

leaping. 

/ lightly from the boat, . . Arabian X's. 92 

/out upon them unseen . . The Merman 33 

/ down the ridges lightly, . . M.d 'Arthur 134 

leapt. 
Then / a trout. In lazy mood . Miller's D. 73 
mailed Hacchus / into my arms, . D. ofF. Worn. 151 
words /forth: ' Heaven heads . n . 201 

sixty feet the fountain /. . . Day-Dm. . 140 
L up from where she lay, . . Lady Clare 62 
Two Proctors / upon us, . . Princess, iv. 240 
L from the dewy shoulders of the earth, 11 v. 41 

into fiery splinters /the lance, . 11 . 483 

o'er the statues / from head to head, 11 vi. 346 
out of langour /a cry ; L fiery Passion 11 vii. 140 
Thought /out to wed with Thought In Mem. xxiii. 15 
L from her session on his lap . Vivien . 693 

harlot / Adown the forest, . 11 . 821 

L on his horse and carolling . . Elaine . 700 
L on him, and hurl'd him headlong, Guinevere, 107 
no one cared for, / To greet her . Ayhner's F. 688 



learn. 
I at full How passion rose 
/to slight His father's memory ; 
thousand thanks for what I / 
Drug thy memories, lest thou /it. 
/ new things when I am not.' 
/ the world, and sleep again ; 
since I came to live and /, 
/ whatever men were taught : 
were too barbarous, would not/; . 
Is the one pou sto 
/ With whom they deal, 
/ ifl da yet would cede our claim, . 
to live and / and lie 
(Jive it time To / its limbs : . 
Is her gone and far from home : , 
/That 1 have been an hour away. 
Is the use of ' I ' and ' mc ' . 
Had man to / himself anew . 



Gardener's D. 234 
. Dora . .150 
. Talking O. . 203 
Loiksley II. 77 
. Tvo I mess, 63 
. Day-Dnt, . 220 
. Will Water. 81 
. Princess, ii. 130 
. 278 



II III. 


246 


" iv 


49« 


M V. 


323 


1' VII. 

In Mem.wW. 


»57 
79 

* 


II XII. 

" xliv. 


»9 
6 


n 


»5 



=36 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 


Aland, I. iv. 


4 1 


The Brook . 


142 


Ode on Well. 


204 


Enid . 


132 


ii 


203 


t'n 


359 


'i 


424 


Vivien 


1347 
17S 


Elaine 


215 
63 


ii 
ti 
ii 
tr 

Gui?tevere . 


582 
584 
651 
696 
768 
918 
572 


En. Ardell . 


8^6 


Aylmers F. 


398 


ii 
Sea Dreams 


433 

177 


The Ringlet 


51 



or admire, if a man could / it, 

bailiff to the farm To / the price, 

l's to deaden Love of self, 

' If Enid errs let Enid / her fault 

* Surely I will /the name/ . 

by the bird's song you may /the nest 

break his pride and / his name, . 

But coming back he l's it, 

wish still more to / this charm 

/ themselves and all the world, 

must / Which is our mightiest, 

/ If his old prowess were in aught 

e our true Arthur, when he l's, 

Whence you might / his name ? . 

/ the courtesies of the court, 

to / this knight were whole, 

a little space Till he should /it ; . 

remaining here wilt / the event ; . 

/ I loved her to the last.' 

grieved to / your grief — 

task ourselves To / a language 

/ A man is likewise counsel . 

what is this which now 11,. 

learned (adj. J 
/, save in gracious household ways Princess, vii. 299 

learned (verb.) 
One lesson from one book we /, In Mem. lxxviii. 14 
shall have / to lisp you thanks. . Enid . . 822 

learning (part.) 
/this, the bridegroom will relent. . Guinevere . 170 

learning {s.) 
what was / unto them ? . . Princess, ii. 440 

wearing all that weight Of /lightly InMem. Con. 40 

learnt, 
the Latin song I / at school, 
/ No more from Psyche's lecture. 
/? I / more from her in a flash 
since we / our meaning here, 
/, For many weary moons . if . 301 

your ungracious laws, which / . n iv. 380 

self-involved; but when she / the face, ir vi. 142 
Much had she /in little time . ti vii. 225 

when they / that I must go . . InMem, cii. 17 
/that James had flickering jealousies The Brook 99 



. Ed. Morris 79 

Princess, ii. 370 

11 .... 375 

11 iii. 206 



ere he /it, 'Take Five horses . Enid 
I their elemental secrets, . . Vivien 
' He /and warn'd me . . . Elaine 
c Sire, my liege, so much I /; . 11 
(When first I /thee hidden here) . Guinevere 
Tithonus 



1257 
. 482 

■ 2 74 
. 704 

■ 535 

■ 47 



a saying / In days far-off, 

lease. 
laying down an unctuous / . . Will Water. 243 

leash. 
hold passion in a /, . . . Love and Duty ,\o 

least. 
Myself not /, but honoured of them Ulysses . 15 
not they the / of men ; . . . Princess, ii. 132 
InMem. xxxv'n. 2 



Enid 



pratest here where thou art / 

leave (permission 
so much as gave us / to go. 
I'll have /at times to play 
petitioned for his /To see the hunt. 

* Your / / let me lay lance 
' Have I / to speak ? ' . 

* Your /, my lord, to cross the room, ti 
free / ' he said ; ' Get her to speak : if 
/ To move to your own land, . if 
father give me /, an if he will, . Elaine 
left him / to stammer,' is it indeed? ti 
with a month's /given them, . Sea Dreams 

leave (farewell.) 
took my /, for it was nearly noon : Princess, v. 457 
swarming now, To take their /, . ir Con. 38 

take her latest / of home, . . InMem. xxxix. 6 
thou shalt take a nobler // . . n lvii. 12 

take last / of all I loved ? . . Guinevere . 542 



) 

Princess, v. 225 
InMemAvln. 11 
. 154 
• 495 



1147 
1 149 
1736 
219 
419 
6 



leave (verb.) poem. line. 
/ us rulers of your blood . . To the Queen 21 
to / the blessed sun, . . MayQueen,m. 9 

/ the myrrh-bush on the height ; . Eotos-E's. . 103 
not meet, Sir King, to /thee thus, M. d' Arthur 40 
Better to / Excalibur conceal' d . 11 .62 

'E ' she cried ' O / me !' ' Never, Ed. Morris 116 
/ my relics in your land, . . StS. Stylites 191 
/ thou mine to me. . . . Talking O. , 200 

/thee freer, till thou wake refreshed, Love and Dutyg^. 
1 / the sceptre and the isle — . Ulysses , 34 

Comrades, / me here a little, . Locksley H. 1 

L me here, and when you want me 11 .2 

first he l's his father's field, 11 . 112 

I / the plain, I climb the height ; . Sir Galahad 57 
I /an empty flask : Will Water. 164 

/ his music as of old ' You might have won,' etc. 14 
And they /her father's roof. . L. of Burleigh 12 

/me where I lie : . . 'Come not, when,' etc. n 
/Yon orange sunset waning 'Move eastward,' etc. 1 
E us : you may go : . . . Princess, ii. 80 
4 L me to deal with that.' . . 11 iii. 133 

111 mother that I was to /her . 11 v. 90 

meteor on, and l's A shining furrow 11 vii. 169 
/The monstrous ledges there to slope if . 196 

/ her space to burgeon out of all . ti . 255 

wilt not / us in the dust : . . InMem. Pro. 9 
/ this mortal ark behind. . . 11 xii. 6 

/ the cliffs, and haste away ti .8 

L thou thy sister when she prays. if xxxiii. 5 
half my life 1 / behind : . . 11 lvi. 6 

what I see I / unsaid, ff lxxui. 10 

I / thy praises unexpress'd . . fi lxxiv. 1 
I / thy greatness to be guess'd ; . u -4 

You / us : you will see the Rhine, ir xcvii. 1 
We / the well-beloved place . . ff ci. 1 

/ the pleasant fields and farms : . 11 .22 

wilt thou /us now behind?' . . if cii. 48 

ungather'd let us / This laurel . if civ. 1 

/the porch, they pass the grave . ir Con. 71 

sweetness hardly l's me a choice . Maud, I. v. 24 
When will the dancers / her alone ? n xxii. 21 

in the vast cathedral /him. . . Ode on Well. 280 
l's The Crown a lonely splendour. Ded. of Idylls 47 
not / her, till her promise given — Enid . . 605 
L me to-night : I am weary. . if . 1207 

To / an equal baseness ; . . Vivien . 679 

ere I /you let me swear once more » . , 778 
made him / The banquet . . Elaine . 560 

let me / My quest with you ; n 687 

of this remnant will I / a part, . Guinevere . 441 
/thee, woman, to thy shame. . if . 507 

E me that, I charge thee, My last hope, if . 563 

this weary way, And / you lonely ? En. Arden . 296 
death-in-life. They could not / him. 11 . 567 

One who cried '/ all and follow me ' Ay liner's F. 664 
/it gorily quivering? . . . Boddicea . 12 

leaven (s.) 
the old / leaven'd all : . . . Princess, v. 376 

leaven (verb.) 
now to / play with profit . . Princess, iv. 131 

leavened. 
the old leaven / all : . . . Princess, v. 376 

leave-taking. 
Low at /-/, with his brandish'd plume Enid 



120S 



leaving. 
L door and windows wide : . . Deserted H. 3 
/ my ancient love With the Greek CEnone . 256 
L the dance and song, . . . D. ofF. Worn. 216 
L the olive-gardens far below, . 11 . 217 

L the promise of my bridal bower, " . 218 

E great legacies of thought, . . InMem.\xxx\u.T,$ 
And, /these, to pass away, . . 11 xcix. 19 
/ night forlorn. ir cvi. 4 

So early, /me behind, . . * " . cxiii. 24 
never / her, and grew Forgetful . Enid . . 49 
/ Arthur's court he gain'd the beach Vivien . 46 

L her household and good father. Elaine . 14 



TEX.VYSOX'S WORKS. 



=37 



Lebanon. ! EH. line. 

O, art thou sighing for L ,rep.) . J/rt/«/,I.xvin. 15 

Lebanoman. 
in halls Of L cedar : . . . Princess, ii. 331 

lecture. 
A classic /, rich in sentiment, . Princess, ii. 352 
learnt No more from Psyche's /, . 11 . 371 

lecture state. 
On the Is The circle rounded . Princess, ii. 349 

ted. 
a bride of old In triumph /, . . Ode to Mem. 76 
light that /The holy Elders . . M.d' 'Arthur 232 
Fancy, / by Love Would play . Gardener sD. 58 
heard, by secret transport /, . . Two Voices 214 
aim by the curls, and /him in, VisionofSin 6 
/ you then to all the Castalies ; . Princess, iv. 275 
But / by golden wishes, n . 400 

/ Threading the soldier-city, . 11 y. 6 

/A hundred maids in train . . 11 yi. 59 

/ by tracts that pleased us well . InMent. xxii. 2 
/him thro' the blissful climes, . 11 lxxxiv. 25 
wept and wail'd, he / the way. . 11 cii. 18 

I have / her home, my love, . . Maud, I.xviii. 1 
/ me thro' the short sweet-smelling The Brook . 122 
Remember him who / your hosts ; OdeonlVell. 171 
L from the territory 01 false . . Enid . 1286 
answeringnotoncword.she/thcway. 11 . 1344 

acrossthcpoplargroveZ. tothecaves: Elaine . 801 
/ her forth, and far ahead . . Guinevere . 381 
/the way To where the rivulets . En. Arden . 642 
a few, by wit or fortune /, . . Aylmer's F. 438 
still we follow'd where she /, The Voyage 59, 90 

leddest. 
/by the hand thine infant Hope. . Ode to Mem. 30 

ledge. 

you were leaning from the /: . Millers D. . 84 
pine;, that plumed the craggy / . CEnoue . 205 
Of / or shelf The rock rose clear, . Pal. 0/ Art 9 
from the craggy / the poppy hangs /."tos-EAs. . 56 
leave The monstrous ts there to . Princess, vii. 197 
About the t's of the hill.' . . InMem. xxxvii. S 
The red-ribbed Ps drip . . . Maud, I. i. . 3 
Athwart the Is of rock . . • " . II. ii- 28 
on the window /, Close underneath Elaine 1232 

ledger. 

When only the / lives . . . Maud, I. i. . 35 

tee. 
Annie L, The prettiest little damsel En. Arden . 11 

later but a loftier Annie L . . 11 . 749 

leech 'an aquatic worm.) 
swarm'd His literary /' s. . . Will Water. 200 

leecli a physician.) 
King's own / to look into his hurt; Enid . 1771 

leering. 

L at his neighbour's wife. . . Vision of Sin 118 

lets. 
I will drink Life to the/: . . Ulysses . 7 
Dregs of life, and /of man : . . Visiono/Sin 205 

/,// left hand.) 
In her /a human head. . . Vision 0/ Sin 13S 

she the /, or not, or seldom used : Princess, iii. 22 
this feud betwixt the right and /.' 11 . 61 

Oaring one arm, and bearing in my / ir iv. 1O5 

/, ft verb.) 

With til ver anchor / afloat, . . Arabian Ws. 93 

She / the weh, she / ilie loom, L.o/S/iatott, iii. 37 

ith a willow / afloat, . . •• iv. 7 

I.-, this the end to be /alone, Mariana intheS. 71 

day and night I am/alone . . » .83 

/awantunkn . . . Miller's D. 228 

• er ; . CEnone ;.i%& 

1 I ild -. 1 ir, . MayQueen, ii. 5 

Then when I I my home.' . D.oJ J-. Worn. 120 

■ was / ' look here I' 11 . 156 

Bow Of music / the lips . . it 195 

she / me where I stood ; . . » .241 



POE1I. LINE. 

Falls off, and love is / alone. . To J. S. . 16 

' at home was little / And none abroad : The Epic 19 
moved away, and / me, statue-like, Gardener sD. 158 
/his father's house, And hired himself Dora 
and he / his men at work, . . 11 

/ the dying ebb that faintly lipp'd Audley Ct. n 
He I his wife behind ; . . Wall;, to the M. 1 
He / her, yes. I met my lady once : 11 -40 

/alone Upon her tower, the Niobe ■■ . 90 

now we / The clerk behind us, . Ed. Morris 96 
/ the place, / Edwin, nor have seen •< . 137 

this way was /, And by this way . StS. Stylites 175 
Her father / his good arm-chair, . Talking O. 103 
She / the novel half-uncut 11 . 117 

She / the new piano shut : it . txg 

passion sweeping thro' me /me dry'. Locksley }I. 131 
Z. me with the palsied heart, and /me 11 . 132 

1 was / a trampled orphan, . .11 . 156 
/alone, the passions of her mind, Codiva . 32 
My father /a park to mc, . . Ampliion . 1 
He / a small plantation ; . . •• .20 

dying lately, /her, as 1 hear, . Princess, i. 77 
she who had / her place, . . 11 ii. 149 

what other way was I, I came/ . 11 . 199 

bells call'd us : we /the walks; . u . 447 

/thedrunkcnkingTobrawlat Shushan » iii. 213 
her horse was lost I / her mine) . 11 iv. 179 

many thousand matters / to do, . it . 438 

what was /of faded woman-slough 11 v. 38 

We / her by the woman ti . 109 

she /: She shall not have it . . 11 . 421 

Pharos from his base Had / us rock n vi. 320 
languid limbs and sickness ; / me in it ;■■ . 356 

some were / of those Held sagest, 11 . 360 

Blanche had gone, but / Her child 11 vii. 41 
/ her woman, lovelier in her mood 11 . 147 

but as a block /- in the quarry ; . 11 _. 216 

having /the gl.iss, she turns . In Men:, yi. 35 

Vdam /his garden yet, . 11 xxiy. 8 
When Lazarus / his charnel-cave, 11 xxxi. 1 
soil, / barren, scarce had grown . 11 hi. 7 

ere the lark hath / the lea . . 11 Ixvii. 13 
What fame is / for human deeds . n lxxii. 11 
As in the winters / behind, . . 11 bcxyii. 9 
I felt, and feel tho' /alone, . . 11 lxxxiv. 42 
/my after-morn content. . . 11 cii. 4 

Our father's dust is /alone . . 11 civ. 5 

had / us flaccid and drain'd. . Maud, I. i. 20 

/ his coal all tum'd into gold . 11 x. 11 

And / the daisies rosy. ... 11 xii. 24 

lump of earth has / his estate . .11 xvi. 1 
who was / to watch her but 1 ? . 11 xix. 10 
if /uncanccll'd, had been so sweet: u . 46 

/ his wine and horses and play, .11 -74 

meadow your walks hove 2 so sweet u xxii. 39 
thou art / for ever alone : . . 11 II. iii. 4 
Affirming that his father/ him gold Enid . . 4-1 
/hermaiden couch, androbed herself, 11 . . ^37 
When late I / Caerleon, our great 11 . . ; 1 
when I /your mowers dinncriess. u . 1083 

the horse, and they were / alone. 11 . 1093 

Enid / alone with Prince Geraint n . 1214 
Nor / untold the craft herself . 11 . 144a 

so / him stunn'd or dead 11 1313 

is not / the twinkle of a fin . . n . 1323 

/ him lying in the public way ; . " . 1327 
Not a hoof/: ....". 1334 

Hut / two brawny spearmen, . 11 . 

and the two Were /alone together 11 . 1582 

trouble which has / me thrice your 11 . 1585 

his father Uther / in charge . . n . 1781 

ne out I lad / in .tshes ; . / '/.' 'en 

kinsman /him watcher o'er his wife " . . 556 

ten Lancelot brave, . . 11 ■ . 653 

ending in a ruin— nothing /, . . 11 . . 732 

Had /the ravaged woodland . ". • • 812 

/ 11 with her, when he rode to tilt . Elaine . , 

/the barren-l>eatcn thoroughfare, . 11 . , 101 

But / her all the paler, . . . 11 • .7 
/him leave to stammer ' is it , n 
any man that day w ere / alield, 11 . 



23o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

and hath / his prize Untaken, . Elaine . 529 
the knight, and here he / a shield ; 11 631 

ask you not to see the shield he I 11 . . 650 

Prince who / the quest to me. ti 758 

being in his moods L them, . tr . . 796 

poor work, her empty labour, /. . if . 985 

when they / her to herself again tr . 992 

/ me taking no farewell, . . it . 1267 

/her and I bad her no farewell. . n . 1296 

the brood by Hengist /; . . Guinevere . if 
Modred whom he /in charge of all ; 11 . 193 

five summers back, And / me ; . 11 . 320 

that other / alone Sigh'd, 11 . 365 

grace of courtesy in him /, . 11 . 433 

when the Roman / us, and their law tt . 453 

us, who might be /, could speak . 11 . 497 

/ me hope That in mine own heart it . 628 

breaking have / a chasm ; . . En. Arden . 1 
daily /The little footprint . 11 .21 

(Since Enoch / he had not look'd . 11 . 272 

ten years Since Enoch / his hearth 11 . 357 

/ you ten long years ago n . 401 

nor loved she to be / Alone at home, 11 . 512 

/ but narrow breadth to left and right ir . 675 

Among the gifts he /her . . Aylmers F. 217 
/ the living scandal that shall die — 11 . 444 

/alone he pluck' d her dagger . it . 470 

/ Their own gray tower, tt . 617 

house is / unto you desolate ! " 11 . 629 

were / to make a purer world — . 11 . 638 

love and reverence / them bare ? . 11 . 785 

or one stone L on another, . . 11 . 789 

/ their memories a world's curse — it . 796 

Still so much gold was /; . . Sea Dreams 126 
the gaps and chasms of ruin / . 11 . 218 

L him one hand, and reaching thro' it . 275 

my Annie, who /me at two, . . Grandmother 77 
there's none of them / alive ; . it -85 

There is but a trifle /you it . 107 

Nobbut a bit on it's /, . . . N. Farmer 41 
could not end me, /me maim'd . Tithonus . 20 
/ behind the painted buoy . . The Voyage 1 
if/ to pass His autumn . . . A Dedication 9 
scrolls L by the teacher whom he Lucretius . 13 
fire that /a roofless Ilion, . . tr -65 

if I go my work is / Unfinish'd— . tt . 103 

such cups as / us friendly-warm . tt . 212 

and /me in shadow here ! . . The Window 37 

leg. 

caught the white goose by the /, . The Goose . 9 
My right / chain'd into the crag, . StS. Stylites 72 
/and arm with love-knots gay, . TalkingO. . 65 
I's of trees were limber, . . . Amphion . 14 
Stept forward on a firmer /, . . Will Water. 123 
Callest thou that thing a / ? . . Vision of Sin 89 
and white and strong on his I's . Grand?nother 2 
' Here's a / for a babe of a week !' it . 11 

Strong of his hand, and strong on his Is, it . 13 

legacy. 
Leaving great legacies of thought, TftJifem.lxx3aVi.35 

legend. 

Nor these alone : but every / fair . Pal. of Art 125 

shaped The city's ancient X into this : — Godiva 4 

Some/of a fallen race . . . Tivo Voices . 359 

The reflex of a / past, . . . Day-Din. . 11 

The violet of a /blow . . . Will Water. 147 

lived an ancient /in our house. . Princess, i. 5 

almost think That idiot / credible. tt v. 146 

fading / of the past, . . .In Mem. Ixi. 4 

/ as in guerdon for your rhyme ? . Vivien . 404 

' The Legend of Good Women* 
* The L o G W,' long ago Sung . D. o/F. Worn. 2 



all his I's crying Christ and him, . Elaine . 305 

legionary. 

those Neronian legionaries . . Boddicea . 1 

many a valorous /. ... it .85 



leisure. poem. line. 

in the fallow / of my life . . Audley Ct. . 76 

lapt In the arms of /, . . . Princess, ii. 152 

eyes have / for their tears ; . . InMem.x\\\. 16 

lemon-grove, 
l-g Iu closest coverture upsprung, ArabianlTs. 67 

lend. 
God in his mercy lend her grace, L. ofShalott, iv. 53 
/our hearts and spirits wholly . Lotos-E's. . 108 
Something to love He I's us ; . To J. S. _ . 14 
in this frequence can I I full tongue, Princess, iv. 422 
Nature I's such evil dreams ? . hi Mem, liv. 6 

/ me one, if such you have, Blank, Elaine . 193 
/an ear to Plato where he says, . Lucretius . 147 

length. 
All its allotted /of days, . .Lotos-E's. . So 
/of bright horizon rimm'd the dark. Gardener 1 's D '.177 
to such / of years should come . Locksley H. 67 
I's of yellow ringlets, like a girl, . Princess, i. 3 
boss'd with I's Of classic frieze . n ii. 10 

All her fair / upon the ground . it v. 56 

To wile the / from languorous hours tt vii. 48 
lazy I's on boundless shores ; . In Mejn. lxix. 12 

Down by the / of lance and arm . Enid . 1312 

all her / and kiss'd his feet, . . Vivien . 68 

all its /in blackest samite, . . Elaine 1136 

Cut off the /of highway on before, En. Arden . 674 
Dangled a /of ribbon ti . 751 

lengthen 'd. 
Tall as a figure / on the sand . Princess, vi. 145 

Lent (fast.) 
If it may be, fast Whole L's . St S. Stylites 179 

lent (verb.) 
/broad verge to distant lands, . Pal. of Art . 30 
Who /you, love, your mortal dower Margaret . 5 
/ The pulse of hope to discontent. Tzuo Voices 449 
/my knee desire to kneel, . . Princess, iii. 177 
once or twice she / her hand, . 11 iv. 9 

have /my life to build up yours, . tt . 332 

crown'd with all the season /, . In Mem. xxii. 6 
A willing ear We / him. . . 11 Ixxxvi. 31 

in the little book you /me, . . The Daisy . 99 

Leolin. 
L, his brother, living oft With Averill, Aylmcr'sF. 57 

L's first nurse was five years after 11 . 79 

care no more for L's walking with her n . 124 

Might have been other, save for L's — it . 140 

once withZ at her side the girl, . tt . 184 

L ever watchful of her eye . tt 210 

L, coming after he was gone, .. ti . 234 

L's horror-stricken answer, . tt 318 

L still Retreated half aghast, . it 329 

WentZ.; then, his passions all in flood ir . 339 

he thought, had slandered L to him. tt . 350 

L, I almost sin in envying you : . tt 360 

L cried out the more upon them — tt . 367 

Tho* L flamed and fell again . 11 . 409 

I went : and as we task ourselves tt . 432 

return'd L's rejected rivals . rr 493 

Came at the moment L's emissary it . 518 

L's one strong rival upon earth ; . tt 557 

crying upon the name of L, . tt 576 

Leonard. 
shall have that song which L wrote : Golden Year 1 

and I wish'd for L there, . m * 4 

leopard. 

two tame Ts couch'd beside her . Princess, ii. 19 

foot en one Of those tame l's. . " iii. 165 

I tamed my l's: shall I not tame these? it v. 390 

leopard sk in. 
3.1 s Droop'd from his shoulder . (Enone . 57 

leper. 
c Last of the train, a moral /, I, . Princess, iv. 203 



less. 

Some said their heads were /; 
can grief be changed to / ? . 



Princess, ii. 131 
luMem.lxxyu. 16 



TEX.VYSONS WORK'S. 



239 



POEM. LINE. 

Not being /but more than all . In Mem. ex. n 

yet is love not /, but more ; . .11 Con. 12 

lessen. 

Nor will it / from to-day ; . . InMem.Wm. 10 

lessened. 
And I be / in his love ? . . .In Mem. 1. 8 

lessening. 
a foot L in perfect cadence, . . Walk.totl1eM.47 
L to the /music, .... Sea Dreams 214 

lesser. 
draws The greater to the /, . . Gardener sD. 10 

lesson. 
One /from one book we learn'd . IuMem.\xs.\\n. 14 
Shall we teach it a Roman /? . Boadicea . 32 

let. 
And rs me from the saddle ;' .Elaine . 93 

lethargy. 
for months, in such blind lethargies, St S. Styliles 101 

Lethe. 
Some draught of L might await . Two Voices 350 
she that out of L scales with man Princess, vii. 245 
gleams On L in the eyes of Death. InMcm. xcvii. 8 

Lethean. 
(If Death so taste L springs) . InMcm. x\Ui. 10 

letter (epistle.) 
from her bosom drew Old Fs, Mariana in the S. 62 
'lore the king's /, snow'd it down, Princess, i. . 60 
I can give you Is to her ; ir . 158 

khow'd the kite-writ Is of the king. 11 . 173 

king,' he said ' Had given us /\r, . ■■ . 179 

fave the / CO he sent with dawn ; . 11 . 241 

read -two I's— one her sire's. . >i iv. 37S 

Behold your father's /.' 11 . 448 

I pored upon her / which I held, . " v. 458 

/ i unto trembling bands : . . In Mem. x. 7 
The noble I's of the dead ; . . 11 xciv. 24 
gave my Ft back to me. . . The Letters ao 

as she devised A /, word for word; Elaine 1098 

wrote The / she devised ; . . n 1 103 

lay the / in my hand 11 1107 

father laid the / in her hand, . ■■ 1128 

in her left The / — 1150 

Arthur spied the /in her hand . ■> 1263 

■ . Who had devised the / . 11 1280 

her I's ton. Tho 1 far between, . Aylmer's F. 475 
read Writhing a / from his child, . " . 517 

The / which he brought and swore u . 522 

a / edged with death Beside him, 11 . 595 

And with it a spiteful / . . . Spiteful Let. 2 
J'ly little / apace, apace, . . The Window 98 

Utter (character.) 

a tear Dropt on the Fs as I wrote, To J. S. . 56 

Along the /'j of thy name, . . InMemXxn. 7 

tomb In I's gold and azure Elaine 1335 

kept it green In living I's, . . Aylmer's F. 89 

letter (literal meaning.) 
Hi light upon the / dwells, . . Miller's D. . 189 
broke the / of it to keep the sense Princess, iv. 319 
I use she kept the /of his word Enid . 1304 

letter (verb.) 
Spring I.'s cowslips on the bill? .Adeline . 62 

tetters (literature.) 
From misty men of Fs ; . . Will Wafer. 190 

in the flowery walk Of/ 1 s . fnlifem.baaan.23 

gilded by the gracious gleam Of Fs, Dcd. of Idylls 39 

Letty (sec Hill.) 
The close ' Your /., only yours ;' Ed. Morris 106 
I ardon'd little L ; „ . ,.,„ 

/<-rr/(s.) 
Ridged the smooth /, . . , Arabian N't. 35 
i on a / of bowery lawn, . Poet's Mind 31 

bouse thro' all the / shines. . Mar:, 111,1 in : 

onthc shining Fs of the lake. . M. (F 'Arthur 51 



rOE.M. LIKE. 

thou shalt lower to his / . . Locksley II. 45 
flowery Fs underneath the crag, . Princess, \n. 318 
starts and slides Upon the / . . n | v> 2 -~ 

level (verb.) 
Not to feel lowest makes them /all ; Vivien C77 

lever. 

A / to uplift the earth . . , In Mem. cxii. 15 

leveret. 
quail and pigeon, lark and / lay . A udley Ct. . 23 

levied, 

L a kindly tax upon themselves, . En. Arden . 664 

It-zudncss. 
1, narrowing envy, monkey-spite, Lucretius . 200 

liar. 

Let the canting / pack ! . . Vision of Sin 10S 

And rave at the lie and the /, . Maud, I. i. 60 

Fs belied in the hubbub of lies ; . 11 iv. 51 

Spurn'd by this heir of the / — . n xix. 78 
wrath shall be wreaked on a giant /; n III. vi. 45 

I raged against the public /; . The Letters 26 

'What dare the full-fed Fs say . Vivien . 542 

slandering me, the base little /.' . Grandmother 27 

There the hive of Roman Fs . Boadicea . 19 



No vain / to the Muse, 



libation. 



Will Water. 9 



liberal. 
but come, We will be /, . . Princess, vi. 52 

libera l-ni in dcd. 
l-m, great, Consistent ; . .In Mem. Con. 38 

liberty. 

He that roars for / . . . Vision of Sin 127 

at the boundary of the liberties ; . Princess, i. 170 

ventured on the liberties . . 11 . 202 

for three years to cross the liberties 11 ii. 57 

compass our dear sisiers' liberties. >< iii. 271 

She bore the blade of L. . . The Voyage 72 

Thine the /, thine the glory . . Boadicea' . 41 

me the lover of /, . . . . M .48 

L ibyan. 
We drank the L Sun to sleep . D.ofF. IV0111.14S 

license. 
give you, being strange, At: . Princess, iii. 189 
Vou grant me /; might I use it? . 11 ' . 219 

takes His / in the field of time, . In Mem. xxvii. 6 

lie hen. 
a morbid eating / fixt . . . Maud. I. vi. 77 
I scraped the / from it : . . The IS rook . 193 

lichen' d, 

/into colour with the crags : .Elaine . 45 

lichen-gilded. 
turrets Ig like a rock : . . . Ed. Morris 8 

lie fs.) 
dp away that ancient/; 'Clear-licadedfriend.'titc. 15 
Perplexing me with Fs; . . StS.Stylites 100 
Cursed be the social Fs . . Locksley 11. 60 

' \\ ill thou make everything a /, . Two I oices 203 
Love but play'd with gracious Fs In Mem , 
fool the crowd with glorious Fs, . .. exxvii. u 
and a wretched swindler's / . . Maud, I. i. 56 
And rave at the /and the liar, .11 .60 

has as many Fs as a Czar ; . . w iv. 9 

liars belied in the hubbub of Fs ; . .. . 51 

In another month to his brazen Fs, ir vi. 55 

lie fiercely gave me the /,• . . 11 || 

cloaks the wounds of loss with /**; Vivien .667 

neither capable of Fs, . . . En. Ardei 
a /which is half a truth is ever the 

blai jcesl oil's . . . Crandm 

a / which is all a / may be met . ,, .it 

a / whirh is |urt .1 truth . . 11 ~ a 

lie You golden /. . . . . The Kinglet 44 



240 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Oriana . 80 
L.ofShalott, i. 1 
Miller's D. 166 
" . 185 

CEnone 



May Queen, ii. 20 

» ■ 5° 

ir 111. 59 

11 -59 

. Lotos-E's. , 50 

. I56 

. D. of the 0.1 ear x 

5 



Gardener sD. 39 

Talking O. . 5 

11 . 239 

Golden Year 49 

54 

44 



lie (to rest, etc, 
Within thy heart my arrow Vs t 
On either side the river / 
to I Beside the mill-wheel 
I would / so light, so light, . 
There Vs a vale in Ida, . 
on her threshold / Howling To—. With Palo/Art 15 
God, before whom ever /bare . Pal. oj 'Art 2 
But I shall /alone, mother, . 
All night I /awake, 
To / within the light of God, 
as I / upon your breast 
gentlier on the spirit Vs 
For they / beside their nectar, 
knee-deep /\y the winter snow 
the old year Vs a-dying. . . ir 

L still, dry dust, secure of change. To J. S. 
Is Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair . M. d Arthur 261 
between it and the garden Vs 
Beyond the lodge the city Vs, 
Vs beside thee on the grass. . 
Peace L like a shaft of light . 

* Ah folly! for it I's so far away, . n 
There Vs the port : the vessel puffs Ulysses 
from the wells where he did /. . Tivo Voices 
I upon her charmed heart. . . Day-Din. . 96 
liberal applications / In Art if . 209 
That in my bosom Vs. . . . St Agnes' Eve 12 
Here Vs the body of Ellen Adair ; Ed. Gray 27, 35 
leave me where I /: . ' Come notvuhen, 'etc. n 
Heroic, for a hero I's beneath, . P?-incess,Pro. 207 
gross error Vs In this report, . 11 i. 68 
when we came where I's the child 
Here I's a brother by a sister slain, 
hearts / fallow in these halls, 
there she Vs, But will not speak . 
sweet sister : /not thus. 
/ in the tents with coarse mankind, 
that there L bruised and maim'd, . 
' You shall not / in the tents 
"Whatever man Vs wounded, friend 
But Vs and dreads his doom. 
Vs the Earth all Danae to the stars, 
all thy heart Vs open unto me. 
as far as in us Vs We two will serve 11 
in true marriage Vs Nor equal . it 
A use in measured language Vs . In Jlfem. v. 
Where Vs the master newly dead ; ir xx". 
use may / in blood and breath, . 11 xliv. 
/ Foreshorten' d in the tract of time? 11 lxxvi. 
Bring in great logs and let them /, 
What profit Vs in barren faith, 
There yet Vs the rock that fell 
And Sleep must / down arm'd, 
/ while these long branches sway 
full of wolves, where he used to /, 
I know that he I's and listens mute 
let the bodies /, but bound the suits Enid 
I still, and yet the sapling grew : 
to / Closed in the four walls . 
did you never / upon the shore, 
Never / by thy side, see thee no 
/ before your shrines ; . 
Might / within their compass 
E's the hawk's cast, 

* Let them / for they have faH'n.* 
tills the field and Vs beneath, 
See the place where thou wilt / 
Crew and Captain /; 
dead lineaments that near thee I? 
Nature, so far as in her Vs, . 



IF cvi. 
11 cvii. 
Maud, I. i. 



ii. 191 

. 378 

v. 49 

. 61 

«■ 53 

• 56 

- 73 

..- 3i6 

11. 139 
. 167 
. 168 
. 251 
. 284 

6 

4 
13 

3 
17 

5 



xvin. 

II. V. 



Vivien 
Guinevere 
Ayliuer's F. 



41 
29 
54 
60 
■ 945 
1014 

• 57 
. 140 

• 574 
673 
485 



Sea Dreams 221 
TilJionus . 3 
Sailor Boy . 8 
The Captain 68 
Coquette, iii. 2 
On a Mottrner 1 



lie (to utter falsehood.) 
a shameful thing for men to /. . M . d'A rthur 78 

will speak out for I dare not /. . Lady Clare 38 

when only not all men /; . . Maud, I. i. 35 

Who can rule and dare not /. . i» x. 66 

scheming brain a cinder, if I 1/ . Vivien . 782 

lied. 

wrong' d and / and thwarted us — Princess, iv. 510 

vext at having / in vain : . . Elaine . 103 



lief. POEM. LINE. 

50 again As thou art / and dear, . M. d' Arthur 80 



lic° 



640 
802 



1174 



true and tender ! O my I and king ! Vivien 
call'd him lord and /, Her seer . " 
my /, -in whom I have my joy, . Elaine 

liege-lady. 
he, he reverenced his /-/ there ; . Princess, i. 186 

liest. 
O happy thou that /low, . . Oriana . 84 
/ beneath the greenwood tree, .11 -95 

L thou here so low, . . . Guinevere . 419 

lieth. 
He /still : he doth not move: D.oftheO. Year 10 

lieu. 
In /of many mortal flies, . . Princess, iii. 
In / of idly dallying with the truth Elaine 

liever — liefer. 
Far / had I gird his harness . Enid . 

Far / than so much discredit him. 11 
Far / by his dear hand had I die, 11 



251 
S&8 



93 
629 
917 



life. 



court was pure ; her /serene ; . To the Queen 25 
Crown'd Isabel, thro' allherplacid I, Isabel . 27 
She only said 'My /is dreary, (rep.) Mariana . 
L, anguish, death, immortal love, Arabian N's 
thought was there of Vs distress: . OdetoJIIem. 
Whither in after /retired ir 

L in dead stones, or spirit in air ; . A Character 
He saw thro' / and death, . . The Poet 
L and Thought have gone away . Deserted H. 
L and Thought Here no longer dwell 11 
Thou art the shadow of/, . Love and Death 
L eminent creates the shade of death ; 11 



9 
73 
37 
in 
9 
5 



my /, my love, my bride. 
Two lives fast bound in one . 
So runs the round of / . 
Oh ! what a happy / were mine 
delirious draughts of warmest /. 
somewhat flows to us in /, 
I'd almost live my / again. . 
scarce my / with fancy play'd 
Like mine own / to me thou art, 
My other dearer / in /, 
I am all aweary of my /. 
A shepherd all thy / 
lead / to sovereign power : 
forward thro' a / of shocks, . 
pass before my light of /, 
Not less than /, design'd. 
death and / she hated equally 
sweeter far is death than / . 
blessings on his whole / long, 
ceased to be, with my desire of/, 
what is /, that we should moan? 
Death is the end of /; ah, why 

Should / all labour be ? 
memory of our wedded lives 
O my /In Egypt 1 
my name Sigh'd forth with / 
move Me from my bliss of/, 
enter not the toil of /. . 
He hath no other / above. 
Without whose / I had not been 



Oriana . 44 

C ircunista7ice 5 

ti . 9 

The Merman 37 



Elcdnore 
Miller's D. 



CEnone 



*39 
21 
28 
45 
196 
217 

32 

ti . 126 

11 . 143 

ti .160 

1. . 237 

Pal. of Art 128 

m . 265 

I\IayQueen,\\\. 8 

v . 14 



56 



Loios-E^s. 



w . 114 

D.o/F.Wom.i^ 

11 . 154 

If . 2TO 

Margaret . 24 

D. of the O. Year 12 

To 7. S. . 24 



WithZ., that, workingstrongly 'Lovetho?t thy land '34 
Yearning to mix himself with L. ir 56 

live three lives of mortal men . M. d Arthur 155 
I have lived my /, and that which ir . 244 

nourish a blind /within the brain, 11 . 251 

ere he found Empire for I? . . Gardener sD, 



made the air Of L delicious, 
old Mays had thrice the /of these,) m 

by my /, These birds have joyful . it 

such a noise of / Swarm'd . . ir 

Love trebled /within me . . 11 

by my /, I will not marry Dora.' . Doi-a . 
let me live my /. (rep.) . . , Audley Ct. 
in the fallow leisure of my / . 



69 
83 
97 

'74 
194 
21 
42 
7 6 



the sense that handles daily / — Walk, to the M. 16 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



241 



TOEM. LINE. 

dust and drouth Of city /.' . . Ed. Morris 4,143 

once I ask'd him of his early /, . 11 . 23 

/of death . StS.Styliles 53 

smite the threshold stairs Of / . 11 . 189 

The /that spreads in them, . TalkingO. . 192 

I took the swarming sound of / — 11 . 213 

To riper / may magnetise it . 255 

brooding in the ruins of a /, . Love and Dutyi? 

I, and apathetic end. . 11 .18 

such tears As (low but once a /. . 11 -63 

— closing like an individual / — . 11 . 77 

/ needs for / is possible ti . 83 

I will drink L to the lees : . . Ulysses . 7 

L piled on / Were all too little, « .24 

Love took up the harp of L, . Locksley H. 33 

1 purer / than thine ; 11 .88 

and the tumult of my /; ir . no 

where my / began to beat ; . . 11 .154 

help me as when / begun : . . 11 . 185 

shut my / from happier chance. . Two Voices 54 

not to lose the good of / — 11 . 132 

The springs of /. the depths of awe, 11 . 140 

when /. her light withdraws, . 11 . 145 

A / of nothings, nothing worth, . ti . 331 

It may be that no /is found . >• . 346 

Or if thro' lower lives I came — . ti . 364 

mat breathes with human breath ■■ . 395 

/. whereof our nerves are scant . n . 397 

/, not death, for which we pant : . ir . 398 

More /, and fuller, that I want.' . m . 399 

in those the / is stay'd. . . Day-Dm. . 38 

all his / the charm did talk 11 . 121 

all the long-pent stream of / . . n . 147 

Arc clasp'd the moral of thy /, . o . 267 

smote Her / into the liquor. . IVill IVater. 112 

A private / was all his joy, . 11 . 129 

Lest of the fullness of my / n . 163 

an unctuous lease Of /. 11 . 244 

/that moves 10 gracious ends ' You might ha-je-.von 6 

A deedful /, a silent voice : . . 11 .8 

No public / was his on earth, . ,» .23 

The little / of bank and brier, 11 -3° 

keep the secret for your /, . Lady Clare 34 

Aiui I love thee more than /.' . L. of Burleigh 16 

What! the Dower of /is past : . Vision of & 

Whited thought and cleanly / . 11 . 116 

of /. and lees of man : . 11 . 205 

I was yet in bud and blade, Princess, i. 31 

I earlier, and her / Was longer ; n ii. 13S 

Two in the liberal offices of /, ., . 158 

'Well then, Psyche, take my /, . ir . 187 

I lose My honour, these their lives' 11 . 321 

debtors for our lives to you, . n . 334 

better blush our lives away. n iii. 52 

our three lives. True — we had limed ri . 126 

perchance your / may fail : . rr . 220 

lueht to the /; . 11 . 286 

th in L, the days that are no more. " iv. 40 

brief is / but love is long. . . rr -93 

lent my / to build up yours, . •» . 332 

mine than yours : . . ti . 406 

1 he breath of/; n . 439 

you bitter . 11 . 510 

r in the logic of a If . . ir V. 182 

ul ! I thought her half-right « . 274 

babbling wells With her own people's/; ■■ . 325 

■ is /: . . . 1, . 397 

on the little clause 'take not his /:' ri . 459 

my/: my brother slew him 11 vi. 92 

lien /, . . 11 .114 

r / . 11 vii. 32 

with what / I bad, And like a flower 11 . 125 

type them now In our own lives. 11 . 282 

with on.; full stroke, /..' . 11 . 290 

t self, 11 . 295 

1 , thru' thee, 11 . 324 

1 1 M) life, my I. . . •• . 339 

/. m man and brute . . In Mem. Pro. 6 

little lives of men 11 ii. 8 

Stili'd tli'' / thai I eat from thee. . " vi. 13 

noise of / begins again, . . n vii. to 



thy dark freight, a vanish'd /. 

An awful thought, a / removed, . 

how my / had droop'd of late, 

The / that almost dies in me : 

I know that this was L, — 

In more of / true /no more . 

that my hold on / would break 

rests upon the L indeed. 

blest whose lives are faithful prayers, 

/ that leads melodious days . 

My own dim / should teach me this, 

That / shall live for evermore, 

A / that bears immortal fruit 

leap the grades of / and light 

But evermore a life behind. 

The total world since / began : 

Lest / should fail in looking back. 

drown The bases of my / in tears 

L, a Fury slinging flame. 

on the low dark verge of / 

/ is dash'd with flecks of sin. 

For / outliving heats of youth, 

not one / shall be destroy'd . 

No / may fail beyond the grave, . 

So careless of the single /; 

I bring to /, I bring to death : 

/as futile, then, as frail ! . 
half my / I leave behind : 

My bosom-friend and half of /; 

Whose /in low estate began 

shade by which my / was crost, . 

On songs, and deeds, and lives 

grief as deep as / or thought, 

No lower / that earth's embrace . 

put our lives so far apart 

The / that had been thine below, 

should'st link thy / with one . 

What kind of / is that I lead ; 

Whose /, whose thoughts were little 

The footsteps of his /in mine; 

A / that all the Muses deck'd 

Diffused the shock thro' all my /, 

pining / be fancy-fed 

full new / that feeds thy breath 

Were closed with wail, resume their /, 

their dim lights, like /and death, 

Two partners of a married / — 

Her / is lone, he sits apart 

By which our lives arc chiefly proved, 

King in the nobler modes of/, 

A /of civic action warm 

live their lives From land to land ; 

The / re-orient out of dust, . 

/ is not as idle ore, 

/is darken'd in the brain. 

1 slip the thoughts of /and death ; 
when her / was yet in bud, . 
shielded all her / from harm 

living words of/ Breathed in her car 

For them the light of / increased, 

moved thro' / of lower phase 

His who had given me / — . . Ma 

works in the very means of/, 

lie mine a philosopher's /. 

and lain in the lilies of/. 

Singing alone in the morning of/, 

happy morning of /and of May. 

sick to the heart of/, am I. 

Before my / has found . 

To a / that has been so sad, . 

My yet young /in thewildsof Time, 

made my /a perfumed altar-flame 

More /to Love than is 

live .1 / of truest breath, 

true / to fight with mortal v. 

L of my /, wilt thou not an 
■ > my /endures 
Tiling, my /, my fate ; 

must have / for a blow . 

Might drown all /in the eye,— . 

red / spilt for a private blow 



at. LINE- 

Mem. x. 8 

xiii. jo 



XIV. 

xviii. 

XXV. 

xxvi. 
xxviii. 

xxxii. 

xxxiii. 
xxxiv. 

xxxix. 

xl. 

xlii. 
xlv. 

xlviii. 
xlix. 

h! 

Iii. 
liii. 

liv. 

iv! 
ivi! 

Iviii. 
Ixiii. 

I XV. 

Ix.vvt. 
Ixxix. 
lxxxi. 

Ixxxiii. 

lxxxiv. 



Ixxxv. 
brjurix. 

xciv. 
xcvi. 

civ. 
cv. 
cxii. 
cxiv. 
cxv. 
cxvii. 
cx.v. 
exxi. 
Con. 



id, I. i. 



18 




3 
3 
5 
3 
7 
3 

■s 



XVI. 

xviii. 



XIV. 

wii. 
II. i. 



:s 

' 

•!1 
45 
55 
96 
■ • 

6 
63 

5 
17 
14 
15 

9 
16 

6 
20 

8 
16 
33 
47 
5» 
7* 
125 

6 
40 
49 
60 

6 

7 
36 

3 
»3 
21 

=>4 

47 
S3 
34 
59 
86 
62 

'7 
Ci 



242 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

/has crept so long on a broken wing Maud^\\\.v\. i 

/ in him Could scarce be said . T/te Brook n 

Thro' you, my /will be accurst.' . The Letters 36 

long self-sacrifice of /is o'er . . Ode on Weil. 41 

Whose / was work ... 11 . 183 

rugged maxims hewn from /; 

other forms of / than ours, 

So dear a / your arms enfold 

How gain in /, as /advances, 

ivhite rlower of a blameless /, 

A lovelier /, a more unstain'd, 

for my /, or hunger for my death, Enid 

save a / dearer to me than mine.' . tr 

pilot star of my lone / tr 

Owe you me nothing for a /half-lost? tr 

hurt that drain'd her dear lord's /. if 

slay not him who gave you /.* . ti 

foot upon me, and give me /. . tr 

hating the / He gave me, . . n 

glance behind me at my former /, 11 

upon himself After a / of violence, 11 

some knight of mine, risking his /, n 

crown'd A happy / with a fair death, ir 

to /and use and name (rep. 224, 819) Vivien 

ivhat is Fame in / but half-disfame 11 

as dead, And lost all use of/: . 11 

sleepless nights Of my long / .11 

once in /was fluster'd with new wine, it 

from the rosy lips of i and love, . tr 

word worse than a / of blows ! . 11 

course of / that seem'd so flowery it 

If the wolf spare me, weep my /away, it 

vast necessity of heart and /. 

passionate love Of her whole /; 

colour of a mind and /, . . . Elaine 

so I help him back to I?' 

her fine care had saved his /. 

when you yield your rlower of/ 

half disgust At love, /, all things 

trustful courtesies of household /, Guinevere 

hide thee, till my / shall end, . n 

hold thee with my /against the world.' 11 

whose disloyal / Hath wrought confusion 1 1 

all the land was full of /. . . tr 

many a mystic lay of / and death . 11 

hast not made my / so sweet . 11 

spoilt the purpose of my /. tr 

lead sweet lives in purest chastity, if 

so that this /of mine I guard . 11 

thro' flesh hath wrought into my / tf 

must tell him in that purer /, . if 

for her good deeds and her pure /, if 

new warmth of l's ascending sun . En. Arden 

pluck'd a / From the dread sweep ti 

like a wounded /Crept down . 11 75 

miserable lives of hand-to-mouth 

fuller profits lead an easier /, 

lived a / of silent melancholy 

known each other all our lives ? . tf 305 

as I have waited all my / 

/ so wild that it was tame 

and beats out his weary /. 

the dead man come to /beheld 

/ in it Whereby the man could live ; 

boat that bears the hope of / 

approach To save the / despair'd of, 

his lonely /, his coming back, 

Flash into fiery /from rrothing , Ayhner*s F. 

Thro' the perilous passes of his /: 

for years a stunted sunless /; 

quintessence of man, The /of all — ■ 

Had rioted his / out, 

cared to lose, her hold of /. . 

dipt by horror from his term of /. 

faded woods Was all the / of it ; . 

meanness in her unresisting /. 

musing on the little lives of men, . Sea Dreams 48 

Now 1 see My dream was L ; it . 133 

on a matter he of /and death : . ti . 147 

And that drags down his /: tf . 173 

Shadow and shine is /. . . . Grandmother 60 



tr . 264 

. The Daisy . 93 

To F.D.Maurice 39 

. Ded, of Idylls 24 

• 29 

- 93o 



"55 
2167 
1365 
1631 
1698 
1700 
1711 
1761 
1763 
1816 
63 
3i5 
495 
53o 
606 
695 
719 
729 
734 
774 
805 

334 
783 



POEM. LINE. 

the babe had fought for his I. . GrandmotJier 64 
Judge of us all when /shall cease; 11 . 95 

And happy has been my / tr .98 

dream of / this hour may cease. . Requiescat . 6 
rapid of / Shoots to the fall — . A Dedication 3 
My / is full of weary days * My life is full, 3 etc. 1 
all thy / one way incline . . On a Mourner 19 
would you have of us? Human/? 1 Th" Victim 12 
'We give you his/.' ... n .16 

Take you his dearest, Give us a /.' it . 29 

taken our son, They will have his /. tf . 52 

O, Father Odin, We give you a /. ti . 80 

summer leaf, isn 't / as brief? . Spiteful Let. 21 
the / of the worm and the fly ? . Wages . 7 
Live the great / which all our greatest Lucretius 78 
may gain Letting his own /go. . tt . 113 
settled, sweet, Epicurean /. . if 215 
of so much within our little /, . ti . 223 
so little in our little /, . if . 224 
little /that toddles half an hour . 11 . 225 
Ay is /for a hundred years, . . The Window '114 
Love will come but once a / (rep.) tr . 126 

Ufeblood. 
New / warm the bosom, . . Will Water. 22 

life-long. 

forge a l-l trouble for ourselves, . Enid . . 852 

l-l injuries burning unavenged, . 11 . 1544 

sat the /-/creature of the house, . Elaine 11 37 

lifetime. 
Ere half the / of an oak. . , In Mem. lxxv. 12 

lift. 

Many an arch high up did /, . Pal. of Art 142 

to I the hidden ore That glimpses, D. ofF. Worn. 274 
knowing God, they /not hands of M.tV Arthur 252 
lean arms I / the cross, . . StS. Styliies 116 

/ His axe to slay my kin. . . Talking O. 235 
to /a burthen from thy heart . Love and Dutyq-$ 
l's me t© the golden doors ; . . St Agnes 1 Eve 25 
/ your natures up : Embrace our aims ; Princess,'ri.j4. 

1 the woman's fall'n divinity . 11 hi. 207 
fair philosophies That / the fancy ; tr 323 
t L up your head, sweet sister : . tr v. 61 
/ thine eyes ; my doubts are dead, tr vii. 327 
L as thou may'st thy burthen'd brows In MemAxxi. 21 
seem to / the form, and glow . n Ixxxvi. 37 
A great ship / her shining sides. . tr cii. 40 
That we may /from out of dust . 11 cxxx. 5 
Nor did she / an eye nor speak . Enid . . 528 
/ a shining hand against the sun, . 11 . 1322 
Without the will to /their eyes, . Vivien . 685 
He spared to / his hand . . Guinevere . 434 
/ the household out of poverty ; . En. Arden . 482 
slowly l's His golden feet . . Lucretius . 134 

lifted. 
once my arm was / to hew down . D.ofF. Wont. 45 
her arm /, eyes on fire — . . Princess, Pro, 41 
/ up A weight of emblem , . 11 iv. 183 

/ up her voice and cried . tr v. 78 

Then us they /up, dead weights, t> vi. 328 

once, but once, she / her eyes, . Maud, I. viii. 5 
came near, / adoring eyes, . . Enid . 1153 

her palfrey whinnying /heel, . tt . 1382 

gravely smiling, /her from, horse, 11 . 1731 

/ up A face of sad appeal, . . Vivien . 82 
when my name was / up, n . 352 

And the Queen L her eyes. . Elaine . 85 

L her eyes, and read his lineaments, it . 244 

noblest, when she /up her eyes. . it . 256 

/up her eyes And loved him, . it . 259 

/her fair face and moved away : . tr . 679 

like a ghost she / up her face, . ir . 914 

/ up his eyes And saw the barge . it 1381 

limb was broken when they /him ; En. Arden . 107 
/ up in spirit he moved away. . tr . 327 

To Thor and Odin /a hand. . The Victim 8 

lifting (part.) 
L his grim head from my wounds. Princess, vi. 255 
L his honest forehead . . . En. Arden . 385 



TENXYSOX'S JVORA'S. 



2 43 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, v. 134 



lifting s.) 

/of whose eyelash is my lord, 

Uggin' (lying.) 
meii / 'ere aloan ? . . . .A'. Farmer 

light (adj.) 
she So /of foot, so /of spirit 
So / upon the grass : 
/as any wind that blows 
ler foot, /as on air, 
/ as the crest Of a peacock . 

light (s.) 
giving /To read those laws : 
swifter movement and in purer / . 
cock sung out an hour ere /.• 



Gardener's D. 14 
TalkingO. . 88 
11 . 129 

Princess, vi. 72 
Maud, I. xvi. 16 



LINT. 



POEM. 

furrowing into /the mounded rack. Line and Duly 07 

smit with freer /shall slowly melt Golden Year \ 

/shall spread, and man be- likcrman 

like a shaft of /across the land. . 

I's begin to twinkle from the rocks : Ulysses 



Isabel , 
Mariana 



Until the breaking of the / ' C lear-lieaded friend' 2 
Thro' / anil shadow thou dost range, Madeline . 



The Owl, 
A rattan N s. 

Ode to Mem. 



33 



-Adeline . 5G 
Deserted II. "(, 
A Dirge . 12 
Love and Death 1 



cats run home and /is come, 
I cnter'd, from the clearer /, 
Boften'd / Of orient state. 
The / of thy great presence ; 
A pillar of white / 
Breathing /. against thy face 
In the wi no /; 

hadow ever wander . 
mighty moon was gathering / 

in the /of great eternity . . ,, .12 

. Oriana . 10 

thunder and /in the magic night— The Merman 23 

A funeral, with plumes and Is L. ofShalott, ii. 31 

irdcd meteor, trailing /, . ,, iii. 2 g 

. Mariana in ti: 



lavish Is, and floating shades : . Flednore 
Grapc-thicken'd from the /, . 11 

am as nothing in its /; . , „ 

er lost their /. . Miller's D. 

I the village I, . ,, 

moved the /, .11! 

Upon the letter dwells, . 1, 

■' all thy heat and/, Fatima 
lslcd in 1 '/, . . 1, 

/thatgi I 1 and clearer, . (Enone '. 

v /of life, 
nly scaled the /. . . Pal. of Art' 

the . 1. emerald, blue 11 

Lit /in wreaths and anadems, . ,, _ 

•ion, without / . 11 

L.C.V.deVere 
without ■peaking, like a flash of/. MayQueen, i. „ 
mother, beneath the waning / 11 ii. 25 

and there his / may shine— . „ jij' SI 

. ithin the /of God, . 11 .55 

thro' wavering Is and shadows broke, Lotos-Fs. 12 
Sweeten 'd with the summer /, . ,, 

dream, like yonder amber /. . ., 

1 wherever / illumineth, I), of ' F. Worn 

fill'd with /The interval of sound 11 

with welcome /, With timbrel . 1, 

that I should ever see the /.' . 1, 

Ire, A /of ancient France; 11 \ 

of mellow / Float by you . Margaret '. 
faint, rainy Is arc seen, . . „ 

cricket chirps : the / burns low : I). oftlieO. Year 40 
mournful /That bra . To J s j-o 

•ok the starry I's' Of old sat Freedom' 3 
1 ' dry their / from tears ; . „ 2 q 

girt with doubtful /. 'Love thou thy laud; etc. t6 



36 



■iet in all Is by many minds, 
' tli.it led The holy I 



. M. d' Arthur 232 
wink'd . 11 Ei \ 

itter'd silver Ft. Gardener's D 117 
1 d into/, and died into the shade; n in8 

a /Of laughter dimpled . . Fd. Morris 60 



ire time by yon slow /, 
' nd downfall of the /, 

' my /out as I read : 

\ Sash of/. 
em to thy /. 

I oer cheek with rosy /, 



StS.Slylites 93 

108 

172 

200 

. 220 

Talking O. 165 



nuVd Lave and Duty 70 



point thee forward to a distant /, 



•j- 



came a colour and a /, . . . Locksley II. 

Sees in heaven the /of London . 11 

Underneath the / he looks at, . .. 

A living flash of /he flew.' . . Two Voices' 

swift souls that yearn for /, . . n 

Those lonely I's that still remain, . n 

Nor art thou nearer to the /, . 11 

when Life her / withdraws. . . „ 

the /increased With freshness . 11 \ 

slumbrous /is rich and u arm, . Day-Dm. 

Stillness with love, and day with /. 11 ! 

A fuller /illumined all, . . . ,, 

lie still the first to leap to / . . 11 

straws her Ft below . . . St A pies' Eve 28 

A / upon the shilling sea — . . n 

A / before me swims, . . . Sir Galahad 

A gentle sound, an awful /.' . . ,, 

Ten thousand broken /\s and shapes, Will Water. 

wide earth of /and shade . . 11 

A sleepy /upon their brows. . Vision of Sin 

Dip forward under starry /, ' Move eastward.' etc. 10 

flew thro' / And shadow, . . Princess, Pro. 84 

college Fs Began to glitter . 

world was once a fluid haze of/, . 

still may lead The new / up, . 

two streams of / from wall to wall, 

green malignant /of coming storm. 

smote me with the /of eyes, . 

with the sun and moon renew their / 

Let there be /and there was / 

one act at once, The birth of/: . 

long / shakes across the lakes, 

in your own / and darken'd mine. 

we did not know the real /, . 

lived 111 all fair/ 1 ! 

lapt in wreaths of glowworm / 
open-mouth'd, ihc /, . 

wild birds on the / Dash themselves 
would-be quenchers of the / to be, 
saw the Ft, and heard The voices 
sudden / Dazed me half-blind 
common /of smiles at our disguise 
tremulous isles of / Slided, . 
A genial warmth and /once more 
she not fair, began To gather /, . 
small bright head, A /of healing, . 
silent / Slept on the painted walls, 
double / in air and wave, 
from a dewy breast a cry for /: 

I ' irer for night, . 
happy valleys, half in /, 

Thine are these orbs of /and shade InMcm Pro 
are but broken Is of thee, . . ,, 
vain worlds to bear thy /. . . „ 

magic /Dies off at once . . u viii. 

thro' early /Shall glimmer . . „ i x . 

Sphere all your Ft around, above ; 11 . 

<till /on yon great plain . 11 hJ. 

My blessing, like a line of/, 

Fancy / from Fancy caught, 

/ that shone when Hope was born. 

leap the grades of life and /, 

' Farewell ! We lose ourselves in /. 

Like / in many a shivcr'd lance . 

near me when my / is low, . 

An infant crying for the /: . 

in the /of deeper eyes . 

Recalls, in change of /or gloom. . 

like a finer / in /. . 

in the house /after /Went out, . 

dim Is, like life and death. . 

makes the darkness and the /, 

dwells not in the /alone, 

The flying cloud, the frosty t: 

God and Nature met in /; . 

dance the /'1 on lawn aI1 d lea 



Con. 



114 
116 
IS 
67 
83 
92 
■45 
4°4 
83 
92 

•37 
239 



1. 204 
ii. 101 

• 3=7 
.. ■ 449 

III. 116 
. 176 
. 238 
. 3 06 
- 3°9 

. • 35° 

IV. 295 

• 338 
. 410 

• 415 
. 462 

■ 474 

• 515 

■ 536 

V. 10 
. 261 

vi. 056 

..- 20 5 

'ii. 9 

• 44 

• "5 

• "52 

• 237 
>=S 
4t 

5 
'9 
.-' 

S 



XVII. 

xxiii. 

xxx, 

xj. 

xlvi. 

xlviii. 

xlix. 

liii. 

hi. 

Ixxxiv. 



244- 



CONCORDANCE TO 



II. iv. 



POEM. LINE. 

Behind thee comes the greater li In Mem. cxx. 12 

For them the /of life increased . n Con. 74 

poison behind his crimson Fs. . Maud, I. i 

I see her pass like a / . . . ir i 

if ever that / be my leading-star ! . n 

Maud in the /of her youth and her grace ir 

spark Of glowing and growing / . » 1 

With no more hope of /. . ■ . n J 

faint in the / that she loves (rep.) . n xx 

to faint in his /, and to die. . 

At the shouts, the leagues of l's, . 

And the / and shadow fleet ; 

Ripples en in /and shadow . 

From the realms of / and song, 

broad / glares and beats, 

Tho' many a / shall darken, . 

darkness into the / shall leap 

Whatever record leap to / 

Thro' the long gorge to the far / 

A /amid its olives green ; 

From Como, when the /was gray_ 

on thro' zones of / and shadow To F. D. Maurice 27 

fierce / which beats upon a throne, Ded. of Idylls 26 



„ III. vi. 43 

. 46 
Ode on Well. 1 90 

M . 213 

The Daisy . 30 
73 



that ye made One / together, 

as he loved the / of Heaven. . Enid . 

as the /of Heaven varies . .11. 

darken'd from the high /in his eyes ir 

never /andshadeCoursedoneanother it 

fair head in the dim-yellow /. . ir . 

the red cock shouting to the /, . if 

/ came from her when she moved : Vivien 

the court, the king, dark in your/, 11 

the crown RolI'd into /, . . Elaine 

maiden standing in the dewy /. . it 

green /from the meadows underneath it 

in the /of your blue eyes : . ir 

lo ! the bloodred / of dawn . . it 

one low / betwixt them burn'd . Guinevere 

No / had we : for that we do repent : ti 

No /: so late ! and dark . . 11 

let us in, that we may find the // . 11 

in the / the white mermaiden swam it 

the world and all its fs And shadows, ir 

thou reseated in thy place of /, 

the sad nuns with each a / . 

smitten by the I's The Dragon 

pure severity of perfect /— . 

isles a /in the offing . . . En. Arden . 131 

from bed, and struck herself a /, 

a great mist-blotted / 

finding neither / nor murmur 

ruddy square of comfortable /, 

a touch of /, an air of heaven, 

to dilate, as toward the /. 

a hope, a / breaking upon him. 

Star to star vibrates /.* . 

from the low / of mortality , 

with His /about thy feet, 

fill'd the house with sudden /. 

near the / a giant woman sat, 

— But round the North, a /, . 

Broke, mixt with awful / 

cold Are all thy /'j, . . . TitJwnus 

sleep beneath his pillar'd 11 . . The Voyage 

It wore a crown of /, . . . T lie Flower 

/and shadow illimitable, „ . Boadicea 

I is large and lambs are glad . Lucretius 

The I's and shadows fly ! . . The Window 

I's and shadows that cannot be still 

O Is are you flying over h.er sweet 

Gone and the / gone with her 

roll up away from the / . 

Down to the / in the valley fly 

Fly to the / in the valley below. . 

Z-, so low upon earth, . 



46 

• 5 
. 6 
. 100 

- 521 
. 600 

1233 

• 417 
. 724 

■ 52 

- 35i 
. 407 

• 657 
1019 

4 
. 269 
. 172 

■ 173 

- 243 

- 34i 
. 521 
. 584 

• 59 1 
639 



11 . 727 

Aylmers F. 5 

" - 77 

" . 480 

- 578 

tr . 641 

II . 665 

ir . 682 

Sea Dreams 96 

" . 201 

208-28 



67 



light (to settle, etc. ) 
"Who can / on as happy a shore . Sea-Fairies 40 
could not I upon a sweeter thing : Walk. totheM.44 
give to I on such a dream ?' . . Ed. Morris 58 
trusts to I on something fair ; . Day-Dm. . 120 



POEM. LINE 

float thro' Heaven, and cannot I? Day-Dm. 276 
follow, and / Upon her lattice, . Princess, iv. 81 
mayyou/onallthingsthatyoulove, Enid . . 226 
know Where I can / on arms, . 11 . .422 
L on a broken word to thank him En. Arden . 344 
Britain /upon auguries happier? . Boadicea . 45 

light (to illumine, etc.) 
sunbeam slip, To /her shaded eye ; Talking O. 218 
/ The light that shone when Hope In Mem. xxx. 31 
God within him / his face. . . 11 lxxxvi. 36 
L's with herself, when alone . Maud, I. xiv. 12 

light. 
'Is and rings the gateway bell, . In Mem. viii. 3 

light-blue. 
Sweet-hearted, you, whose l-b eyes In Mem. xcv. 2 
A l-b lane of early dawn, . . n cxviii. 7 

Light Brigade. 
' Forward the L B ! . . . L. Brigade 5-9 
Honour the LB. . . . 11 -54 

lighted (kindled.) 
tho' my lamp was / late, . . May Queen,ui.iS 

lighted (alighted.) 
And / at a ruin'd inn, . . . Vision of Sin 62 

lighted on. 

those of old That I o Queen Esther Enid . . 731 

till she had lo his wound, . . n . 1362 

/ the maid, Whose sleeve he wore ; Elaine . 706 

lighten (to flash, etc.) 
now she Vs scorn At him that mars Princess, v. 125 
/ thro' The secular abyss to come, hi Mem. lxxv. 5 
What Is in the lucid east . . 11 civ. 24 

brute earth l's to the sky, . . 11 exxvi. 15 
L's from her own central Hell — . Aylmer's F. 761 
You flash and / afar . . . The Window 187 

/ into my eyes and my heart . 11 . 192 

lighten (to make lighter.) 
To /this great clog of thanks, . Princess, vi. no 
One burthen and she would not /it? Aylmer's F. 703 

lightened (flashed, etc.) 
The random sunshine / / . . A mphion . 56 
rays, that / as he breath'd ; . . Elaine . 296 

brim Of waters /into view . . The Voyage 26 
/ In the eyes of each. . . . The Captain 31 

lightened (made lighter.) 
yet it / my despair ... . Maud, III. vi. 18 

lighter. 
finest Gothic / than a fire, . . Princess, Pro. 92 
As flies the / thro' the gross . . In Mem. xl. 4 

lighter-footed. 
/;/"than the fox Day-Dm. . 108 

light-foot. 
If Iris brought it yester-eve . CEnone . 81 

light-glooming. 
L-g over eyes divine, . . . Madeline . 16 

light-green. 
A l-g tuft of plumes she bore Sir L. andQ. G. 26 

light-luaded. 

1 should grow l-h, I fear, . . Maud, I. xix. 100 

my child, you seem L-h, . . Elaine 1057 

lighting. 

1 upon days like these ? 

lightning. 
as the / to the thunder 
a fountain Like sheet /, 
into the dark Arrows of Vs. . 
summer l's of a soul 
Is in the splendour of the moon, 
Nor ever / char thy grain, 
flash the l's. weigh the Sun — 
The wizard Is deeply glow . 
like a silent /under the stars . 



. Locksley H. 99 

. The Poet . 50 
The Poet's Mind 25 
. ToJ.M.K. 14 
. Millers D. . 13 
. M. d'Arthuri-tf 
. Talking O. 277 
. Locksley H. 186 
. In Mem. exxi. 19 
. Maud, III. vi. q 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



245 



POEM. LINE. 

i wicked fs of her eyes, . Guinevere . 516 
L of the hour, the pun, . . Aylmer'sF. 441 

like (adj. and s.) 
L men, /manners. L breeds /, they Walk, to tlteM. 55 
those two Fs might meet and touch Two Voices 357 
life ! he never saw the /; . . Princess, L . 1S4 
' L to /.' The woman's garment hid ir v. 294 
riid mingle with your I's. . 11 vi. 321 

Not / to /, but /in difference. . ■■ vii. 262 

Ami I so /her? so they said . . The Prook . 223 
Not violating the bond of / to /.' . Elaine . 241 
1 never saw his /; .... it . 316 

one /him.' ' Why that / was he." 11 . 573 

In-. I that year in twenty parishes Grandmother 12 

like verb.) 
we / them well : But children die: Princess, iii. 235 
// her none the less for rating at her ! u v. 451 

How I you this old satire? . . Sea Dreams 194 

liked. 
more he look'd at her The less he / her : Dora 33 
/it more Than magic music, . Princess, Pro. 191 

Nor th'/ she / him, yielded she, . 11 vii. 61 

loved nor / the thing he heard. . Aylmcr's F. 230 

likelihood. 
Need must be lesser /, . . . Elaine . 366 

likely. 
' O ay,' said Vivien, 'that were / too. Vivien . 596 

likeness. 
Lo ! God's /—the ground-plan — . Vision of Sin 187 
pluck'd her /out ; . . Princess, i. 91 

A /, hardly seen before Comes out In Mem. Ixxiii. 3 
Thy / to the wise below, 11 .7 

Thy /, . " xci. 2 
darkening thine own To thine own / Aylmer'sF. 674 

titer. 

light shall spread, and man be /man Golden Vear^S 
in the long years / must they grow ; Princess, vn.ad^ 

litest. 

men, in power Only arc /gods . CEnone . 128 

lilac. 

Academic silks, in hue '1 he /, . Princess, ii. 3 
makes the purple /ripe . . Ona Mourner 7 

lilac-ambush. 

Thro' crowded l-a trimly pruned ; Gardener 'sD. 111 

Lilia. 

And sifter L with the rest.' . Princess, Pro. 52,97 

/., wild with sport. Half child 1. . jco 

• ■alter, patting L's head . 11 . 125 

here are thous indsu .127 

many L's in the brood . " . , 11 . 146 

The little hearth-flower L. . . „ . 165 

with L's . n . 173 

As many little trilling L's - . 11 . 186 

with sudden-shrilling mirth 11 . 210 

' , then, for hel .11 . 217 

ins : we thought her . ir iv. 562 

With which we banterM little L . 11 Con. 12 

no part 11 . 29 

ig quietly, Disrobed n . 116 

Lilian. 

Airy, fiiry /.. 'rep.) . , . Lilian . 1 

weep, May L ! „ >9-25 

lilted. 

scraps of thundrous Epic / out . Princess, \\. 353 

lily. 
level plots Of crowned lilies, . Ode to Mem. 109 
a / which the tun I . Adeline . 12 

. Uiei at sunrise? . i, -37 

where the lilies blow . /.. o/Shalott, i. 7 

! lilies : . . CEnone . 96 

nil its lazy lilies, . . Gardener' sD.+i 

■ -, . . .Sir Galahad tj 

Iver / heaved and fell ; . To Ii. L. . 19 

the tunc when lilies blow, . . Lady Clare 1 



ro. 72 
ni. 52 



XIV. 


2 


XIX. 


55 


fcXU. 


1 > 



. ,,. ,. POEM. LINE. 

paddling plied And shook the lilies Princess, I 

than wear Those lilies, belter blush 

violet varies from the / as far 

' Pretty bud ! L of the vale ! . 11 vi! 176 

Now folds the /all her sweetness up, 11 vii. 171 

flung The lilies to and fro, . . In Mem. xciv. 60 

lain in the ////« of life. . . Maud, I, iv. 60 

Gathering woodland lilies, . . 11 xu. 7 

here In among the lilies. 

And lilies fair on a lawn : 

Bright English /, breathing a prayer 

1 said to the /, ' There is but one 

lilies and roses were all awake 

Queen / and rose in one ; . . 11 .56 

the / whispers, ' I wait.' 11 .66 

All made up of the /and rose . 11 II. v. 74 

Have I beheld a /like yourself. .Find . 1468 

Set in her hand a /, . . . Elaine 1142 

In her right hand the /, . . 11 n 4 g 

Be carven, and her /in her hand. 11 1332 

now at last— Farewell, fair /. . 11 1388 

lily-avenue. 
A l-a climbing to the doors ; . Ayliuer's F. 162 

lily-cradled. 
The golden bee Is l-c: . . . CEnone . 29 

lily-handed. 
No little /-/< Baronet he, . . Princess, Con. 84 

lilylike. 
The / Melissa droop'd her brows . Princess, iv. 145 

lily maid. 

Elaine, the / m of Astolat, . . Elaine . 2 

came the / m by that good shield 11 . 28 

hind them stept the Im. . n . 176 

I in Elaine Won by the mellow voice •■ . 242 

to her own heart said the / in 11 . 318 

/ m had striven to make him cheer 11 . 326 
' L 111, For fear our people call you 

Im In earnest .... 11 . 385 

pledging Lancelot and the / nt . " . 734 

Then spake the / m of Astolat . 11 1079 

the / 111 of Astolat Lay smiling . 11 1235 

lily-shining. 
lay The l-s child; .... Princess, iv. 2CS 

lily-while. 
Lord Ronald brought a /-?</ doe . Lady Clare 3 
l<u doe Lord Ronald had brought 11 . 61 



liiul: 



writhed I'sof lightning speed ; 'Clear-headed friend' 23 
clear and bared /\j O'erthwartcd . CEnone . 136 

Resting weary Is at last . . Lotos-Es. . 170 
e laps our fs are nursed. To J. S. . 10 
I Jenying not these weather-beaten l's St S. Stylites 1 9 
all my l's drop piecemeal . . 11 . 43 

Int , her A itself doth mould . Day-Dm. . 86 
Hair, and eyes, and l's, and faces, Vision 0/ Sin 39 
thro' her l's a drooping languor wept : Princess, vi. 251 
due To languid l's and sickness : . 1. . 356 

Give it time To learn its P»: . ■■ Con. 79 
Nor could 1 weary, heart or /, . In Mem. jtxv. q 
watl h'd them, Ward in every /,■ .. . 

brood On a horror of sh.uter'd /\s . Maud, I. i. 56 
tho' thy fs have here increased . 11 xviii. 18 

hurl'd his huge /"rout of bed, . Find . . 124 
to suffer nothing heart or /, . .... . 472 

from her fs the costly-broidcr'd gift, 11 . . 769 
striking out her fs awoke ; . . n . 1229 

stretch his fs in lawful light, . 11 . 1C02 

clung about her lissome fjr, . . Vivien . 72 

no larger than the l's of fleas : . .. . 522 

/ was broken when they lifted him ; Eii. Arden . 107 
id handled all his fs « . 153 

Till the little fs are stronger. . Sen Dreamt 294 

naked fs and flowers and fruit, . The I «yage 55 

limber. 

And legs of trees were /, . A million . 14 



246 



CONCORDANCE TO 



lime (tree.) poem. line. 

your branching I shave blown L. C. V.de Vere 27 
arching Is are tall and shady, . Margaret . 59 
the large /feathers low, . . Gardener's D. 46 

/a summer home of murmurous wings it . 47 

many a range Of waning / . 11 . 213 

bard has honour' d beech or /, . Talking O. . 291 
ambrosial aisles of lofty I . . Princess, Pro. 87 
Up that long walk of Is I past In Mem. lxxxvi. 15 
break from the ruby-budded I . Mand, I. iv. 1 
beech and / Put forth and feel . On a Mourner 14. 

lime (earth.) 
To feed thy bones with /, . . Two Voices 326 
dying Nature's earth and /; . In Mem. cxvii. 4 

lime (verb. ) 
every sophister can /. ' Love thou thy land/ etc. 12 

limed. 

True — we had / ourselves . . Princess, Hi. 126 

limit. 

reach'd The / of the hills ;_ . . Audley Ct. . 82 
on the glimmering I far withdrawn Vision of Sin 223 

not breathe Within this vestal /, . Princess, ii. 204 

The /of his narrower fate, . . In Mem. Ixiii. 21 

No / to his distress ; Maud, II. v. 31 

blown the lake beyond his /, . The Daisy . 71 

in what l's, and how tenderly ; . Ded. of Idylls 19 

there you fixt Your /, oft returning Elaine 1035 

ran Ev'n to the /of the land, . En. Arden . 579 

Twofooted at the /of his chain . Aylmers P. 127 

Slipt o'er those lazy Is . it . 495 

at the quiet / of the world, . . Tithonus . 7 

L imours. 

suitors as this maiden ; first L . Enid . . 440 

wild lord of the place, L n 1126 

Earl L Drank till he jested 11 1138 

when the Prince was merry, ask'd L ir . 1146 

rose L and looking at his feet, . 11 . 1151 

told him all that Earl L had said, 11 . 1240 

from the territory of false L . . " . 1280 

wild L, Borne on a black horse, . n . 1306 

In combat with the follower of L, ir . 1356 



Umpit. 
on thy ribs the / sticks, 

linden. 

The / broke her ranks and rent . 

in copse And / alley : 

on the sward, and up the /walks, . 

line (s. ) 
Beyond, a /of heights, and higher 
curving Is of creamy spray ; 
"What time the foeman's / is broke, 
drove his cheek in Is : . 
Persian, Grecian, Roman Is 
fifth in / from that old Florian 
Is of green that streak the white 
ride with us to our Is . 
long / of the approaching rookery. 
My blessing, like a /of light, 
So word by word, and / by /, 
a grandson, first of his noble /, 
He gave them /: . 
Right thro' the / they broke ; 
face ispractised, when I spell the Vs, 
one true /, the pearl of pearls : 
the second in a /of stars 
High with the last / scaled . 
Long l's of cliff breaking have left 
a darker isle beyond the / ; . 
Love, let me quote these Is . 
Is of cliffs were cliffs no more, 
past long Is of Northern capes 
never a / from my lady yet ! . 

line (verb.) 
May bind a book, may / a box, 

lineament. 
Every / divine, 



Sailor Boy . n 

Amphion . 33 

Princess, i. . 206 

11 iv. . 191 



Pal of Art 


82 


Lotos- E's. . 


107 


Tiuo Voices 


155 


Princess, i. . 


115 


11 ii. . 


114 


" 


220 


II v. . 


188 


ir 


216 


ti Con. 


97 


InMem.xvil. 


10 


ii xciv. 


33 


Maud, I. x. 


12 


The Brook . 


145 


Lt. Brigade 


33 


Vivien 


217 


if 


309 


11 


359 


Elaine 


[013 


En. Arden . 


1 


11 


606 


Sea Dreams 


177 


'i 


210 


The Voyage 


35 


T/ie Window 


120 


In Mem. Lxxvi. 6 


E lean ore 


53 



faded form and haughtiest Is, 
Imperious, and of haughtiest Is 
Lifted her eyes, and read his Is. 
writhing barbarous Is, . 
take the cast Of those dead Is 



POEM. LINE. 

. Princess, ii. 425 

. Enid . . 190 

. Elaine . 244 

. Moadicea . 74 

. Coquette, £11. 2 



li?ien. 

Fares richly, in fine /, . . . Aylmer's F. 659 

linger. 
Knowledge comes, but wisdom Is, Locksley //.141-3 

/ here with one that loved us.' . Princess, iii. 321 

/ weeping on the marge, . . In Mem. xii. 12 

They rise, but /,• it is late ; . . it Con. 91 

Is late With a roystering company) Maud,\. xiv. 14 

rose-garden, And mean to / in it . 11 xx. 42 

I / by my shingly bars ; . . The Brook 

I hate that he should / here ; . E?iid . 

linger 7 cL 

charmed sunset /low adown . Lotos-E's. . 19 

/there Till every daisy slept, . Gardener 'sD .160 

ever at a breath She /, . . . Godiva . 45 

I /; all within was noise . . InMem.lxxxvi.iS 
By night we / on the lawn . 
L that other, staring after him ; 
o'er his bent brows / Averill, 



180 
9i 



ti XCIV. I 

Elaine . 717 

Ayhner's F. 625 



Imgereth. 
Why / she to clothe her heart . Princess, iv. 87 

lingering. 

After a /, — ere she was aware, — . En. Arden . 
/out a three years' death-in-life . 11 

L about the thymy promontories, Sea Dreams 

link (s. ) 
Or to burst all Is of habit — . . Locksley H. 
maids, That have no Is with men. Princess, vi. 
A /among the days, to knit . InMem.xxxix.15 

lost the Is that bound Thy changes; 11 xl. 6 

/ Betwixt us and the crowning race ir Con. 127 
loops and l's among the dales . Elaine . i6£ 

link (verb.) 
Idle habit Is us yet. 
To which she Is a truth divine ! 
should'st / thy life with one . 

linked — linkt, 
L month to month with such a 
/ again. I saw within my head 
/ with thine in love and fate, 
/ a dead man there to a spectral 

force in her L with such love for me Enid . . 806 
/ our names together in his lay, . Elaine . 113 

broke Flying, and / again ; . . Guinevere . 256 
/ their race with times to come . Aylmers F. 779 

linnet. 
Sometimes the /piped his song : SirL. andQ. G. 10 
Like Vs in the pauses of the wind : Princess,Pro.i^> 
pipe but as the Is sing : . . In Mem. xxi. 24 
The / born within the cage . . 11 xxvii. 3 

hears the latest /trill, ... 11 xcix. 10 

three gray Vs wrangle for the seed : Guinevere . 253 
O merry, the /and dove, . . TJie Window 156 

lintel. 
household flower Torn from the / — Princess, v. 123 



267 
566 



157 
274 



. Miller's D. 212 

. In Mem.xxxm. 12 

u lxxxiii, 11 

. Two Voices 16 7 

. Vision of Sin 59 

In Mem. lxxxiii. 38 

Maud, II. v. " 



and under his own / stood 

lint white. 
Her song the / swelleth 



Ayhner's F. 331 



. Claribel 



lion. 
The / on your old stone gates L. C. V. de Vere 23 
the /roaring from his den ; . D. ofF. Worn. 222 

comes a hungry people, as a /, . Locksley H. 135 
in her Vs mood Tore open, . . Princess, iv. 361 
blazon'd Is o'er the imperial tent . 11 v. 9 

old /, glaring with his whelpless eye, ir vi. 83 
your long locks play the L's mane ! 11 . 148 

her / roll in a silken net . . Maud, I. yi. 29 

A / ramps at the top ... 11 xiv. 7 

ruddy shield on the L's breast. . 11 III. vi. 14 
Porch-pillars on the /resting, . The Daisy . 55 



TENiVYSOX'S WORKS. 



247 



Sir Lancelot's azure fs . 
The banc shall lead the /. 



POEM. LINE. 

. Elaine . 660 

. Aytmer'sF. 648 



lioness. 

L That with your long locks play Princess, vi. 147 

lioness-like. 
and rolling glances /-/ . . . Boddicea . 71 

lion-heart. 
The M, Plantagcnet, . . . Margaret . 34 

lionlike. 
rushing outward / Leapt on him, . Guinevere . 106 

lion-whelp. 
Far as the portal-warding l-w, . En. A rden . 98 

up. 

When from crimson-threaded fs . Lilian . 23 
ts thereon perpetually did reign Isabel . . 7 
If -ny Is should dare to kiss . . Madeline . 43 
Er: the placid Fs be cold? . .Adeline . 20 
A depress'd as he were meek, . A Character 25 
Your ripe fs moved not, . . Miller's D. 131 
my whole- soul thro' My Ts, . . Fattma . 21 

In.- blossom of his fs to mine CEnoue . 76 
my hot fs prest Clojc, close . 11 . 199 

from her /\l, as morn from Memnon Pal. 0/ Art . 171 
in a little while our Is are dumb. . Lotos-E's. . 89 
« ith dead fs smiled at the twilight V. of p. I. 
music left the fs of her that died . 11 . 195 

She lock'd her fs : she left me . » . 241 

11 with fs divine 'Of old sat Freedom! etc. 23 
fr in Discussion's /may ' Lowe thou thy land! etc. 33 
knightly growth that fringed his fs. M. if Arthur 220 
Her fame from /to /. . . Gardener's D. 50 
his own warmth against her fs . 11 . 137 

: Is Less exquisite . ir . 149 

stirr'd her ts For some sweet answer, 11 . 155 

with a flying linger swept my fs, . 11 . 241 

r'd madly ; bit Ins Is, . Dora . . 31 

breathing love and trust against her /.- AudleyCt. 68 

ud flutter'd round her / . Talking U. 219 
me That have no fs to kiss, " . 242 

at the touching of the Vs. . . Locksley II. 38 
a /to drain thy trouble dry. . . 11 .88 

fs will laugh me down : . 11 -89 

Her fs are severd as to speak : . Pay-Din. . 50 

What fs, like thine, so sweetly join'dy 11 . 238 

my Ts, . . Will Water. 19 

:• : . II .20 

1 1 he fs I once have kiss'd ; . " .37 

iy falter,. . L. of Burleigh 9 

I rfect fs. . . SirL.andQ.G. 45 

1 heir brows and fs— Vision of Sin 9 

\. ivell'd ts . 11 . 79 

fire In your eye— nor yet your /: ■> . 184 

1 itcd blossom of her Is: . Priitcess,Pro.\qs 

the fs: ... » i. 95 

it, And all her thoughts . 11 ii. 304 

that arc for others ; . . 11 iv. 38 
id with alien fs, ... » .101 

md all pardon . » . 232 

upon my fs: . . " • 274 

1 smile. " ■ 345 
dying Fs, With many thousand matters 11 . 437 
seem'd to wait behind her Fs, _ . 11 ■ 4i> 
at qui kc from their Fs, 11 
lingering at the hair about his / . 11 _. 293 
drew Her robe to meet his Fs » vi. 140 
■pint closed with Ida's at the Fst 11 vii, 143 
meek Seem'd the full Fs, . . 11 . 211 

m thy lying /! . . In Mem iii. 4 

hrc.it' Ft impart . " xv '!j- '5 

dull'd the murmur on thy /, . . " xxii. 16 

1 he Ft oi tl 1. " maci. 16 

1 .11 xxxvii. 20 

le / Short swallow-flights . " x '\!!- '4 

fills The /■* of men with hi 11 Ixxxiii. 26 

t win An ai v Ft >i cii. 50 

■ r thy fs are bland . 'I rxvni. 9 

idieu, . '■ c.wii. 11 
Sweet human hand and fs and eye ; 11 exxviu. 6 



1 :. LINE. 

fs in the field above are dabbled . Maud, I. i. 2 
sunlight broke from her l> . . 11 yi. £6 

curving a contumelious /, .11 xiii. 20 

happy V'es Kalters from her fs, . " xvii. 10 

For the hand, the fs, the eyes, . 11 II. iv. 27 
Prophet, curse mc the blabbing /, " v. 57 

raised her head with Fs comprest, The Letters i) 
sworn From his own fs to have k—Euid . . 409 
Slip from my fs if I can help it . 11 . . 446 
gnaw'd his under, now his upper /, 11 . 1517 

yesterday you never open'd /, . Vivien . 1 20 
from the rosy fs of life and love, 11 . 695 

by what name Livest between the Fs 'Elaine . 1I2 
living smile Died frcm his/\r, . 11 . 323 

sat With fs severely placid . . 11 . 736 

her fs, Who had devised the letter, » 1279 

I cannot touch thy fs, . . Guinevere . 547 

and could hear the fs that kiss'd . Tithonus . 60 



lip/d. 
faintly / The flat red granite ; 

liquor. 
smote Her life into the /. 



Audley Ct. 11 



. Will Water. 112 

Lisbon. 
Round affrighted L drew . . Ode on Well. 103 

lissome. 
but as /as a hazel wand ; . . The Brook . 70 

lisp. 
lightest wave of thought shall /, . In Mem. xlviii. 5 
shall have learn'd to / you thanks. Enid . . 822 
/ in love's delicious creeds ; . . Coquette, i. 1 1 

lispeth. 
The callow throstle /, . . . Claribel . 17 

lisping. 
A lot the innumcrous / . . Princess, v. 1 3 

lispt. 
Was / about the acacias, . . Princess, \\\. 235 

list (register, etc. ) 
But still her fs were swell'd . Princess, iv. 300 

meaning by it To keep the /low . Vivien . .];-■ 

•rder.) 
fs of such a beard as youth gone Vivien . 94 

list to choose.) 
not be kiss'd by all who would /, . The Mermaid 41 
(J maiden, if indeed you /to sing, Guinevere . 163 

list (to listen.) 

To /a foot-fall, ere he saw . . Pal. of Art no 

listen. 

/, /, your eyes shall glisten . Sea Fairies 35-37 
Whither away? /and stay. . 11 . j2 
stars that hung I.ovc-charm'dto/: Love and Duty 73 
if you care indeed to /, hear .Golden Year 20 
W'bisper'd 'L to my despair: . Ed. Gray . 22 
/.' here is proof that you were miss'd Princess,Pr 1.175 

11 but /at the gates, . . In. Mem. \ 
The larkspur fs, ' I hear. I hear ; ' Maud, 1. xxii. 65 

1 know that he lies and fs mute . 11 II. V. 60 
fs near a torrent mountain-brook, Enid . 1020 
/to me, and by me be ruled, . 11 _ . 1472 
it shall answer for me. /. to it. . Vivien . 236 
while the king Would /smiling. . Elaine . 117 
/ to mc, If I must find you wit : . 11 ■ 147 
Would / for her coming, and regret 11 . 862 
vex an ear too sad to / to me, . Guinevere . 313 
speak no slander, no, ncW to it, . 11 -4^9 
'/,, Annie, How merry they are . En. Ardtn . 385 

Sit, /.' 'I hen he told her . . 1. . 862 

spirits into each car To /: . . Aylmer's F. 20a 

1 fear you'll / 10 talis, . . . Grandmothers* 

Did they hear me, would they /, . BoSdicsa . 8 

<ned. 

I look'd And /, the full-flowing . Cl'noue 

and I / i" my bed, . . . May 

from them iii Is; we /; Go 

The deep air / around her . - 54 

While I /, came Uu a sudden . Privets, iv. 537 



248 



CONCORDANCE TO 



spoke no slander, no, nor / to it 
while they /for the distant hunt, 
Enid / brightening as she lay : 
melted all who / to it : . 

liste?ier. 
not to die a /, I arose, . 
every roof Sent out a /: 

listenest. 
Thou / to the closing door, . 



POEM. LINE. 

Ded. of Idylls 9 
Enid . .184 



En. A rden 



733 
650 



listening 
L the lordly music 
at eventide, /earnestly, 
E, whispers "Tis the fairy 
roll'd Dry flame, she / ; 
with shut eyes I lay L ; 

E now to the tide in its broad-flung Maud, I. iii. 11 
she sat Stiff-stricken, /; . . Guinevere . 409 

/ till those armed steps were gone, n . 579 



. TheBrook . 163 
. Ay liners P. 614 

. In Mem. cxx. 7 

(part.) 

. Ode to Mem, 41 

' A spirit /taunts,' etc. 4 

. E. ofSIuilottj..y$ 

. Princess, vi. 173 

209 



listening (s.) 
lonely Vs to my mutter'd dream, , 



Princess, vii. 9s 



listless, 
f, in all despondence — . 

lists. 
Shot thro' the / at Camelot, . 
they roll in clanging / . 
the /were hammer'd up, 
The l's were ready. Empanoplied 
lord of the ringing /, . . . ir 

father heard and ran In on the / . ir 

into the / they wound Timorously ; if 

settling circled all the / . . Enid 

her gentle presence at the / . .11 
come To these my / with him . tr 
Lancelot, and his prowess in the /, Elaine 
Favour of any lady in the /, . . 11 
when they reached the / By Camelot it 
assail'd, and they that held the / tr 

Table Round that held the / . ri 

day when Lancelot fled the /, . if 

lit (settled, etc.) 
bore Them earthward till they/; . 
a crested peacock /, 
here we / on Aunt Elizabeth . 
wheel'd or / the filmy shapes 



. Aylmers F. 534 

. M.'d' 'Arthur 224 

. Sir GalaJiad 9 

Princess, v. 358 

tr . 472 



• 547 

• 795 
1688 

- 83 
363, 473 

• 4 2 7 

• 454 
466-98 

- 524 
18 



The Poet 
LEuone . 102 
Princess, Pro. 96 
hi Mem. xciv. 10 

lit (kindled, etc.) 
gray eyes /up With summer lightnings Miller's D. 12 
E up a torrent-bow. . . , Pal. of Art . 36 
E with a low large moon. . n .68 

E light in wreaths and anadems, . m . 186 

/ Lamps which outburn'd Canopus. D. of P. Worn. 145 
/your eyes with tearful power, . Margaret . 3 
/ the spark within my throat, . Will Water. 109 

litany. 
solemn psalms, and silver litanies, Princess, ii. 453 

litter-bier. 
raised and laid him on a l-b, . . Enid . 1414 

little. 
You would, and would not, /one ! Miller's D. . 134 
* at home was / left, And none abroad : The Epic . 19 
Summ'd up and closed in /; . . Gardener's D. 13 
stored what / she could save, . Dora . . 50 

'Tis / more : the day was warm . Talking O. . 205 
Life piled on life Were all too /, . Ulysses . 25 
of one to me E remains: ir .26 

owning but a / more Than beasts, Two Voices . 196 
E can 1 give my wife. . . . L. of Burleigh 14 
While my / one, while my pretty one Princess, ii. 463 
Sleep, my / one, sleep 11 . 471 

early woke to feed her / ones . 11 vii. 236 

'Tis /; but it looks in truth . In Mem. xviii. 5 
now her / ones have ranged . . if xxi. .26 

So /done, such things to be, . tr lxxii. 2 

Because their natures are / . . Maud, I. iv. 53 
Making the / one leap for joy, Top. D. Maurice 4 
hoard is /, but our hearts are great Enid . 352-74 
Enid took a /delicately, ir 1061 



POEM. LINE. 

Guine7>ere . 201 

En. Ardc?i . 195 

Tl . 228 

tr . 280 

tr . 707 

Aylmers P. 699 

Sea Dreains 49 

Boadicea . 68 

Eucretius . 224 

Princess, ii. 118 

Ded. of Idylls 25 

Two Voices 171 



even were the griefs of / ones 
pretty, puny, weakly /one, — 
kiss'd his wonder-stricken / ones 
from the burial of her / one, 
Philip put her / ones to school 
toil'd to clothe your little ones ; 
mar this / by their feuds, 
dash the brains of the / one out, 
of so /in our /life, 

little-footed. 
laws Salique And //China, 

littleness. 
a thousand peering Ves 

little-worth. 
So were thy labour l-w. 

live. 
Thou wilt not live in vain. ' Clear-headed friend? 9 
My friend, with you to /alone, . Ode to Mem. rig 
rainbow Vs in the curve of the sand ; Sea-Fairies 27 
/forgotten, and love forlorn, (rep. ).#/#?-zVz«rt in the S. 12 
melody, Which l's about thee, . Elednore . 65 
I'd almost / my life again. . . Miller's D. . 28 
Grow, /, die looking on his face, . Fatima . 41 
/ by law, Acting the law we / by . CEnone . 145 
the happy souls, that love to /; . tr . 236 

My soul would / alone unto herself .P^/. of Art 11 
/till the snowdrops come again : . May Queeu/n. 14 
brood and / again in memory, . Eotos-E's. . no 
In the hollow Lotos-land to / . tr . 154 

His memory long will /alone . To J. S. . 4g 
/three lives of mortal men . . M '. d 'Arthur 155 
let me / and work with you : . Dora . . 113 

thou and I will / within one house n . . 123 
but let me /my life, (rep.) . . Audley Ct. 42 
touch mybody and beheal'd, and I'.StS. Stylites 78 
E — yet / — Shall sharpest pathos Eove and Duty 81 
E happy ; tend thy flowers ; . tr .84. 

like the second world to us that /: Golden Year 56 
L on, God love us, as if the seedsman tr . 69 

To breathe and loathe, to /and sigh, Two Voices 104 

tr . 162 



Day- Dm. . 
Will Water. 



"3 

233 

237 

26 



27 



Who is it that could /an hour? 

that for which I care to /. . 

since I came to / and learn, . 

hence this halo Vs about . tr 

E long, ere from thy topmost head tt 

E long, nor feel in head or chest . 11 

the truth, as I / by bread ! . . Lady Clare 

Here he Is in state and bounty, . E. of Burleigh 57 

' Vs there such a woman now?* . Princess, Pro. 126 

loved to /alone Among her women rt i. 48 

Who am not mine, say, /.* . . tr ii. 205 

yet may / in vain, and miss, 

/, perforce, from thought to thought, 

they cried ' She Is: 

to / No wiser than their mothers. 

/, dear lady, for your child ! 

risk'd it for my own ; His mother Vs : 

gray mare Is ill to / with, 

' Sweet my child, I / for thee.' 

' he Vs : he is not dead : 

at the happy word 'he Vs' . 

no more, lest I should bid thee Is 

What pleasure Vs in height . 

to / and learn and be 

he, that doth not, l's A drowning 

merit l's from man to man . 

I trust he Vs in thee 

wild unrest that l's in woe . 

Vs no record of reply, . 

life shall /for evermore, 

doubtful gleam of solace Vs . 

grain by which a man may I? 

O Sorrow, wilt thou /with me 

Vs to wed an equal mind ; 

Vs to clutch the golden keys, 

thine effect so l's in me, 

A part of mine may / in thee 

Can trouble /with April days, 

By which we dare to / or die, 





II IV. 


T 74 
492 


V: 


II V. 


77 
398 
442 




11 vi. 


547 
106 
112 




11 vii. 


37 2 
178 


it 
fe >r 
In Mem. Pre 


257 
294 
• 35 


" 




39 


Tr 


XV. 


IS 


ir 


XXXI. 


6 


n 


XXXIV. 


2 


11 


XXXV111. 


8 


11 


Iii. 


8 


11 


lviii. 


1 


11 


lxi. 


8 


11 


Ixiii. 


10 


" 


lxiv. 


10 
11 


11 


Ixxxii. 


7 


» 


lxxxiv. 


40 



TEXNYSOX'S WORKS. 



249 



POSH. LINE. 

Vs more faith in honest doubt, JuMem.xcv. n 
He told me, Is in any crowd, . 11 xcvii. 26 
/ within the stranger s land, . 11 civ. 3 

/ their lives From land to land . 11 cxiv. 16 
ss of sorrow I's in m« . . 11 cxv. 13 

seem'd to / A contradiction . . ir cxxiv. 3 
friend of mine who I's in God, 11 Con. 140 
That God, which ever fs and loves m . 141 

\. ■. only the ledger fs, . . Maud, I. i. 35 
he may / to hate me yet. . . 11 xiii. 4 

world, where yet 'tis sweet to /. . 11 xviii. 48 
/a life of truest breath, . . 11 -53 

/, long as my pulses play ; 11 .66 

But t i-morrow, if we /, . . 11 xx. 23 

We are not worthy to /. . . ■■ II. i. 48 
- 1 with her whom first . Enid . . 227 
if 1 /, So aid me Heaver, 11 501 

if he /, we will have him of our band : 11 . 1402 

/ like two birds in one nest, . . 11 . 1475 

I's dLspersedly in many hands, . Vivien . 307 
So / uncharm'd. . 400 

tell us— for we / apart— . . Elaine . 284 
there fs No greater leader.' . 11 . 316 
Vs for his children, ever at its best n . 335 
doubt Whether to / or die, . . n . 520 
as but born of sickness, could not /: n . 876 
that I /to hear,' he said. ' is yours.' 11 . 924 
seeing you desire your child to /, 11 1089 
wli > fove me still, for whom I /, . Guinevere . 442 

1 the King should greatly care to /; 11 . 449 
sad it were for Arthur, should he /, 11 . 492 
nor by living can I / it down. . 11 . 616 
own heart 1 can / down sin. . n . 629 
Enoch fs; that is borne in on me : En. Arden . 318 
fear that her first husband I's '.' . <i . 807 
to work whereby to /. . . 11 . 813 
life in it Whereby the man could /; 11 . 822 
not three days more to /; . 11 . 852 
Surely i's in man and beast . . Sea Dreams 68 
' What a world,' I thought, 'To /in!' " . 93 
have faith ! We / by faith,' 11 . 153 
1 His deeds yet /, .... 11 . 301 
but I would not / it again. . . Grandmother 98 
they / with Beauty less and less . Coquette, i. 9 

jectfs: more cause to weep 11 iii. 6 

loves in every place ; . Ona Mourner 5 

And I shall / to see it. . . . Spiteful Let. 18 

L the great life which all our . Lucretius . 78 

tired. 
I and loved alone so long, . . Miller's D. . 38 
Jf I had /—I cannot tell — . . MayQiieen,\\\. 47 
You I with us so steadily . D.oftkeO.YtarS 

have / my life, and that which I . .'/. d' Arthur 244 
/ Her fame from lip to lip. . Gardener's D. 49 

Dora / unmarried till her death. . Dora . . 167 
farmer's sun, who /across the bay, Audley Ct. . 74 
There /a llavllint near; . Walk, to the M. 76 
Here /the Hills — . . . Ed. Morris 11 

while 1 / In the white convent . St S.Stylites 60 
I up there on yonder mountain . n .7' 

Three years I / upon a pillar, . 11 -85 

like endless welcome, / and died. . Loveartd Duty66 
said he /shut up within himself, . Golden Year 9 
had 1 / when song was great (rep.) Amphion . 9 
/an ancient legend in our house. . Princess, i. 5 
L thro' her to the tips of her long hands, 11 ii. 26 

vast bulk that /and roar'd . . 11 iii. 277 

prized my counsel, / upon my lips : 11 iv. 274 
/ in all fair light-, ... 11 . 410 

equal baseness / in sleeker times . 11 v. 375 

and / but for mine own. . . 11 . 379 

dream had never died or /again. . 11 vi. 1 

order / again with other laws : . 11 vii. 4 
dearer thou for faults /„ over: . 11 . 327 

( ) had he // In our schoolbooks . The Brook . 9 
:t there / no proof . . Enid . . 26 
sothere /tome colour in your cheek 11 . 1469 
/thro* her, who in that perilous hour n . 1614 
/in hope that sometime you would h . 1687 
/a king in the must Eastern East, Vivien . 405 






LINE. 

■ 456 

• 471 

• 499 

■ 506 
2 7. 397 

• 38 



/ there- neither dame nor damsel 

/ alone in a great wild on grass ; 

to his old wild, and / on grass, 

it / with her ; she died : 

so she / in fantasy. 

A horror / about the tarn 

his face before her /, 

face before her /. Dark-splendid, 

Sir Lancelot knew there /a knight 

/ along the milky ruufs ; 

an Abbess, / For three brief years, Guinevere 

I a life of silent melancholy. . 

and that other /alone. . 

Where Annie / and loved him, 

/ for years a stunted sunless life 

scandals that have / and died 

the sooner, for he / far away. 

thought I /securely as yourselves Lucretius 

live-green. 
Out of the l-g heart of the dells 

livelier. 
And / than a laHc .... Talking O. . 122 
no / than the dame That whisper'd Princess, ii. 97 
All her splendour seems No / . In-Wem. xcvii. 7 

liver. 
pierces the /and blackens the blood, The Islet . 35 

livest. 
by what name L between the lips? Elaine . 182 

livid. 
L he pluck" d it forth, . . . Aylmer's F. 627 

/; v id-flickering. 
dazzled by the l-f fork, . . . Vivien . 790 

living (part) 
giants /, each, a thousand years . Princess, 



330 
336 
400 

•V 3 

En. Arden . 259 

11 . 571 

» . 686 

Aylmer's F. 357 

" • 443 

Grandmother 16 
207 

Sea-Fairies 12 



L alone in an empty house 
so much For any maiden /,' 
may judge the / by the dead, 
by / can 1 live it down . 
Should still be /, well then— 
Who hardly knew me /, 
his brother, / oft With Avcrill 
same as that L within the belt) 

//:'/<. 
earn'd a scanty / for himself : 



111. 252 

. Maud, I. \ ; 

. Elaine . 375 

• " I35Q 

. Guumiere . 616 
. En. Arden . 402 
" . 890 

. Aylmer's F. 57 
. Sea Dreams 209 

. En. Arden . 819 



. Ol none . z c > 

. En. Arden . £02 



lizard. 
I, with his shadow on the stone 
golden /on him paused, 

Lizard-point. 
fairest-spoken tree From here 10 L-p. TalkingO. 264 

Llanberris. 
And found him in L : . . . Golden Year 5 

load. 
help me of my weary /.' . Mariana in the S. 30 

loaf. 
a dusky /that smelt of home, . Audley Ct. . 21 

loan. 
arms On /, or else for pledge ; . Enid . . 220 

loathe. 

to name my spirit Cs and fears : . D. ofF. Il'orn. ic6 

To breathe and /, to live and sigh, Two Voices 104 

And I / the squares and streets . Maud, 11 

and whatever fs a law . . Enid . . 37 

on thine polluted, cries ' I / thee.' Guuuvtrl . 552 

I / it : he had never kindly heart, Sea Dreams 195 



and she L's him as well ; 

loathed. 
but most she / the hour 
/ to see them overtax 'd ; 
power to shape : he / himself; 

loathing, 

dread and /of her solitude . 
1 heart, /, said ; 



Lucretius . 197 



. Mariana 

1 
. Lucretius 

. Pal. of Art 
. Vivien 



77 
9 
»3 



220 
639 



250 



CONCORDANCE TO 



loathsome. 



POEM. LINE. 

, Vision of S 171 157 
Walk, to the M. 29 



What is / to the young 

lobby, 
whined in lobbies, tapt at doors, 

lock {hair. ) 
l's not wide-dispread, . . . Isabel . 5 

Stays on her floating l's . . Ode to Mem. 16 

While his Vs a-drooping twined . Adeline . 57 
them back by their flowing l's . The Merman 14 
on each side my low-flowing Vs . The Mermaid 32 
When the Vs are crisp and curl'd ; Visio7i of Sin 200 
dark l's in the gurgling wave . Pri7icess, iv. 169 
From the flaxen curl to the gray / if . 406 

with your long Vs play the Lion's 11 vi. 148 

Serve to curl a maiden's Vs; . hi Mem. lxxvi. 7 

lock (fastening.) 
Break / and seal : ' You might have won, etc. 18 

Melissa, with her hand upon the /, Princess, ii. 301 

locked, 
pool, / in with bars of sand ; . Pal. of Art 249 

She /her lips : she left me . . D.ofF. W0771.n1 
She might have / her hands. . Talking '. 144 

Merlin / his hand in hers . . Vivien 139,320 
chest in chest, With each chest I . n . . 505 

Locksley Hall. 

flying over L H ; L H that in the Locksley H. 4 

a long farewell to LHl n . 189 

let it fall on L H . . . . n . 193 



lodge. 






the garden to the gardener's /, 


.AudleyCt. . 


16 


Beyond the / the city lies, 


. Talking O. . 


5 


They by parks and Is going 


. L. of Burleigh 17 


the moulder' d l's of the Past 


. Princess, iv. 


4S 


beyond her Is where the brook Vocal Ay Inter's F. 


r 45 


lodging. 






let him into / and disarm'd. . 


. Elaine 


171 


Lodi. 






At L, rain, Piacenza, rain. . 


. The Daisy . 


52 



log, 
his heel into the smoulder'd /, M. a" Arthur, Efi. 14 
Bring in great Vs and let them lie, 1 71 Mem. cvi. 17 

logic. 
Severer in the / of a life ? . . Pri7icess, v. 182 
Impassion'd /, which outran . . In Mem. cviii. 7 

loiar (liar.) 
I weant saay men be Vs . . N. Farmer . 27 

loife (life.) 
an' / they says is sweet, . . N. Farmer . 63 

loi7is. 
many weeks about my 1 1 wore . St S. Stylites 62 
From Gama's dwarfish/? . . Princess, v. 495 

loiter, 
Vs slowly drawn .... CE7W7ie . ^ 5 

With weary steps I /on, . In Me77i. xxxviii. 1 
I / round my cresses . . . The Brook . 181 

loiter d. 
/ in the master's field . . ZnMe77z.xxxvii.22 

Loi7ibard. 
But when we crost the L plain . The Daisy . 49 
look'd the L piles ; ir - 54 

lond (land.) ■ 
as I 'a done by the /. N. Farmer 12-24 

it . 44 

tr . 58 



an' / o' my oan. 

to howd the / ater mea. 

London. 

dust and drouth of L life 
Sees in heaven the light of L 
Your father is ever in L, 
in streaming L's central roar 
L, Verulam, Camulodune. . 

lo7ie. 
Her life is /, he sits apart, 



Ed, Morris 
Locksley H. 
Maud, I. iv. 
Ode on Well. 
Boiidicea 



. IftMem.xcvi. 17 



lonelier. 
I, darker, earthlier for my loss. 

loneliest. 
the / in a lonely sea. 

loneliness. 

Uphold me, Father, in my L 
from his height and / of grief 
Me rather all that bowery /, 



POEM. LINE. 

Ayhfier's F. 750 
E71. Arden . 554 



. En. Arde7i , 
. Ay Inter's F. 
. Milton 



785 
632 

9 



loves most, /and miserable 

who sits apart, And seems so IV . 

this weary way, And leave you I? 

lo7ig (adj.) 
Thou art mazed, the night is / 
/and troubled like a rising moon, 
brief is life but love is /, 

long (verb.) 
I / to see a flower so 
to me that / to go. 
/ to prove No lapse of moons 
Vs to burst a frozen bud, 
Always I / to creep 
sense might make her / for court . 
Zformylife, or hungerformy death, 
credulous Of what they / for, 
that's all, and / for rest ; 

lo7tg-bea 7'ded. 
Stept the long-hair'd l-b solitary, . 

loiig-betrothed. 
Lovers l-b were they : . 

long-bounden. 
his l-b tongue Was loosen'd . 

long-lmried. 
Like that l-b body of the king, 

lo7tg-closeted. 
L-c with her the yestermorn, 

longed. 
Has ever truly / for death. . 
swore he /at college, only /, 
flying south but / To follow : 
I /so heartily then and there 
when he stopt we / to hurl together 
Had whatsoever meat he / for 
Annie's children /To go with others, 

lo7ig-e7idtiri7ig 
Mourn for the man of l-e blood, 
What l-e hearts could do 

longer. 
ripen'd earlier, and her life Was /; 

longest. 
growing / by the meadow's edge, . 

long forgot ten. 
Sung by a /^"mind. 

lofig-haired. 
l-h page in crimson clad 
Stept the l-h long-bearded solitary 

lo7ig- Ulumin ed. 
when the l-i cities flame, 

longing (part.) 
ever / to explain, .... 

longing (s. ) 
Geraint had / in him evermore 
Enid fell in / for a dress 

lo7ig-laid. 
l-l galleries past a hundred doors . 

long-leaved, 
in the stream the /-/ flowers weep, 

lo7tg-lii7ibed. 
The /-/ lad that had a Psyche too ; 

lo7ig-jieck'd. 
From the /-« geese of the world . 



Enid . 



123 

t . 1 149 

E71, A rden . 296 

Vision of Sin 195 

Pri7icess, i. 58 

tr iv. 93 

May Quee?i,\\. 16 

m iii. 8 

ZnMem.7cx.vl, 2 

11 lxxxii. 15 

Maud, II. Iv. 95 

Enid . . 803 

n . . 930 

tt . 1724 

Grandmother 99 

En. Arden . 638 

Lady Clare 6 

En. Arden . 645 

Ayhners F. 3 

Pri7icess, iv. 303 

Tivo Voices 396 
Pri7icess,Pro.i57 

11 in. 194 

Maud,l. xiii. 15 

Vivien . 270 

Guinevere . 263 

E?i. Arden . 359 

Ode on Well. 24 
ti . 132 

Pri7tcess, ii. 139 

Enid . 1106 

l7iMe>7z.\>Lxvi. 12 

L.ofShalott,\\. 22 
En. Arden . 638 

Ode on Well. 228 

The Brook . 107 



E71 id 



394 
630 



Pri7icess t vi. 354 
Lotos-E's. . 55 
Princess, ii. 3S4 
Maudi I. iv. 52 



TEXXVSOX'S WORKS. 



251 



long-pent. poem. line. 
all the l-p stream of life . . Day-Dm. . 147 

long-pondering. 
Enoch lay l-p on his plans ; . . En. Arden . 133 

long-practised. 
Strike down the lusty and l-p knight Elaine 1351 

long-sounding. 
Full of l-s corridors it was, . . Pal. 0/ Art 53 

long-sufferance. 
Trying his truth and his l-s . . En. Arden . 467 

long-suffering. 
I that thought myself l-s, . . Ayliuer's F. 753 

long-tailed. 
Like /-/ birds of Paradise, . . Day-Din. . 275 

long-tormented. 
Thro' the /-/ air . . . . Ode on Well. 128 

long-7vinded. 
came across With some l-w tale . T/ie Brook . 109 
there he told a long l-w tale n . 138 

long-wished-for. 
Calming itself to the l-w-/ end . Maud, I. xviii. 5 

long-witltdrawn. 
Betwixt the black fronts l-w . In Mem. c.wiii 6 

looiik ;look.) 
Dubbut /at the waaste : . . N". Farmer 37 
an' fuzz, an' / at it now — . ir .38 

L 'ow quoloty smoilcs ... 11 .53 

look I 

Wherefore those dim t's of thine, . Adeline . a 

Hence that / and smile of thine, " .63 

it of that sharp /, mother, . May Queen, i. 15 

therit us : our fs arc strange : Lotos-E's. 118 

sick and scornful /'* averse, . . D.o/F. ii'om. 101 

sweet are /'* that ladies bend . Sir Gahalad 13 

when I rdsand/'r . II ill Water. 193 

A liquid /on Ida, full of prayer, . Princess, iv. 350 

This / of quiet flatters thus . . In Mem. x. 10 

Treasuring the / it cannot find, . ir xviii. 19 

look thy /, and go thy way, . . 11 xlviii. 9 

voice was low, the / was bright : . 11 Ixviii. 15 

they meet thy / And brighten . 11 Con. 30 

eyes Glaring, and passionate fs, . Sea Dreams 229 

look (verb.) 
could not /on the sweet heaven, . Mariana , 15 
the sun L's thro' in his sad decline, Adeline . 13 
How 1 the day'/ . ('nana . 59 

/in at the gate With his large calm The Mermaid 26 
imelot iv. 14) /.. qfShalottja. 5 
her with slight, and nay, Mariana in the S. 66 
To / into her eyes and say, . n .75 

/.'i down upon the village spire : Miller's D. 36 
L thro' mine eyes with thine rep.) 11 . 215 

/, the sunset, smith and north, . ir . 241 

/ upon your face ; . . May Queen, ii. 38 
here, That I may /on thec' D.o/F. Worn. 124 
What else was left? /here!' . 11 . 156 

4 Turn and / on me : ... 11 . 250 

only / across the lawn, . . . Morgan/ . 65 
/. out below your bower-eaves, . 11 .66 

He cried, ' L '. I '.' Before he ceased Gardener's!). 120 
thercfoi the is well To / to ; Dora . 13 

/. to it ; Consider, Willi.un: . " . 26 

may /on me, And in your looking StS.Stylites 138 
/at her. . . Talking O. 132 
£ further thro' the chace, . ■■ . 246 

come like one that fs content, Love and Duty 90 
Did I i . . Locksley II. 8 

whom to / at was to love. . . .. .72 

1 erneath the light he /* at, . ■• . 116 

ing ; . Godiva . 40 

/. up thro' night : the world is wide. Two Voices 24 

/. tip, the fid is on her brow. . 11 . 192 

/ with that too-earnest eye — . Day-Dm. . 1; 

Co, / in . loj 

I /at all things as they are, . Will Water. 71 



POEM. LIKE. 

And he came to /upon her, . . L. o/Burh 
as well can / Whited thought . VisionafSin 115 
/ upon her As on a kind of paragon Princess, i. 155 
L. our hall I Our statues . . 11 ii. 61 

to /on noble forms Makes noble . 11 . 72 

// for such are these and 1.' . tt 

blessing those that /on them. . 11 1 

/ well too in your woman's dress : 11 iv. 508 

we will not / upon you more. . » . 526 

' L, He has been among his shadows.' <• v. 31 

/up: be comforted : ... 11 . 6? 

L up, and let thy nature strike on 11 vii. 330 

' L there, a garden I ' said my college ir Con. 49 
To /on her that loves him well, . J11 Mei>i.\\\\. 2, 
Ion Spirits brcath'd away, . . it xxxix. 2 
/thy look, and go thy way, . . ir xlviii. 9 
dead shall / me thro' and thro' . 11 1. 12 

/ back on what hath been, . . 11 Ixiii. 1 
L's thy fair face and makes it still. 11 lxix. 16 
did but / thro' dimmer eyes ; . it exxiv. 6 

eye to eye, shall / On knowledge : 11 Con. 129 
1 L at it, pricking a cockney ear. . Maud, I. x. 22 
fs Upon Maud's own garden-gate : 11 xiv. 15 

That I dare to / her way xvi. 11 

As fs a father on the things . . The Letters 23 
L on it, child, and tell me if you . Enid . . C4 

once again she rose to / at it 1236 

Eat ! J. yourself. .... 11 . 1465 

Until my lord arise and /upon me';' it . 1498 

will not /at wine until I die.' , 11 . 1515 

own leech to /into his hurt : . . 11 . 1771 

/ upon his face ! — but if he sinn'd, Vivien . 611 

A sight you love to /on.' . . Elaine . 84 

/On this proud fellow again 1053 

and she, L how she sleeps— . 11 . 1248 

not / up, or half-despised the . Guinevere . 636 
I shall /upon your face no more . En. Arden . 212 
said Enoch, ' I shall /on yours. . it . 213 

L to the babes, and till I come . tt . 219 

not to / on any human face, 11 . 281 

' 1 cannot / you in the face, 11 . 314 

So much to / to — such a change — it . 458 

might /on her sweet face again . ■■ . 719 

Why do you look at me, Annie? . Grandmother 17 

looked. 
/upon the breath Of the lilies .Adeline . 36 
She /down to Camclot. . L.o/Shalott,\\\.si 

might have /a little higher : . Miller's D. 140 

turning / upon your face, . , 11 . 157 

/athwart the burning drouth . Fatima . 13 

1 / And listen'd, the full-flowing . CEuoue . 66 
when I /, Paris had raised his arm, 11 . 185 

slept St Cecily; An angel /at her. Pal of Art . 100 
her face Glow'd, as I /at her. . D. <•//■'. Worn. 240 
have not /upon you nigh, . . To J. S. . 33 
when I /again, behold an arm . M. d Arthur 158 
long before I / upon her, . Gardener'sD. 61 

She /; but all Suffused with blushes ■■ . 150 

often /at them And often thought Dora . . 3 
more he /at her The less he liked 11 . .32 
/with tears upon her boy, 11 . . 55 

I / at him with joy : Talking O. . 106 

She /with discontent. ..." . 116 

L down, half-pleased, half-frighten'd Amf>hion . 54 
/into Lord Ronald's eyes, . . Laay Clan 
/up toward a mountain-tract, ;« 46 

Half-canonized by all that /on her, Princess, i. 
/ across a land of hope, . . " . 167 

every face she /on justify it) . 11 v. 128 

once more she / at my pale face : . 11 vi. 99 

L up, and rising slowly from me, 11 . 135 

/ At the arm'd man sideways, . 11 . 140 

1 lay Listening: then/. . . 11 vii. 209 

/ all native to her place, . . " . 304 

ever / with human eyes. . I>iMcm\\\. 12 

He / upon my crown and smiled : 11 l.w 

I / on these and thought of thee •» xevi, 6 

and thee mine eyes Have / on : . ■■ cviii. 22 
The sun /out with a smile . . Maud, I. ix. 3 
I /, and round, all round the house 11 xiv. 33 



252 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

/, tho' but in a dream, upon eyes Maud, IV. vi. 16 
he / up. There stood a maiden . The Brook . 204 
he /so self-perplext, n . 213 

things Of his dead son, I / on these. The Letters 24 
/ and saw that all was ruinous. . Enid . . 315 
dress that now she / on to the dress if . . 613 
/ on ere the coming of Geraint. it 614 

still she /, and still the terror grew 11 . . 615 
Enid /, but all confused at first h . 685 

or yellow sea L the fair Queen, 11 . 831 

turn'd and / as keenly at her . n . 1279 

Geraint / and was not satisfied. . n . 1284 

Once she / back, and when she saw 11 . 1290 

/too much thro' alien eyes, n x 74° 

have you /At Edyrn ? . . .11 . 1744 

He / and found them wanting ; n . 1783 

when I /, and saw you following . Vivien . 148 

Merlin /and half believed her true, 11 . 250 

by the mellow voice before she /, . Elaine . 243 

/, and more amazed Than if seven n . 349 

Lancelot / and was perplext in mind ir . 834 

/Down on his helm, u . 975 

when she heard, the Queen /up . Guinevere . 162 
pale Queen / up and answer'd her, 11 . 325 

/and saw The novice, weeping, . u . 655 

men /upon him favourably : . En. Arde?i . 56 

Philip /, And in their eyes . . 11 . 72 

Enoch left he had not /upon her) u . 272 

silent, tho' he often /his wish ; . if . 479 

And after / into yourself, . . Aylmer's F. 312 
I I at the still little body — . . Grandmother 66 
Then they / at him they hated . The Captain 37 

lookeih. 
and / down alone. . 

looking" (part, 1 ) 

I thro' and thro' me 

/ fixedly the while, 

in a well, L at the set of day, 

/ as 'twere in a glass, 

All / up for the love of me. 

live, die / on his face, . 

/ over wasted lands, 

Sang / thro' his prison bars ? 

/ wistfully with wide blue eyes 

in your /you may kneel to God. . St S. Stylites 131 

/ ancient kindness on thy pain. . Locksley H. 

I upward, full of grace, . 

/ on the happy Autumn-fields, 

placid marble Muses, /peace. 

/ back to whence I came 

Sat silent, / each at each. 

life should fail in / back. 

Now / to some settled end, . 

/ to the South, and fed . 

L, thinking of all I have lost 

/ at her ; ' Too happy, fresh . 

Not turning round, nor / at him, 

/round he saw not Enid there, 

rose Limours and /at his feet, 

spoke and said, Not /at her, 

' I once was / for a magic weed, . n 

/at her, Full courtly, yet not falsely, Elaine 

Lancelot knew that she was / at him. " 

/ often from his face who read . 11 

Here /down on thine polluted, . Gicinevere 



Claribel 



-4 



Lilian . 10 

. Madeline . 39 
. Adeline . 17 
. A Character 10 
T/ie Mermaid 51-55 
. Fatima . 41 
. Lotos-Es. . 159 
. Margaret . 35 

M.d' Arthur 169 



Two Voices 
. Princess, iv. 

. luMem.xxm. 

tr xxx. 

it xlv. 

ir lxxxiv. 
. Maud, I.xviii. 

11 II. ii. 
The Brook . 



Enid 



Vivien 



4 
97 

20 

46 
. 217 
. 270 
. 506 



321 
235 
979 
1277 

55* 



With father Vs on. 



looking (s.) 



. Miller's D. . 231 
loom (s.) 
She left the web, she left the /, L. ofSlialottfii.y] 
A present, a great labour of the /; Princess, i. . 43 
rent The wonder of the / . 11 .61 

a splendid silk of foreign /, . . Enid . 1535 

loom (verb. ) 
smoke go up thro* which I / to her Princess, v. 124 
Makes former gladness / so great ? InMem.xxiv. 10 

loop. 
Vs and links among the dales . Elaine . 166 

l's and folds innumerable n . 438 



loose (adj.) poem. line. 

A / one in the hard grip . . Sea Dreams 159 

loose (verb.) 
that she would / The people : . Godiva . 37 
Let me / thy tongue with wine : . Vision of Sin 88 
Fear not thou to / thy tongue ; . n . 155 

/A flying charm of blushes . . Princess, ii. 407 
ran To /him at the stables, . . Aylmer's F. 126 

loosed. 
She /the chain, and down she lay ; L. ofShalott, iv. 16 
And /the shattered casque . . M '. d' Arthur 209 
/a mighty purse, Hung at his belt, Enid . . 871 
/ in words of sudden fire the wrath 11 . . 955 
/ the fastenings of his arms, u 1360 

our bond Had best be / for ever : . Vivien . 192 

Merlin /his hand from hers . 11 . 206 

pricked at once, all tongues were I: Elaine . 720 

had not /it from his helm, ir . 805 

and her heart was /Within her, . Guinevere . 659 
/their sweating horses from the yoke Spec, of Iliad 2 

loosen. 
Vs from the lip Short swallow-flights In Mem. xlvii. 14 

loosened. 
The team is / from the wain, . In Mem. cxx. 5 

Skirts are /by the breaking storm. Enid . 1308 

his long-bounden tongue Was /, . En. Arden . 646 

lop. 
or Vs the glades ; . . . .In Mem. c. 22 

Lord{see Lord of Astolat.) 
come hither, and be our Vs. . . Sea-Fairies . 32 
Knight and burgher, /and dame. L. ofShalott, iv. 43 
L over Nature, L of the visible 

earth, L of the senses five ; . Pal. of Art 179 
fall'n in Lyonness about their L, . M.d* Arthur 4 
record, or what relic of my I . n .98 

Such a / is Love, .... Gardener 's D. 56 
by the L that made me, you shall pack Dora . 29 
It may be my /is weary, . . Locksley H. 53 
sought her /, and found him, where he Godiva . 16 
robed and crown' d, To meet her /, 11 . 78 

'Omega! thou art L,' they said, . Tnvo Voices . 27S 
That lead me to my L : . . St Agnes' Eve 8 
Break up the heavens, O L ! . 11 .21 

Ancient homes of /and lady, . L. of Burleigh 3 1 

Not a /in all the county Is so great a / n . 59 
honeying at the whisper of a /; Princess, Pro. 115 
with those self-styled our Vs 
the L be gracious to me ! A plot 
all women kick against their L's , 
lifting of whose eyelash is my /, 
overborne by all his bearded l's 
I of the ringing lists, 
and the great l's out and in, . 
A / of fat prize-oxen 
thou, O L, art more than they, 
not from man, O L, to thee, 
her future/. Was drown'd . 
A / of large experience, 
Procuress to the L's of Hell. 
To what I feel is L of all, 
souls, the lesser Is of doom. . 
Love is and was my L and King, 
now / of the broad estate 
of old the L and Master of Earth, 
new-made /, whose splendour plucks 11 
a /, a captain, a padded shape, . 11 

Go back, my /, across the moor . 11 

L of the pulse that is /of her breast, it 
be fasten'd to this fool / ti 

He came with the babe-faced /; . 11 

another, a / of all things, praying 11 

ever yet was wife True to her /, . Enid 
cannot love my / and not his name n 
/thro' me should suffer shame. . 11 
see my dear / wounded in the strife, ti 
we smile, the Vs of many lands ; . n 
we smile, the Vs of our own hands ; 11 
Vs and ladies of the high court . 11 
save her dear I whole from any wound, u 



5i 
174 
393 
i34 
346 
491 
361 

86 



ir Con. 
In Mem. Pro. 20 



II XII. 

11 Hi. 
,1 Iiv, 

ir Cxi. 
II cxxv. 

Maud, I. i. 



II. 



i-5 

19 

31 

3 

29 

3 1 

13 

=4 

13 

3 2 

47 

92 

101 

10.3 

353 

354 

662 

£94 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



253 



POEM 

I will go back a little to my /, . Enid 
my / should suffer loss or shame.' 11 
one scem'd far larger than her /, . 11 
I will abide the coming of my /, . » 
My I is weary with the fight before, 11 
To close with her I's pleasure : . it 
' Yea, my kind /,' said the glad youth, 11 
the wild / of the place, Limours. . 11 
tending her rough /, tho' all unask'd " 
not to disobey her Vs behest, . 11 
Start from their fallen I's, . . 11 
hurt that drain'd her dear I's life. n 
for long hours sat Enid by her /, 11 
my / arise and look upon me 't ' . 11 
dear /arise and bid me do it, . m 
poor gown my dear / found me first, ir 
surely knew my / was dead,' . ■■ 
like a bride's On her new /, . . Vivien 
she call'd him / and liege, . 11 

be truer to your faultless /?' . Elaine 

1 tte perfection, my good / — u 

battle with the love he bare his /, if 

at Cacrleon had he help'd his / . ti 
/, The dread Pendragon, 11 
L of waste marshes, kings . . 11 

L am I In mine own land, . . 11 

for Lancelot, is it fur my dear /? it 

by the mother of our /, himself. 11 

in the reading, fs and dames Wept, tt 
..- the I's and dames And people, 11 
tampcr'd with the L's of the White Guinevere 
false traitor have displaced his / . 11 

to lead her to his /Arthur, . . n 
tho' thou would' st not love thy /, . 11 

/hath wholly lost his lore . 11 

Leagued with the l's of the White Horse it 
Gone — my /.' Gone thro' my sin 11 



LINE. 

914 

918 

971 

980 

982 

I063 

IOOO 

II26 

I254 

1299 

1331 

I365 

1428 

I498 

1513 
1546 
I569 

• 467 
. 802 
. I20 

• "3 
. 246 

• 2 97 
. 422 
. 526 
. 912 

1099 
1224 
j 276 
'336 
. 16 
. 214 
. 380 

• 504 
■ 505 

• S°9 
. 605 

. 6lO 

• 63. 

• 348 
765 
811 



my / the King, My own true / 

An great and gentle / Who wast . 11 

£Ss of his house and of his mill . En. Arden 

: in his place, L of his right, 11 
After the Z. has call'd me . . n 

Were he /of this, Why twenty boys Aylmer'sF. 370 
And laughter to their tsi n . 498 

manorial/ too curiously Raking . 11 . 513 

a /. in no wise like to Baal. » . 647 

thy brother man, the L from heaven, 11 . 667 

light yoke of the L of love, u . 708 

scowl'd At their great /. . . 1, . 725 

own traditions God, and slew the L, 11 . 795 

the /. of all the landscape round . 11 . 813 

her dear L who died for all, . Sea Dreams 47 

lord (verb. 1 
every spoken tongue should / you. Princess, iv. 523 
lordlier. 
None / than themselves . Princess, ii. 128 
ice, / than before ; . . InAfem.cii. 28 

lord-lover. 

. what sighs are those, Maud, I. xxii. 29 

Lord of Astolat. 

found the L o A . . Elaine . 173 

I. ,1 A ' Whence comest thou, 11 . 180 

said the L A ' Here is Torre's: „ . 195 

cameThc A oA out, to whom the Prince n . 624 

the /.<>.! 'Bide with us, ■ . 11 . 629 

lore. 

aught of fairy /; 

line. 
1 /my colour, I /my breath, . Eleanere 
not to 1 . . r-.fo I'oices 

r mind. . n 

man : . Princess, 
I : / Convention 11 

I / My honour, these their Uvea, 1 . 11 
not war : I. est I /all.' ... ,, 

I '1 luld / my mind, . ,, 

Nor / tin- wrestling thews that throw 11 
ildlllce in the larger mind ; „ 

grase .1 citizen leenis to / his head,. 



Day-Din. . 224 



' 17 
13a 
37* 
1. 136 

u. 71 

. 3 S ° 

v. 197 

vii. 84 

. 206 

. 268 

Con. 59 



POEM. LINE. 

Nor / their mortal sympathy, . InMetH. xxx. 23 

We / ourselves in light.' . . u xlvi. 16 

I shall not / thee tho' I die. . . 11 exxix. 16 

and he fears To / his bone, . . Enid . 1410 

fearing to /, and all for a dead man 11 . 14 12 

/ your use and name and fame, . Vivien . 190 
And / the quest he sent you on, . Elaine . 652 

/ it, as we / the lark in heaven, . 11 656 

will you let me /my wits?' . 1, . 748 
not /your wits for dear Lavaine.' 11 . . 751 

to have it, none : to / it, pain : . 11 . 1405 

Not greatly care to /; . . . Guinevere . 491 

Nor greatly cared to /, . . . Aylmer'sF. 568 

losing. 

E his fire and active might . . Eleanore . 104 

L her carol I stood pensively, . D.o/F. Worn. 245 

odes About this / of the child ; . Princess, i. . X40 

A little vext at /of the hunt, . Enid . . 234 

mine the fault, if / both of these . Aylmer'sF. 719 

loss. 

I that brought us pain, That / . Miller's D. 229 
Your / is rarer ; . . . . To y. S. . 2$ 
daily /of one she loved, . Walk, to the Mm 

find in / a gain to match ? . .In Mem. i. 6 
sweeter to be drunk with /, . . n .it 

shalt not be the foolof /.' . . 11 iv. 16 

' L is common to the race . . n vi. 2 

That / is common would not make it . 5 

weep a / for ever new, .. xiii. 5 

Thy spirit ere our fatal / . . 11 xl. I 

His night of /is always there. . tt lxv. 16 
To breathe my /is more than fame, 11 Ixxvi. 15 
grief my / in him had wrought, . 11 Ixxix. 6 
The lighter by the /of his weight ; Maud, I. xvi. 2 
Uy the /of that dead weight . u xix. 99 

volleying cannon thunder his / ; . Ode on Well. 62 
shadow of His / drew like eclipse, Ded. of Idylls 13 
my lord should suffer /orshame . Enid . . 918 
/of whom has turn'd me wild — 11 . 1157 

dreadful / Falls in a for land . . 11 . 1345 
/ So pains him that he sickens . >t . 1347 

fearing for his hurt and / of blood, " 
dread the /of use than fame : . Vivien . 369 

/of half his people arrow-slain; . h . 415 

damsel then Wroth at a lover's /? i, . 457 

the wounds of /with lies; 11 . 667 

/of all Hut linoch and two others. En. Arden . 550 
darker, earthlier for my /. . . Aylmer's F. 750 
His gain is /: for he that wrongs Sea Dreams 168 

lost. 

never /their light Miller's D. 88 

Ilcrcheekh.nl/ilierose . . iEnone . 17 

one silvery cloud Had / his way .it -91 

L to her place and name ; . . Pal. nf Art . 264 
Strcam'd onward, /their edges, . /Ki'fFAl'om. 50 
Fall into shadow, soonest /; , . ToJ.S. . 11 
lie / for ever from the earth, . M. a" Arthur 90 

much honourand much fame were/.' 11 . 109 

/the sense that handles daily life — U'atk.totl: 

have you /your heart?' she said ; Ed. Gray 3 

now when all was/or seem'd as /— Princess, I 
They /their weeks ; ... 11 

porch, the bases / In laurel : . 11 1-7 

child We / in other years, . . 11 . 256 

some ages had been /; . . . it ii. 137 

an erring pearl L in her bosom : . 11 iv. 43 
Wiser to weep a true occasion t, . n -50 

since her llor^e was / 1 left her mine) ti 

' Be comforted : have I not /het too. 11 v. 66 

vanquish'd and my cause For ever / 11 vi. 9 

Into my bosom and be / in me.' . 11 vii 171, 

1 I I the man that loved and/. In Mem. i. 13 

Something it is which thou hast /, « i , 

better to nave loved and / bexxiv, |) 11 xwii. 15 

/ the links that bound Thy changes ; « xl. 6 

then were nothing / to man ; . 11 xlii. 9 

' Love's loo precious to he /, . 11 1\. 

like to him whose sight is /; . 11 lxv, 8 

Nature's ancient power was /.' . 11 Ixviii. j 



254 



CONCORDANCE TO 



II xcu. 


5 


II XCV111. 


4 


II CXX1V. 


S 


Maud, I, xxi. 


*, 


ii 11. ii. 


46 


ii III. vi. 


39 


Ode on Well. 


97 



Ded. of Idylls 14 



. 252 

. 689 
• 93i 
1383 
1598 
63, 819 
. 283 



POEM. LINE. 

The quiet sense of something /. hi Mem. Ixxvii. 8 

No visual shade of some one /, 

Day, when I /the flower of men 

Hope had never / her youth ; 

I in trouble and moving round 

Looking, thinking of all I have / 

/ for a little her lust of gold 

Nor ever / an English gun ; . 

We have / him : he is gone : 

L in sweet dreams, and dreaming Enid 

enter'd, and were I behind the walls, ti 

sadly / on that unhappy night ; . it 

shall see my vigour is not /.' . . 11 

scour'd into the coppices and was /, n 

charger is without, My palfrey /.' ti 

/ to life and use and name . . Vivien 

and there We / him : . .11 

Some /, some stolen, some as relics 11 . 303 

as dead And /all use of life : . m . 495 

but their names were /. . . Elaine . 41 

Else had he not /me : tr . 147 

Full often / in fancy, / his way ; . 11 . 164 

waste downs whereon I /myself, . ti . 225 

design wherein they / themselves, n . 440 

/ the hern we slipt him at, tr . 654 

had you not / your own. . . u 1207 

wholly /his love for thee. . . Guinevere . 505 

precious morning hours were /. . En. Arden . 301 

Philip gain'd As Enoch /; it . 352 

'The ship was /'he said 'the ship was// ti . 390 

poor man, was cast away and /.' . it . 714 

muttering 'cast away and /; ' . 11 . 716 

in deeper inward whispers '//' 11 . 717 

slowly / Nor greatly cared to lose Aylmers F. 567 

came To know him more, I / it, . Sea Dreams 72 

now we /her, now she gleam'd . The Voyage 65 

flying by to be / on an endless sea — Wages . 2 

lot 

Half-anger* d with my happy /, . Millers D. 200 

been happy : but what / is pure? Walk. totheM. 89 

Ill-fated as I am, what /is mine . Love a7id Duty -33 

I might forget my weaker /; . Two Voices 367 

Would quarrel with our /; . . Will Water. 226 

She finds the baseness of her /, . In Mem. lix. 6 

chances where our Vs were cast . » xci. 5 

maidens with one mind Bewail'd their /; ir cii. 46 

let a passionless peace be my /, . Maud, I. iv, 50 

I stubb'd 'un oop wi' the / . . N. Farjner . 32 

foolish bard, is your / so hard, . Spiteful Let. 5 

hate me not, but abide your /; . it .11 

lotos. 
asphodel, L and lilies . 
Eating the L day by day, 
L blooms below the barren peak : 
Z blows by every winding creek : 

Lotos-dust. 
the yellow L-d is blown. 

Lotos-eaters. 
mild-eyed melancholy L-e came. . 

Lotos-land. 
In the hollow L-l to live 

Lot's wife. 
see how you stand Stiff as L w . 

lo7id, 
my fame is /amongst mankind, . 
makes the barren branches /." 
/ With sport and song, . 
So / with voices of the birds, 
/ in the world of the dead ; . 
the rest were / in merrymaking, . 

louder. 
a / one Was all but silence . 

lotid-lunged. 
l-l Antibabylonianisms. 

lour. 
whatever tempests /For ever silent; 



CEnone . 96 
Lotos-E's. . 105 



• i45 
. 146 



Lotos-E's. . 149 

L otos-E's. . 2 7 

Lotos-E's. . 154 

Princess, vi. 224 

StS.Stylztes 80 

In Mem. xv. 13 

ir xcvii. 27 

rr xcviii. 2 

Maud, II. v. 25 

En. Arden . 77 

Aylmer's E. 696 

Sea Dreams 244 

Ode Of 1 Well. 175 



love (S.) POEM. LINE. 

A / still burning upward, . . Isabel . . 18 
Life, anguish, death, immortal /, . Arabian IT s. 73 
/ thou bearest The first-born of thy Ode to Mem. 91 
In /with thee forgets to close . Adeline . 42 
The scorn of scorn, The / of /. The Poet . 4 

sings a song of undying /; . . Poet's Mind 33 
pleasure and /and jubilee : . . Sea-Fairies 36 
L paced the thy my plots of Paradise, Love andDeathi 
L wept and spread his sheeny vans 11 .8 

pierced thy heart, my /, . . Oria?ia . 42 
for the / of me. (rep. ) . . . The Mermaid 27 
'Z,' they said, 'mustneedsbe Mariana in the S. 63 



cruel /, whose end is scorn. 

languid L, Leaning his cheek . Eleanore 

I loved, and / dispell'd the fear . Miller s D. 

/possess'd the atmosphere, . . n 

true /spells — True / interprets- 

in truth You must blame Z. . n 

L that hath us in the net, . . 11 

L the gift is L the debt. . . ir 

L is hurt with jar and fret. . . n 

L is made a vague regret. . . u 

What is I? for we forget : . . 11 

Z, L, LI O withering might! . Fatima 
OZ, O fire ! once he drew . . ti 
eyes are full of tears, my heart of /, CE?zo?ie 
My / has told me so a thousand times. 11 
sworn his / a thousand times. . 11 
my ancient /With the Greek woman, n 
To win his / I lay in wait : . . The Sisters 

1 won his /, I brought him home. u 
that shuts Z out, in turn shall be 

Shut out from L, To . With Pal. of Art 14 

say he 's dying all for /, . . May Queen, i. 21 

L tipt his keenest darts ; . D. ofF. Wo?n. 173 



70 

117 

89 

• 9i 

■ 187 
. 192 
. 203 
. 207 
. 209 
. 210 
. 213 

1 
. 19 

■ 30 
. 193 
. 227 

256 
11 
14 



beams ofZ, melting the mighty hearts 
with a threefold cord of / . it 

knew that L can vanquish Death, n 

God gives us /. Something to love To y. S. 
when / is grown To ripeness . m 

Falls off, and / is left alone. . . 11 



• i75 
. 211 
. 269 

• I 3 

• 14 
16 



thy land with /far-brought ' Love thou thy land? etc. 1 
/ turn'd round on fixed poles, . it .5 

Z, that endures not sordid ends, . 11 .6 

by some law that holds in /, . Gardener'sD. 9 

touches are but embassies of /, . n .18 

not your work, but L's. L, unperceived,u . 24 

Such a lord is L. ... 11 .56 

Fancy, led by Z, Would play . n -58 

to praise the heavens but only / . 11 . 103 

/were cause enough for praise . n . 104 

L's white star Beam'd . . 11 161 

the Master, Z, A more ideal Artist ti . 168 

L at first sight, first-born, . . n . 185 

sometimes a Dutch / For tulips ; . it . 188 

L trebled life within me, . n . 194 

Z, the third, Between us n . 210 

L with knit brows went by, . 11 240 

My first, last /; the idol of my youth ti . 271 

half in /, half spite, he woo'd . Dora . . 37 

all his / came back a hundredfold ; 11 . 162 

not a room For / or money. . Audley Ct. . 2 

breathing / and trust against her lip : 11 .68 

I for Nature is as old as I ; . . Ed. Morris 28 

rich sennights more, my / for her. n . 30 

/ for Nature and my / for her, . tr -31 

L tome As in the Latin song . n .78 

/, that makes me thrice a man, . Talking 0. . 11 
My vapid vegetable Vs 11 . 183 

Pursue thy l's among the bowers . n . 199 

This fruit of thine by L is blest, . tr . 249 

fairer fruit of L may rest ti . 251 

/ that never found his earthly close, Love and Duty i 
the nobler thro' thy/? ... ri . 19 

likewise thou Art more thro' Z, . 11 . 21 

Wait, and Z himself will bring . 11 . 23 

Z himself took part against himself n . 45 

Duty loved of Z—O this world's curse, 11 . 46 

Could Z part thus? ... ti -54 

Caught up the whole of / . . it .80 

lightly turns to thoughts of /. . Locksley H. 20 



TENiVYSON'S IVORA'S. 



255 



POE.M. LINE. 

L took up the glass of Time, . Locksley H. 31 

L took up the harp of Life, . 11 .33 

love her for the / she bore? . 11 .73 

/is /for evermore. ... 11 -74 

mete the bounds of hate, and /— . Two Voices 135 

in their double / secure, . . 11 41S 

spreads above And veileth /, itself is /. 11 . 447 



Visio. 



doth inform Stillness with/. 
/ in sequel works with fate, . 
I never felt the kiss of /, 
/ no more Can touch the heart 
L may come, and / may go, 
L will make our cottage pleasant 
he cheer'd her soul with /. 
ic /and frantic hate 
'fell me tales of thy first /— 
We remember / ourselves (v. 798) Pri 
As arguing /of knowledge . 

hard, when / and duty clash ! , 

ind baby /' s Fly 
half the students, all the /. . 
angled with them for her pupil's /; 
her due, /., children, happiness?' 
tho' your l'rince's / were like a God's, 
deep as /, Deep as first /, 
twitter twenty million Cs. 
to clothe her heart with /, 
brief is life but / is long, 
to junketing and /. L IS it? . 
heated thru' and thro' with wrath and/, 
bore up in part from ancient /, 

1 want her /. 

tale of / In the old king's cars, 

I know not what Of insolence and /, 
lie daz/led by the wildfire L 
Z. and Nature, these are two more 
seek the common / of these, . 
Pledge of a / not to be mine, 
faster welded in one / . 
so employ'd, should close in /, 
L in the sacred halls Held carnival 
out ol hauntings of my spoken /, . 
/.. like an Alpine harebell 
deeps to conquer all with / . 
Filld thro' and thro' with /-, 
come, for L is of the valley, (rep.) 
as tli-- man. Sweet L were slain : . 
/ 01. pranks of saucy boyhood 



Day-Din, . 92 

11 . 103 

Sir Galahad 19 

Ed. Cray . 7 

29 

L.ofBurleigk 15 

.66 

of Sin 150 

. 163 

ss, 1. 121 

43 

• 273 

• 379 

• 23 

• 77 
. 229 

• 23' 

• 38 



11. 



• 83 
. 87 

• 93 

• '24 

• "45 
. 284 

v. 130 

. 230 

• 387 

• 43' 
vi. 149 

- 156 

. 180 

. 236 

vii. 52 

■ 69 

• 94 
. 100 

• '49 

• '57 

■ '«3 

. 26l 
323 



Strong S "i of God, immurtal L, In Mem. Pro, 

1 rrief . . . n i. 9 

ilt of/, . . . . . 14 



Poor child, that waitest for thy /.' 
I i, bright As our pure /, . 

My friend, the brother of my /; . 
I it needed help of L : 

mighty L would cleave in twain . 
■ of moons can canker L t 
L the indifference to be 
one deep /doth supersede 
I endure : . 
air ,(>/., 1 strive . 
/. Would answer with a Sigh, 

A had not been, . 

1 iuman / his due-. ; 

ilms of /,* 
/ will List .u pure and whole 

/». thy province . were not large, 

1 lso, A, a brooding star, 
hit the mood Of /. on earth t 

1 /: . . . 

1 icn'd in his / .' . 

Shall / I want of faith? 

the thing beloved ; . 
'Ilw Spirit of true / replied ; 
^ . * / indeed 

As with the creature of ray / j 
Then be my / an idle talc, 
/in which my hound lias part, 
>'!s (•) be lost, . 
To utter / niutc sweet ihuu praise 



vi. 28 



xxxn. 


5 




'4 


XXXV. 


6 




'3 




'9 


XXXVII. 


16 


XXXIX. 


12 


xlii. 


»3 


xlv. 


1 i 




' ! 


xlvi. 


12 


xlvii. 


;-; 


. 1. 


8 




10 


. li. 


2 




6 


. lv. 


'3 




'4 


lviii. 


12 


. Ivi. 


3 


. Ixii. 


2 


Ixiv. 


3 


lxxvi. 


16 



hold the costliest / in fee. 
/ shall now no further range ; 
now is / mature in ear.' 
/-, then, had hope of richer store : 
link'd with thine in /and fate, 
/ for him have drain'd My capa- 
bilities of /; 
I woo your /: I count it crime 
A meeting somewhere, / with /, . 
If not so fresh, with / as true, 
First /, first friendship, equal powers. 
Quite in the /of what is gone, 
tasted /with half his mind, . 
I's dumb cry defying change 
My / has talk'd with rocksand trees ; 
Their / has never past away, 
Two spirits of a diverse / . 
Ring in the / of truth and right. . 
King in the common /of good. 
A / of freedom rarely felt, 
mine the / that will not tire, 
And, born of /, the vague desire . 
all tlie room Of all my /, 
What is she, cut from / and faith, 
dream of human /and truth, 
L but play'd with gracious lies, . 
L is and was my Lord and King, 
The / that rose on stronger wings, 
My /involves the /before ; . 
My / is vaster passion now ; 
yet is / not less, but more ; . 
Regret is dead, but / is inure 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. lxxviii. 4 
11 lxxx. 2 



lxxxiii. 
lxxxiv. 



4 
5 



Ixxxix. 
xciv. 
xcvi. 



cviu. 
cix. 

Cxi. 

cxiii. 

cxvii. 
exxiv. 

exxv. 
exxvit, 
exxix. 

Con. 



61 

99 

101 

107 

"4 



>3 
7 
"3 
= 4 
'3 
li 
'9 



'7 



there was /in the passionate shriek, Maud, I. i. 57 
/. for the silent thing that had made • • . . 58 
flee from the cruel madness of / . 11 iv. 55 

the new strong wine of / . . " vi fc2 

home, my t, . . " xviii. 1 

Death may give More life to L .11 . .47 

L, like men in drinking-songs, 55 

With dear L's tie, makes L himself " . . n 
by this my / has closed her sight .11 . . 67 

planet of L is on high, xxii. 8 

Have a grain of /for me, . . u II. ii. 53 
me and my passionate / go by, . n . .77 

Me and my harmful /go by ; 80 

To find the arms of my true / . " iv. 3 

Hearts with no / for ine : . .11 . . 94 
/ of a peace that was full of wrongs n III. vi. 40 
talk'd as if her / were dead . . T/te Letters 27 
' No more of /; your sex is known : • » . 29 

/of country move thee thereat all, Ode on Well. 140 
debt Of boundless /and reverence 11 . 157 

learns to deaden L of self, . . 11 205 

May all /, His /, unseen but felt, Ded. of Idylls 48 
/of all Thy sons encompass 1 >i . 50 

/of all Thy daughters cherish Thee, 11 -5' 

/of all Thy people comfort Thee, 11 . 52 

God's / set Thee at his side again ! n . 53 

in their common / rejoiced Geraint Enid . . 23 
her guilty / for Lancelot, . .11 . .25 
dwelling on his boundless/, . 11 . . 63 

dreaming of her / For Lancelot, .11.. 158 
/ or fear, or seeking favour of us .11. . 700 
for whose / the Roman Cxsar first 11 . . 745 

' Earl, entreat her by my /, . . " . . 760 

force in her Link'd with such / . 11 . . 806 

Knid my early and my only /, . 11 . 1156 

man's / once gone never returns — n . 1182 

I greet you with all /; . . . « . 1633 

love you, l'rince, with something of the/ . 1636 

deeper and with ever deeper /, . 11 . '776 

his own wish in age for /, . . Vivien . 41 

in deepest reverence and in /. . ■■ .69 

wise in / I ay least.' .11 .96 

a proof of your /.* »• . 204 

In A. If I. be /., if /. be ours, . " . 237 

/ uf Ood and men And noble deeds, .. . 26a 

of Fame while woman wakes to /.' 11 . 310 

/.. tho* /- were of the grossest, carvel •• . 311 

rest: and /. Should have some rest " . 335 

work as vassal to the larger /, . 11 



256 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

dwarfs the petty / of one to one. . Vivien . 342 

/ of mine Without the full heart back ir 

many a / in loving youth was mine, tr 

keep them mine But youth and /,* ir 

from the rosy lips of life and /, . ?r 

in a wink the false / turns to hate) it 

vainly lavish'd /.' . . . it 
what shame in /, So I be true, . 11 
more in kindness than in /, . . it 
must be now no passages of/ . tr 
one passionate / Of her whole life, 11 
my /is more Than many diamonds,' Elaine 
guilty I he bare the Queen, . . 11 
that / which was her doom. . . 11 
when often they have talk'd of/, . it 
know not if I know what true / is, tr 
cross our mighty Lancelot in his Vs ! tr 
if he love, and his / hold, . . u 
About the maid of Astolat, and her I 11 
woman's /, Save one, he not regarded, if 
her deep / Upbore her ; . . 11 
loved her with all I except the / . it 
shackles of an old I straiten'd him 11 
'Your/,' she said, ' your/ — to be your wife' 
ill then should I quit your brother's /, 11 
This is not/: but I's first flash . tr 
by tact of / was well aware . . it 
'The Song of L and Death,' . u 
Sweet is true / tho' given in vain, 11 
L, art thou sweet? then bitter death ti 
L, thou art bitter ; sweet is death ti 
Sweet /, that seems not made to fade, tr 
fain would follow /, if that could be, tr 
King will know me and my /, 
returns his /in open shame. . 
tho' my / had no return : 
on which I died For Lancelot's /, 
in half disgust At /, life, 
loved you, and my / had no return 
my true / has been my death 
a /beyond all / In women, . 
No cause, not willingly, for such 
her / Was but the flash of youth, 
mine was jealousy in /.' 
'That is I's curse ; pass on, 

1 have Most / and most affiance, 
if what is worthy / Could bind him 
free / will not be bound.* 
* Free /, so bound, were freest' 
' Let /be free; free /is for the best 
best, if not so pure a / . 
/ Far tenderer than my Queen's, 
'Jealousy in IV Not rather dead 

Vs harsh heir 
if I grant the jealousy as of/, 
as it waxes, of a / that wanes? 
sweet talk or lively, all on / . . Guinevere 
desire of fame, And / of truth 
wholly lost his / for thee. 
My / thro' flesh hath wrought 
Enoch spoke his /, ... En. Arden 

Mutual / and honourable toil ; 
beseech you by the /you bear Him tr 
his rights and of his children's /, — 11 

dream That L could bind them . Aylmer's F. 
true / Crown'd after trial ; 
how should L Whom the cross-lightnings 
his, a brother's /, that hung . 
truth and / are strength, 
such a / as like a chidden child 
Martin's summer of his faded / 
the hapless Vs And double death 
light yoke of that Lord of /, . 
loved, for he was worthy /. . 
/ and reverence left them bare 
thy /, Thy beauty, make amends, TitJwnus 
lisp in I's delicious creeds . . Coquette, 
beyond his object L can last 
My tears, no tears of /, . 
No tears of /. but tears that L can die if 
one way to the home of my /, . The Window 



871 
929 
940 
945 
978 

999 
1001 
1004 
1005 
1007 
1010 

1052 
1077 



1232 

1269 
1270 

1285 

1290 

3308 
1 341 

1343 

1348 
1369 
1370 
1371 
1372 
1374 

1385 



1390 
1392 

383 

479 

505 

554 

40 

83 

306 
765 
41 

• 99 
. 128 

■ 138 

• 365 

• 54i 
. 560 
. 616 
. 708 
. 712 

• 785 

• 23 
. 11 

• 5 
7 



POEM. LIKE. 


, The Window (2 


IT 


79 


. TT 


12S 


)r 


126 


tr 


is8 


ir 


180 


tr 


18S 


ir 


ns 


tr 


196 


. Lilian 


3 


,, 


6 


. Ode to Mem 


S8 


ir 


8^ 


The Mermaid 13 



Bird's /and bird's song (rep.) 
And women's / and men's ! . 
Take my /, for / will come, . 
L will come but once a life. . 
you have gotten the wings of / 
Here is the golden close of/, 
this is the golden morning of / 
For a / that never tires. 
are you great enough for / f . 

love (verb.) 
When I ask her if she / me, . 
She'll not tell me if she / me, 
I's To purl o'er matted cress . 
dearly / thy first essay, 
' Who is it I's me ? who Vs not me ! 
To live forgotten, and / forlorn.' Maria.na.in theS. 12 
must I / her for your sake ; . . Miller's D. . 142 
loss but made us / the more, . 11 . 230 

/thee well and cleave to thee, . CEnone . 157 
the happy souls, that / to live : . 11 . 236 

did / Beauty only . To . With Pal. of Art 6 

sought to prove how I could /, L. C. V. de Vere 21 
You /, remaining peacefully, . Margaret . 22 

Those we /first are taken first. . To j. S. . 12 
Something to / He lends us ; . n . 13 

L thou thy land . . ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 1 
Would / the gleams of good it . 89 

blooms the garden that 11. . Gardener* sD. 34 

. 63 

Dora . „ 40 
11 . . 140 

A udley Ct. . 5 1 

H . 72 

Talking O. . 202 

Golden Year 69 

Lochs ley H. 30 

n . 70 

it . 72 

" • 73 

Tvuo Voices 109 

Ed. Gray . 31 

Lady Clare 9 



And told me I should /. 

' My girl, I / you well ; 

take her back ; she I's you well. 

who would / ? I woo'd a woman 

Ellen Aubrey, /, and dream of me 

Old oak, I / thee well ; . 

God / us, as if the seedsman, 

Saying, ' Dost thou / me, cousin ? 

/her, as I knew her, kind? . 

whom to look at was to /. 

/ her for the love she bore? . 

Do men / thee ? 

I will / no more, no more, 

does not / me for my birth, . 

I's me for my own true worth 

'There is none I /like thee.' 

I / thee more than life.' 

Says to her that I's him well, 

but she will / him truly ! . 
Fish are we that / the mud, . 
No, I / not what is new ; 
That / to keep us children ! . 
Her brethren, tho* they / her, 
fall out with those we / . 
so mask'd, Madam, I / the truth 
If I could /, why this were she : 
' you / The metaphysics ! 
with all we / below the verge ; 
shame That which he says he I's 

1 their voices more than duty, 
they say that still You / her. 
with catapults, She would not /; 
Not ever would she /," but brooding 
/us for it, and we ride them down 
one Vs the soldier, one The silken priest 
can be sweet to those she Vs, 
You / nor her, nor me, nor any ; . 
trust, not /, you less. 
/ not hollow cheek or faded eye : . 
like each other ev'n as those who /. 
/to cheat yourself with words? . 
Never, Prince ; you cannot /me.* 
to life indeed, thro' thee, Indeed I /.* 
I / thee : come, Yield thyself up : 
look on her that Vs him well, 
thou bringest all I /. 
come, whatever Vs to weep, . 
Vs to make parade of pain, , 
in the songs I / to sing . 
one that Vs but knows not, . 
truth from one that Vs and knows ? 
I cannot /thee as I ought, . 



L. of Burleigh 6 
.. . 16 

11 . 22 

Vision of Sin ior 

.» ■ 139 

Princess, Pro. 133 
n i. 153 

n ■ 253 

11 .ii. 195 
it ni. 83 

it . 282 

it iv. 29 

It . 23O 

II . 491 

.. v. 118 

■ 133 

• 135 
. 150 

• 17s 

■ 279 

vi. 243 

. 278 
370 

276 

314 

318 
325 
342 



vu. 



JnMem.v'iu. 
u xvii. 

tt xviii. 
tr xxi. 

11 xxxviii. 

11 xli. 



j'EiVyysoN's works. 



J57 



My spirit loved and l's him yet, . In Mem. Tax. 

How should he / a thing so low ?' n 

1 loved thee, Spirit, and / it lx. 

soul of Shakspearc / thee more. . n 

cars had made me/ thee more 11 lxxx. 
the books to / or hate, . 
earnest that he l's her yet 
He l's her yet, she will not weep. 
For that, for all, she l's him more. 
' I cannot understand .11.' 
him I loved, and / For ever : 
Who fs not Knowledge? 
1 do not therefore I thee less : 
I seem to / thee more and more . 
be born and think, And act and /, 

- >d, which ever lives and l's, 
sure That there is one to / me 

! (rep.) 



Ixxxviii. 

xcvi. 



cxiu. 
exxix. 



Con. 127 

■ >4' 

Maud, I. xi. 



I I / her so well if she (rep.) 11 xvi 

I see she cannot but / him . 11 xix. 

1 the light that she l's (rep.) 11 xxii. 

but she, she would / mc still : . n II. ii. 

I : a world that l's him not, 11 v. 

1 lat most she l's to talk of, The Brook 

Thine island l's thee well, . . Odeoti Well. 

Cannot /my lord and not his name. Enid 

1 ice of her Whom he fs most 11 
light on all things that you /, . „ 
wed with her whom first you /: . 11 
wheel and thee we neither/nor hate 11 
there arc those who / me yet ; . n 
the lady he l's best be there. . ,, 

tie two To / each other : . ,, 
r* to know When men of mark n 

does he / you as of old ? . . n 
may bicker with the things they /, 11 
that this man l's you no more. . ,1 
here is one who / s you as of old ; 11 
if you / inc as in former years, . n 
■ vex him eating, .• 

/that beauty should go beautifully: ir 
never I ver / but biin : n 

/ you, Prince, with I the 11 

/ the 11 us. . 1, 

. f 'ivie 

1 . do you / me '! . 11 

Bay least" . h 

I my tender rhyme':' . ,, 

1 . you think you / me well ir 

I .11 you somewhat ; . . ■, 

you /: . H 

t well you think you / me 11 

charm on whom you say you /.' . n 

11 

\ t, , „ 

must be to / you still „ 

t / me, save, . . ,1 
v on.' . . Elaine 

me must have a touch of earth ; 11 

/\ ii in Ins knights more than himself: n 

; ' /him, n 

test knight, . 11 

if I know, thru, it I / ,„,t him . ,, 

nine other I can I.' . . » 

you / him 11 

Others know, And whom he l's.' . i, 

, u will be sweet to give it ; .1 

have it . .. 

/ or not, A 1I1 11. 1 1 . ,, diamond. ■■ 

if he /. and Ins love hold, . . n 

1 Ft him : 11 

in. 11. 1 of A 1 tola I /'. Si I 1, 

1 Aitotal ' .1 

Bui did not / the 1 olour : . . ,, 

I their best, 1 eetcst, ■■ 

He will n ii / me : how then! . u 

' I have I / you : . 11 

i mc, . ,1 

mine to / Him ol nil men . . 11 

lueen, and in an open shame : 11 

1 i" / again 



20 

69 
9 

St 

jj 

3 -'6 
85 

• 92 

• "3 
. 226 
. 227 

349-58 
. 461 
. 481 

• 79 2 
1077 
1172 
1174 
117S 
1183 
1204 
1409 
1529 

1557 
1636 
1637 
. 84 
. 86 

■ 97 

■ »49 

• 333 

• 334 

• 338 
. 366 

• 375 
. 386 

• 389 

• 777 

. 84 

• '34 

• '57 

• 596 
. 665 

• «74 
. 67S 
. 676 
. 678 
. 689 
. 690 

• I M 

• 707 

. 722 
. 836 
. 865 



if lh >u / me gel thee hence 



Guinevere 



926 

1070 

1287 
95 



POEM. LJNL. 

. Guinevere . 442 

11 . 47' 

11 . 504 

" • 555 

■ 556 

. 644 

. 61 5 

. En. Arden . 196 

11 . 409 

" . 410 

11 . 423 

. Ayltner's F. 249 

'. 11 . 362 

me ; 11 . 423 

. Grandmother 48 

11 . 50 

. Tilhouus . 40 

, W. to Alexan. 30 

. Coquette, ii. 12 

. On a Mourner 5 

. 'Die Window 69 



True men who / me still, 

/ one maiden only, cleave to her, 

tho' thou would'st not / thy lord 

my doom is, 1 /thee still. 

no man dream but that I /thee 

tell the King 1 / him tho' so late': 

he is me still, (rep. ) 

I / him all the better for it — . 

think They / me as a father : 

/ them as if they were my own 

Can one / twice ? . 

and he said ' Why then I / it : ' 

whitest lamb in all my fold L's you 

because I /their child They hate 

cannot / me at all, if you / not 

Sweetheart, 1 /you so well . 

the wild team Which /thee . 

/ us and make us your own : 

the slight coquette, she cannot /, 

lives and fs in every place ; 

To / once and for ever : 

L me now you '11 / mc then : 

loveable. 
Elaine the fair, Elaine the /, . Elaine . 1 

love-charmed. 

stars that hung L-c to listen : Love and Duty 73 

loved. 

Have lived and / alone so long, 

1 /, and love dlspell'd the fear 

/ the brimming wave that swam 

I / you better for your fears, 

1 / his beauty passing well. . 

in her sight he / bo well f 

tongue Cold February /, 

a sleep They sleep— the men I /. . M. d' Arthur 1- 

/ the man, and prized his work ; . 11 E/>. 8 

the heart of her I/; . . Gardener" sD. 335 

on the checks, lake one that / him : Dora . 131 

1 have kill'd him— but I / hiir — . „ . ,57 

/ At first like dove and dove Walk, to the M. 49 

daily loss of one she / . ,, .10 

and Duty /of Love— . . Love and Duty tfi 

with those 'I hat /me, andalone : 

weeping, 'I have /thee long.' 

/ thee more than ever wife was /. 

No she never I me truly : . 

to have / so slight a thing. . 

have / the people well, 

therefore, as they /her well, 

Ellen Adair she /me well, 

And the people / her much 



Milter's D. 



The Sisters 

Margaret 



38 
89 
97 
'49 
23 
40 



T/te Blackbird n 



Ulysses 

Locks ley II. 



Codiva 

11 
Ed. Cray 




30 
64 

74 
148 

8 
38 

9 



In Me 



. I.. 0/ Burleigh 76 
I to live alone Among her women ; Princess, 1. 48 
ever /to meet Star-sisters 
'To linger here with one that / us.' 
I / her. Peace be with her. 
I /you like thiskneclcr, 

iser than his own right eye, 

CalI'd him worthy to be /, . 

if you /Hie breast that fed . 

Dear traitor, ton much /, why?— why! 

I / the woman : he, that doth nut, 
there was one thro' whom 1 / her, 
Ere seen I /, anil / thee seen, 

I find him worthier to be /. 

' Behold the man that / and lost, 

I nan-hearted man I /, 

1 i the Weight I had I., bear, 
better to have /ami lust IxXXlV. 3) 

Tb. hi never to have /at all. (Ixxxiv. 4) 

when he / me here in Time. 

Win,/, who siiher'd countless ills, 

My spirit / and loves him yet, 

I / thee. Spirit, and love 

/to handle spiritual strife, . \ 

1 1" ' to 1 "1 against it still, . 
1 "i bun 1 /. and love . 

1 we /was there on deck, . 
A Intl.- spue thenighl I /, . 
sing the songs he / 10 hear. . 



II. 405 

lit. 321 

iv. 118 

• =77 

v. 5'.'o 

.• 537 

vi. 1 64 

• =75 
vu. 294 

. 298 

. 3=0 

. I ro. 40 

'5 



1. 
xiii. 
>■ X V. 

.WVll. 



11 xlii. 

Iv. 

11 li\. 

II Iv. 

nlxxxiv. 
nlxxxviii. 38 

• a. 14 
4' 
'.' 
=4 



' I 



civ. 
cvi. 



=53 



CONCORDANCE TO 



If CXXX. II 

ii Con. 6 

ii _ . 134 

Maud, I. xix. 27 

11 II. iv. 15 

The Brook . 15 



141 



POEM. LINE. 

/ them more, that they were thine, In Mem. cix. 15 

/ the most, when most I feel . ncxxviii. 3 
Z. deeplier, darklier understood ; . 11 .10 
Until we close with all we /, 
he / A daughter of our house ; 
all we thought and / and did. 
To speak of the mother she / 
short hour to see The souls we / 
yet the brook he /, For which, 
fancies of the boy, To me that / him 
you, whom once I / so well, . . The Letters 
We / that hall, tho' white and cold The Daisy . 

1 one only and who clave to her — ' Ded. 0/ Idylls 
I her, as he / the light of Heaven. Enid 
I Geraint To make her beauty vary it 
/ her in a state Of broken fortunes, 11 
-L her, and often with her own white 11 
And Enid /the Queen, . . 11 
/ and reverenced her too much . 11 
that dress, and how he /her in it, n 
ask'd again, and ever / to hear ; . 11 
served for proof that I was /, . 11 
because he / her passionately, , n 
being he / best in all the world, . 11 
Not while they / them ; . . 11 
Enid never / a man but him, . 11 
the passage that he / her not ; . 11 
/ me serving in my father's hall : . m 
I never /, can never love but him : n 
my lists with him whom best you /; n 
true eyes Beheld the man you / . 11 
ladies / to call Enid the Fair, , h 
that I had / a smaller man ! . . Vivien 
I to make men darker than they are 11 
that summer, when you / me first. Elaine 
lifted up her eyes And / him, . 11 
darling of the court, L of the loveliest, i» 
/ her with all love except the love 11 
' If I be /, these are my festal robes, 11 
' I never / him : an I meet with him, n 
my glory to have / One peerless 
having / God's best And greatest 
/ you, and my love had no return, 
/ me with a love beyond all love 
to be / makes not to love again : 
And / thy courtesies and thee, 
a man Made to be /; 
Thou could'st have / this maiden, 
to be /, if what is worthy love 
/ me, damsel, surely with a love 
take last leave of all I /? 
/ thy highest creature here? . 
my duty to have / the highest ; 
We needs must / the highest 
Philip / in silence ; 
/ Enoch ; tho' she knew it not 
And her, he /, a beggar : 
sell the boat — and yet he /her 
/ you longer than you know.' 
you be ever / As Enoch was? 
to be /A little after Enoch.' . 
nor / she to be left Alone 
Where Annie lived and /him, 
learn I / her to the last.' 
/ As heiress and not heir 
hearts not knowing that they /, 
He but less / than Edith, 
He, / for her and for himself. 
/ nor liked the thing he heard. 
/ you more as son Than brother 
madly / — and he, Thwarted . 
/ me, and because I love their child 
you /, for he was worthy love, 
half turn'd round from him she /, 
/ the glories of the world, 
I walked with one I / . 
tho' he / her none the less, . 
the mind, except it / them, clasp 

love-deep. 
languors of thy l-d eyes 



Guinevere 



En. Arden 



16 

19 
119 

843 
436 

• 796 

• 859 
■ 952 

1176 
1212 
1241 
1547 
1557 
1688 
i695 
1810 
. 721 

• 725 

. 105 
. 260 
. 262 
. 864 

• 9°S 
1062 

2084 
1087 



1287 
1354 
1355 
1357 
1369 
1385 
S42 
649 
650 
653 
4i 

• 43 

• "7 

• 134 
418-52 

• 423 

• 425 
- 512 



Ayhner^s E. 



■ 423 
. 712 
Sea Dreams 274 
The Voyage 83 
V. ofCaitteretz 4 
Eitcre tins . 4 
11 . 164 



Eleanore 



76 



love-knots. poem. line. 

leg and arm with l~k gay, . . Talking O. . 6$ 

love-la nguage. 
heard The low 14 of the bird . In Mem. ci. n 

love-la?ig7tid. 

eyes, /-/thro' half-tears, . . ZoveandDuty^6 

lovelier. 

I Than all the valleys of Ionian . CEnone . i 
/ than whatever Oread haunt .- n • 72 
all heavens, and / than their names, Princess, Pro. 12 
/ not the Elysian lawns, . . u iii. 324 
left her woman, / in her mood . ?r vii. 147 
Far / in our Lancelot had it been, Elaine . 587 
What /of his own had he than her, Aybner's F. 22 

loveliest. 
true To what is /upon earth.' Mariana in the S '. 64 

/ in all grace Of movement, . . CEnone . 73 

Their feet in flowers, her /.* . . Princess, vi. 62 

deck'd her as the /, . . . Enid . .17 

/ of all women upon earth. . .if . .21 

darling of the court, Loved of the /, Elaine . 262 

loveliness. 
Her/ with shame and with surprise D. of P. Worn. 89 
A miniature of /, .... Gardener* sD. 12 
In /of perfect deeds, . . InMem.xxxvi. 11 
love Clothed in so pure a I? . Elaine 1375 

love-lore. 
Thou art perfect in /-/, . . . Madeline . 26 

lovelorn. 
With melodious airs /, . . . Adeline . 55 

love-loyal. 

II to the least wish of the {Guinevere 125) Elaine 90 

lovely. 

She look'd so /, as she sway'd SirL. andQ. G. 40 

indeed these fields Are /, . . Princess, Hi. 324 

Be sometimes / like a bride, . In Mem. lviii. 6 

that clear-featured face Was /, . Elaine 1154 

love-poe77i. 
and this A mere l-f> I Princess, iv. 108 

lover. 
Two Is whispering by an orchard wall Circwnstance^ 
Came two young l's lately wed ; L. o/ShalottjS.. 34 
my /, with Whom I rode sublime D. o/F. Worn. i4r 
on her l's arm she leant, . . Day-Dm. . 165 
L's long-betrothed were they : . Lady Clare 6 
But he clasp'd her like a/, . . L. of Burleigh 67 
at the happy V s heart in heart — . Princess, vii. 93 
A happy / who has come . . In Mem. viii. 1 
my Maud by that long l's kiss, . Maud,l. xviii. 58 
From a little lazy I . . .11 xx. 10 

Come out to your own true /, . tt . 46 

That your true / may see 11 - 47 

That grow for happy Vs. . . The Brook . 173 
call it l's 1 quarrels, yet I know . Enid . i*73 

one true / which you ever had, . it . **93 

Shall we strip him there Your I? it . 1338 

little rift within the l's lute . . Vivien . 243 
damsel then Wroth at a l's loss? . n . 457 

like a / down thro' all his blood . En. Arden . 660 
by night again the l's met, . . Aybner's F. 413 
/ heeded not But passionately restless 11 . 545 

me the / of liberty, . . . Boddicea . 48 

no / of glory she : . . . . Wages . 4 

a jewel dear to a l's eye ! . . The Window 3 

love-sighs. 
passion seeks Pleasance in t-s . Lilian . 9 

love-song. 
A l-s I had somewhere read, 

lovest. 
L thou the doleful wind 
I think thou /me well.' 



/her own anguish deep 



loveth 



Miller's D. 65 

Adeline . 49 
L. of Burleigh 4 

To J. S. . 42 



T£.YXFSO.V'S WORKS.. 



z >9 



love^Juhispers. poem. line. 
Affianced, Sir ? l-w may not breathe Princess, ii. 203 

loving. 
Most /is she? .... CEnone . 197 
Gray nurses, /nothing new ; . InMem. xxix. 14 

praying for her, / her ; . . . En. Arden . 880 
/her, As when she laid her head . » . 881 

so lowly-lovely and so /, — . . Aylmer's F. 168 

low (adj.) 
ever when the moon was /, . . Mariana 49 

to the car The warble was /, . Dying Swan 24 

Sweet and /, sweet and /, . . Princess, ii. 456 
L, /, breathe and blow, m . 453 

near me when my light is / . . In Mem. xlix. 1 
The voice was /, the look was bright n Ixviii. 15 
babbling world of high or /; . Ode on Well. 182 

this be high, what is it to be /?' . Elaine 1078 

L was her voice, but won . . Aylmer's F. 695 

low (s. ) 
From the dark fen the oxen's / . Mariana . 28 

low-cmvering. 
Z-f shall the Sophist sit 'Clearheaded friend,' etc. 10 

loiu-drooping. 
L-dti\\ he well-nigh kiss'd her feet Elaine 1166 

lower (adj.) 
thyself a little /Than angels. . Two Voices 198 
feel There is a / and a higher ; In Mem. exxviii. 4 

lower (verb. ) 
/to his level day by day, . Locksley H. 45 

turn thy wheel and / the proud ; . Enid . . 347 

lowered. 

L softly with a threefold cord oflove D.o/F. Wom.211 
spake to these his helm was /, . Guinevere . 587 

lowest. 
barbarous isles, and here Among the /. ' Princess,\\. 108 
low desire Not to feel / . Vivien . 677 

height That makes the / hate it . Aylmer's F. 173 

Imv-ftowing. 
fling on each side my //locks, . The Mermaid 32 

low-folded. 
breathless burthen of /-/heavens . Aylmer's F. 612 

loiv-hung. 
from beneath a l-h cloud. . . Ode to Mem. 71 

lowing (part. ) 
And / to his fellows. . Gardener's D. 87 

lowing (s. ) 
So thick with l's of the herds, . In Mem. xcviii. 3 

low-licth. 
Where Claribcl /-/ ... Clarilel 1, 8, 21 

lowtiMead. 
perfect wifehood and pure /. . Isabel . . 12 

lowliness. 
sure of Heaven If /could save her. Maud, I. xii. 20 

lowly-lovely. 
she— so /-/ and so loving . Aylmer's F. 168 

lowness. 
The / of the present slate, . . In Mem. xxiv. 11 

Itnthtpoktn, 
Z-r, and of so few words, . Enid . 1244 

' <ned. 

So she /-/; while with shut eyes I lay Princess, vii.208 

ngued, 

the /-/ Orient Wander .Adeline . 51 

heeVd. 

Within the l-w chaise, . . Talking O. . 110 

loyal. 
/unto kindly laws. . . In Mem. lxxxiv. 16 

Nor often / to his word, . . Elaine . 558 

/., the dumb old servitor 1138 

loyal-hearted. 
On thec the l-h hung . . .In Mem cix. 5 



lucid. POEM. LINE. 

Be large and / round thy brow. . In Mem. xc. 8 

Lucilia. 

L, wedded to Lucretius, found . Lucretius . 1 

Lucretius. 
Lucilia, wedded to L, found . Lucretius . 1 

Lucius Junius Brutus. 
The L J B of my kind? . . Princess, ii. 264 

luck. 
good / Shall fling her old shoe . Will Water. 21s 
Liuud / had your good man, . Enid . 1465 

lucky. 
Less / her home-voyage : . . En. Arden . 537 

Lucumo. 
lay at wine with Lar and L ; . Princess, ii. 113 

lull. 
(while warm airs /us, blowing lowly) Lotos-E's. 134 
/ with song an aching heart. In Mem. xxxvii. 15 

1 / a fancy trouble-tost . . ir Ixiv. 2 

Perchance to / the throbs of pain, . T/u? Daisy . 105 

lullabies.. 
These mortal / of pain . . In Mem. lxxvi. 5 

lulled. 

Thy toowhits are / I wot. . . The Owl, ii. 1 

Into dreamful slumber /. . . Eleanore . 30 

And / them in my own. . . Talking O. . 216 

lumber. 
the waste and / of the shore . . En. Arden . 16 

luminous. 
L, gemlike, ghostlike, deathlike . Maud, I. iii. 8 

lump. 
This /of earth has left his estate . Maud,l.xvi. 1 

lungs. 
laboured down within his ample l's, Princess, v. 263 

Lunnon (London.) 
Squoirc's in L, an' summun . . N. Farmer . 57 

hired. 
L by the crimes and frailties of the Guine-.ere . 135 
often / her from herself ; .... . 150 

/ Into their net made pleasant . Aylmer's F. 485 
one unctuous mouth which / him, Sea Dreams 14 

lurk. 
no more of deadly Ts therein, . Princess, ii. 208 
such as Is In some wild Poet, . InMem. xxxiv. 6 
/ three villains yonder in the wood, Enid . . 991 

Lusitanian. 
father-grape grew fat On L summers. Will Water. 8 

lust. 

from /of gold, or like a girl . . Ma" Arthur 127 

Ring out the narrowing / of gold ; In Mem. cv. 26 

/ of gain, in the spirit of Cain, . Maud, I. i. 23 

of wine and anger and /, . 11 II. i. 43 

lost for a little her / of gold III. vi. 39 

and worship thine own Is ! . .A timer's F. 650 

in his /and voluptuousness, . . Boddieta . 66 

keep him from the / of blood . Lucretius , 83 

shapes of /, unspeakable . • 11 . T57 

/ or lusty blood or provender : . 11 . 195 

lustihood. 
He is so full of/, he will ride, . Elaine 



203 



lusting. 
I for all that is not its own : . 



. Maud, I. i. 22 

lustre. 

Soft / bathes the range of urns . Pay-Pm. . 30, 

/ of the long convolvuluses . . En. Arden . 577 

lustreless. 

one was patch 'd and blurr'd and / Enid . . 64} 

lute [1.) 

on lattice edges lay Or book or /; Prinrrss, ii. 16 

the little rift within the / ircp.) . Vivien . ^o 



260 



CONCORDANCE TO 



lute (verb. ) 
/and flute fantastic tenderness, 

Luther. 

thou wilt be A latter L . 

luxury. 
And / of contemplation : 

lychgate. 
to the /, where his chariot stood 

Lycian. 

Appraised the L custom, 

_ lying: 
L, robed in snowy white 



POEM. 

Princess, 



LINE. 

iv. in 



To J. M. K. 2 



Elea?iore 



Ay Inter's F. 824 



Princess, ii. 112 



L.ofShalott, iv. 19 

. Eleanore . 25 

109 



Fed thee, a child, I alone 

/ still Shadow forth the banks 

/broad awake I thought of you . MayQueen,'ui. 29 

Roman soldier found Me /dead, . D.o/F. lVom.162 

I robed and crown'd, if . 163 

/, hidden from the heart's disgrace, Locksley H, 57 

Summer isles of Eden / 

Will vex thee /underground? 

She / on her couch alone, 

sitting, /, languid shapes, 

/ bathed In the green gleam . 

You /close upon his territory 

when she saw me / stark, 

And found thee / in the port ; 

wine-flask I couch'd in moss . 

L close to my foot 

left him / in the public way ; 

saw him I unsleek, unshorn, . 

father / sick and needing him) 

/ thus inactive doubt and gloom 

/ with his urns and ornaments, 

On the decks as they were /, 

lynx. 
her /eye To fix and make me hotter, Princess, iii. 



It 


164 


. Two Voices 


in 


. Day-Dm. . 


78 


, Vision of Sin 


12 


. Princess, i. 


92 


u iv. 


384 


tr vi. 


84 


. In Ment.x'w. 


4 


11 lxxxviii. 


44 


. Maud, II. ii. 


3 


. Enid . 


1327 


. Elaine 


8n 


. En. Arden . 


65 


" 


113 


. Ayhners F. 


4 


. The Captain 


53 



Lyonnesse. 
Had fall'n in L about their Lord, . M. d' Arthur 
Roving the trackless realms of L, Elaine 



Guinevere 



4 

36 

234 

238 



And rode thereto from L, 

All down the lonely coast of L. 

lyre. 
voice, a I of widest range 
touch'd a jarring / at first, 

lyrics. 

dismal /, prophesying change 

M 

maaziiH . 
Huzzin' an' m the blessed fealds . N. Far77ier . 62 

Macaw. 
add A crimson to the quaint M, . Day-Dm. . 16 



D.ofF.PVom.165 
In Mem. xcv. 7 

Princess, i. . 141 



jnace. 
brand, m, and shaft, shield — 

machine. 
praised his land, his horses, his nis; 

mad. 
devils, m with blasphemy, . 
Am I m, that I should cherish 
What matter if I go m, 
Is enough to drive one m. 
bailiff swore that he was m, . 
your town, where all the men are?«, 
makes me m to see you weep, 
for I was well-nigh 711 : . 
* I have gone in. I love you : 
beheld three spirits m with joy. . 
Squoire 'ull be sa -m an' all — 
M and maddening all that heard , 

Madam. 
M — if I know your sex, 

madden. 
Is this a time to m madness 



Princess, v. 492 
The Brook . 124 



StS.Stylites 


4 


Locksley H. 


6* 


Maud, I. xi. 


6 


II. v. 


20 


The Brook . 


143 


Enid . 


418 


11 


1464 


IT 


1684 


Elaine 


926 


Guinevere . 


2 SO 


N. Fanner . 


47 


Boddicea 


4 



Vision oj 'Sin 181 
Aylmer's F. 769 



poem. 
Maud, I. 

Boddicea 



■madden! d. 
ever he mutter'd and m, 

maddening: 
Mad and in all that heard her 
made. 
So slightly, musically m, 
What is so wonderfully m.' . 
I told thee — hardly nigher m, 
remember'd one myself had m, 
part m long since, and part Now 
M at me thro* the press, 
thou hast m him : thou art just. 
Of onward time shall yet be m, . 11 exxvn. 
Her sweet ' I will ' has 711 ye one. 11 Con. 

not in the world, and He that m it Maud, I. 



. Talking O. . 
. Two Votces 

. Pri7icess, iv. 



87 

6 

'73 

70 

11 . 72 

11 v. 511 

InMem.Pro. 12 

6 

'56 
48 

5 
. 81 
• 335 
1141 
1624 
1007 



M so fairly well . . . if II. ii. 

Was ever man so grandly in as he ? Enid . 
M him like a man abroad at morn n 
And vi it of two colours ; . n 

in as if to fall upon him. . . 11 
seems not 111 to fade away, . . Elaine 
from the sun there swiftly in at her Gttinevere . 78 
in them lay their hands in mine . 11 . 464 

I am not 111 of so slight elements. 11 . 506 

The sea is His : He m it.' . . En. Arden . 226 
duty by his own, M himself theirs : 11 . 331 

bounteously in And yet so finely, Ayhners F. 74 
wherefore he had in the cry ; . 11 . 589 

m by these the last of all my race it . 791 

Madeline. 
Ever varying M. (rep. ) . . Madeline . 3 

inadest. 
Thou 111 Life in man and brute ; . In Mem. Pro. 6 
Thou 111 Death ; and lo, thy foot .11 .7 

Thou 111 man, he knows not why ; 11 .10 

Who 111 him thy chosen, . . Tithonus . 13 

madman. 
warn'd that in ere it grew too late; Vision of Sin 56 
struck me, in, over the face, . Maud, II. i. 18 

like a 111 brought her to the court, Enid . . 725 

madness. 
Then in in and in bliss, 
Thro' in, hated by the wise, . 
From cells of in unconfmed, . 
Mingle in, mingle scorn ! 
accomplice of your in unforgiven, 
to death and trance And 111, 
the vitriol in flushes up 
flee from the cruel in of love, 
Perhaps from in, perhaps from cri 
do accept my 111, and would die 
cells of 111, haunts of horror . 
pardon me ! the 111 of that hour 
after m acted question ask'd : 
their last hour, A m of farewells. 
Vext with unworthy m, 
Is this a time to madden in . 
No m of ambition, avarice, none 

Madonna. 
M, sad is night and morn . Mariana in tile S. 22 

Madonna-wise. 
M-w on either side her head ; . Isabel . . 6 

Magazine. 
O blatant Ms regard me rather— H endecasyllabics 1 7 

maggot. 
the in born in an empty head, . Maud, II. v. 38 



. Madeline . 


42 


. LoveandDu 


ty 7 


. Two Voices 


37i 


. Vision of Sin 
, Princess, vi. 


204 
2S9 


. In Mem. lxx 


2 


. Maud, I. i. 


37 


II IV. 


55 


me, it xvi. 


22 


II XVlll. 

. „ III. vi. 


44 
2 


. Enid . 


IIQS 


Tl 


1661 


Guinevere . 


102 


. Aylmer's F. 
: Lucretius . 


335 
769 
209 



magic. 
Is there some in in the place? 

magic music. 
The M M in his heart . 
liked it more Than 111 m, 

magnetic. 
Twice as m to sweet influences 
His face 111 to the hand 



. Will Water. 79 

. Day-Dm. . 126 
Princess, Pro. 192 

. Princess, v. 183 
. Aylmer's F. 626 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



261 



magnetise. poem. line. 

may tn The baby-oak within — . Talking O. 255 

magnet-like. 
m-l she drew The rustiest iron . Vivien. . 423 

magn ijicence. 
{His dress a suit of fray'd tn, . Enid . . 296 

magpie. 
And only hear the m gossip . To F. D. Maurice 19 

Mahomet. 
touched on M With much contempt. Princess, ii. 118 

Mahratta-battle. 
ia wild M-b fell my father . . Locksley IP 155 

maid [sec Maid of Astolet, lily maid.) 
Even as a tn, whose stately brow Ode to Mem. 13 
Fitting, served by man and m t . The Goose . 21 
If ever m or spouse, As fair . . Talking O. 34 
f» and page renew" d their strife, . Day-Dm. . 145 
earth is rich in man and m ; . Will Water. 65 

come you drest like a village tn, . Lady Clare 67-9 
and m's Arranged a country dance, Princess, Pro. 83 
presented M Or Nymph, or Goddess 11 i. 193 

mother of the sweetest little m, . u ii. 260 

tn's should ape Those monstrous males 11 iii. 292 

turning to her m's, ' Pitch our pavilion 11 . 327 

a m Of those beside her, smote n iv. 19 

marsh-divers, rather, m. Shall croak ir . 105 

hubbub in the court of half the tn's ij . 455 

pretty m's in the running flood, . it v. 372 

Mask'd like our m's, blustering 11 . 386 

our m's were better at their homes, n . 418 

»:'s, behold our sanctuary Is violate 11 vi. 43 
led A hundred m's in train . 11 .60 
had to do with none but m's, . n . 273 
we will scatter all our vis m . 283 
random sweet on m and man. . 11 vii. 71 
down, O m, fnun yonder mountain » . 177 

1 keep but a man and a m, . Maud, I. iv. 1 j 
1 r the m's and mamage-makcrs, it xx. 3s 

I's rood is the one m for me.' Enid 36^ 

And page, and tn, and squire, . 11 710 

with no attendance, page t r m, . m 1171 

Vivien, like the tenderest-hearted m Vivien . 227 

be not wrathful with your m ; . 11 . 230 

A m so smooth, so white, , • 11 . 416 

st. in,! ic a stainless m ; •> . 587 

for Oueens and not for simple m's.' Elaine . 231 

this m Might wear :is fair a jewel . >i . 239 

in enamell'd arms the m Glanced at, 11 . 616 

till the m Rcliell'd against it . » . 647 

the /;/ Whose sleeve he wore ; . ti . 706 

1 irvel what the m might be, 11 . 724 

m in As tola t, Her guiltless rival, . n . 741 
tu had told him all her talc, . . 11 794*819 

meek m Sweetly forbore him . ■» . 851 

simple m Wcntnalfthenight repeating,!! . 894 

1 it ever prest upon the m . n . 907 

uiswcr'd, . 11 . 944 

full meekly rose the ///, . 11 . 972 

seem'd a curious little m again . 11 1029 

pure Sir Galahad to uplift 1 lie m ; 11 1258 

with her save a uttlem, . Gumtvert . 3 

communed only with the little m, 11 . 148 

at, who brook'd No silence . 11 . 157 

full willingly sang the little m, u . 165 

little m, shut in by nunnery walls, \\ . 225 

Thau i> the maiden passion f->r a m„ 11 . 475 

l I not forgiven?' 11 . 657 
Perish'd many a m and matron, . Boiidicea . 85 
After-love-* of m's and men . . The Window 130 

maiden. 

phantom two hours old Of a m . Adeline iq 
A simple m i ti I j * r flower . L. ('. I', de Vert is 

of the warrior Gileaditc, A m pure \D.ofF.Wotn 1 fi 

" 253 

wrought by the lonely m of the LokcAf.d'Artkvrzoi 

1 he m's tender palm. . . Talking 0, . 180 

tlie little m walk'd demure, . 7\u0VoictM, 419 

m's Jet-black hair baa grown! . Day-Dm. , 80 



POEM. LINE. 

Nor m's hand in mine. . . Sir Galahad so 

Dropt her head in the m's hand, . Lady dare 63 
M, 1 have watch'd thee daily, . L. oj Burleigh 3 
And a village m she. ... 11 .8 

found an University For tu s, . Princess, i. 150 
Six hundred m*s clad in purest white, 11 ii. 448 

O marvellously modest m, you ! . 11 iii. 32 

open-hearted m, true and pure. . 11 .82 

Among her avV, higher by the head, 11 . 163 

college and her tn's, empty masks, n . 171 

Stood her tn's glimmeringly group'd 11 iv. 172 
All her m's, watching, said, . 11 v. 534 

stole a tn from her place, . . 11 . 540 

many a tn passing home . . it vi. 359 

m's came, they talk'd, They sang, i» vii. 7 

As on a tn in the day . . InMetn. xxxix. 3 
serve to curl a tn's locks : 11 lxxvi. 7 

within a hall And tn's with me : . 11 cii. 6 

m's gather'd strength and grace . m . 27 

m's with one mind liewail'd their lot ; n -45 

m's of the place, That pelt us 11 Con. 67 

Go not, happy day, Till the m yields. Maud,, I. x vii. 4 
m of our century, yet most meek ; The Brook . 68 
stood a tn near Wailing to pass. . 11 . 204 

a single tn with her, Took horse, . Enid . . 160 
sent Her m to demand it .11 . . 193 

in your tn's person to yourself: . 11 . .216 
her own m to demand the name, .11 . .411 
pair Of suitors as this tu; . . 11 . . 440 
a m is a tenderthing, . . .11. . 510 
Let never tn think, however fair, .11 . .721 
tn rose. And left her m couch, 11 736 

call'd her like that m in the talc, 11 » 742 

/// dream'd That some one put . Elaine . 2it 

yield it to this ///, if you will.' . u . 229 

m standing in the dewy light. . n . 351 

so much For any m living,' 11 . 375 

great pearls Some gentle tn's gift.' 11 . 603 

fur lack of gentle m's aid. . . 11 . 761 

gentler-born the m, the more bound, 11 . 762 

the m, while that ghostly grace . n . 88 r 

in her tower alone the m sat : . 11 , 983 

Elaine? 'till back the tn fell, . 11 1025 

for this most gentle tn's death . m 1283 

tn buried, not as one unknown, . 11 1324 

Thou could'st have loved this ///, h 1357 

l O m t if indeed you list to sing . Guinevere . 163 
as thou art be never tn more. . 11 . 356 

aghast the tn rose, ... 11 • 360 

love one m only, cleave to her, . 11 . 471 

.Meek m's, from the voices crying 11 . 664 

more and more, the tn woman grown, Aylmer's F. 108 
Lash the ;// into swooning, . . Boadicea . 67 

or half coquettc-likc M, . Hendecasy liable s 20 

maiden-cheek. 
Engirt with many a florid m-c, . Princess, iii. 332 

maidenhood. 
To her, perpetual tn, . . . In Mem. vi. 43 

maidenlike. 
m as far As I could ape their treble, Princess, iv. 73 

ma iden - meek, 
m-m I pray'd Concealment: . Princess, iii. :i8 

maid-mother. 
Or the tn-m by a crucifix, . . Pal. 0/ Art 93 

maid of Astolat. 
Flainc the lily m o A, . . Elaine . 2 

About the tn o A and her love . 11 . 719 

The tn o A loves Sir Lancelot, . ti . 721 

Sir Lancelot loves the tn o A.' 11 . 722 

Then spake the lily m o A ; . . 11 1079 

lily tn o A Lay smiling, . . 11 

I, sometime call'd the m o A, 11 1266 

maid 0/ honour. 
The m o h blooming fair : . Day-Dm. . 48 

Poor soul ! I had a m o h once ; . Princess, iv. 115 

mail 'armour.) 
clear plates of sapphire m. . . Two Voices 12 
ringing, springs, from brand and m; Sir Galahad 54 



262 



CONCORDANCE TO 



mail (coach.) 
The m ? At one o'clock, 
fear That we shall miss the in : 

maimed, 
cured some halt and m ; 
is there any of you halt or m ? 
that there Lie bruised and in, 
and all the good knights m. . 
and him they caught and in. 
could not end me, left me in 

main. 
Just breaking over land and in ? 
stands apart Cleft from the in, 
great river take me to the in : 
gaze O'er land and m : . 
mingle with the bounding m : 
I am sick of the moor and the in. 
Flying along the land and the in — 



POEM. LINE. 

Walk, to the M. 6 

II . I02 

StS. Sty lit es 135 
11 . 140 

Princess, vi. 56 
" . 224 

Elaine . 275 

Tithonus . 20 



Two Voices 84 

Princess, iv. 263 

u yi. 376 

if vii. 21 

In Mem. xi. 12 

Maud, I. 
II 



61 



On open in or winding shore / . The Voyage 6 

main-curren t. 
what m-c's draw the years 'Love ihonthy land,' 'etc.21 

maintained. 
at least by me be m : . 

■maintaining. 
M that with equal husbandry . Princess, i. 

maintenance. 
all That appertains to noble m. 



Maud, I. i. . 18 



129 



Enid 



712 



maize. 
hand in hand with Plenty in the m, Princess, vii. 186 
olive, aloe, and in and vine. . . The Daisy . 4 

majesty. 
Majesties of mighty states — 'Love thou thy land' 60 
such and so unmoved a in . Elaine 1164 

to mar the sober majesties . . Lucretius . 214 

make. 

why m we such ado ? . . MayQueen,m. 56 

love, that ins me thrice a man, . Talking O . . 11 

* wilt thou in everything a he, . Two Voices 203 

might in it worth his while . . Princess, i. . 182 

woo her, and in her mine, . . n iv. 97 

in us all we would be, n . 576 

The mother m's us most — . 11 v. 496 

m my dream All that I would. . ti . 508 

let her in herself her own . . if vii. 256 

wills are ours, to in them thine . InMem.Pro. 16 

himself could in The thing that is The Brook . 7 

To m them like himself : . . Elaine . 132 

that I in My will of yours, if . 912 

sweetly could she in and sing. . if 1000 

love of truth, and all that m's a man. Guinevere . 479 

Roaring to in a third : . . . Aylmer's F. 128 

for your fortunes are to in. \\ . 300 

shall not in them out of mine. . if . 301 

Went both to in your dream : . Sea Dreams 246 

follow till I in thee mine.' . . The Voyage 64 

love us, and m us your own : . W.toAlexan. 30 

in Another and another frame . Lucretius . 41 

make-believes* 
m~b For Edith and himself. . . Aylmer's F. 95 

Maker. 
For the drift of the M is dark, . Maud, I. iv. 43 

inakest. 
1 Thou in thine appeal to me : . In Mem. Iv. 5 

making {■part.) 
M earth wonder, .... The Poet . 52 
In firry woodlands m moan ; . Miller's D. 42 

M sweet close of his delicious toils Pal. of Art 185 
M for one sure goal. n . 248 

Thro' many agents in strong, 'Love thou thy land,* 39 
m all the horizon dark. . . . Two Voices . 390 
in vain pretence Of gladness, . In Mem. xxx. 6 
M the little one leap for joy. To F. D. Maurice 4 
in his high place the lawless perch Ded. of Idylls 21 
good mother in Eftid gay . _ . Enid . , 757 
comrades, in slowlier at the Prince, . . 1016 



POEM. LINE. 

M a roan horse caper . . . Elaine . 788 

M a treacherous quiet . . if . 879 

in them An armlet for the roundest u . 1176 

men worse by in my sin known? . ti . J 4°7 

111 all the night a steam of fire. . Guinevere . 593 
younger people in holiday, . . En. A r den . 62 
m signs They knew not what : . n . 641 

swallowing gold, Not in. . . Sea Dreams So 

making {s. ) 
since the in of the world. . . M. d' Arthur 203 
have gone to the m of man : . . Maud, I. iv. 35 
the sudden in of splendid names, . 11 III. vi. 47 

Malay. 
not the Kaffir, Hottentot, M, . Princess, ii. 142 

Malayan. 
The cursed M crease . . . Princess, Pro. 21 
Ran a M muck against the times, Ay 'liner 's F. 463 

male. 
any m thing but to peep at us : . Princess, Pro. 151 
should ape Those monstrous m's . it iii. 293 

malice. 
of sense became The crime of 111, . Vision of Sin 216 
My ;;/ is no deeper than a moat, . Enid . 1189 

malison. 
I have no sorcerer's in on me, . Princess, ii. 388 

mallow. 
set With willow-weed and 111 . The Brook . 46 

Mammon. 
This filthy marriage-hindering M Aylmer's F. 374 

M ammonite. 
When a M mother kills her babe . Maud, I. i. . 45 

mammoth. 
old-world 111 bulk'd in ice, . . Princess, v. 142 

man (see man and wife.} 
sick m's room when he taketh 'A spirit haunts? etc. 14 
riving the spirit ci in . . . The Poet . 51 
with the certain step of in. . . Miller's D. 96 
men, in power Only, are likest gods, CEnone . 127 
hated both of Gods and men. . n . 225 

ever in her ears of armed men. .11 . 26T 

friends to m, Living To — . With Pal. of Art n 

to the perfect shape of in. . w 19 

choice painting of wise men . . Pal. of Art 131 
like some sick m declined u . 155 

possession oims mind and deed . n . 209 

that good m, the clergyman, . MayQueen,\\\, 12 

from an ill-used race vi men . . Loios-Es. . 165 
squares of men in brazen plates, . D. ofF. Worn. 33 
' I govern'd men by change, . 11 . 130 

long since I have seen a in. . \\ . 131 

no men to govern in this wood : . n . 135 

The 111, my lover, with whom I rode 11 . 141 

that Rosamond, whom men call fair, m .251 

111 more pure and bold and just . To % S. . 31 
in may speak the thing he will ; ' You ask me why ',' 8 
part by part to men reveal'd ' Oj old sat Freedom,' n 
Bear seed of men . 'Love thou thy laud,' etc. 20 
Nature's evil star Drive men . ri -74 

sitting, served by in and maid, . The Goose . 21 
whyshouldany 7/r Remodel models? The Epic . 37 
King Arthur's table, m by m, . M. d Arthur 3 
They sleep — the men I loved. . n . 17 

little thing may harm a wounded in. 11 . 42 

mighty bones of ancient men, . 11 -47 

shameful thing for men to lie. . i» -78 

pleased the eyes of many men. . n , 91 

old in speak in the aftertime . n . 107 

for a 111 may fail in duty twice, . ti , 129 

live three lives of mortal men . ir . 155 

Among new men, strange faces, . 11 . 238 

men better th^n sheep or goats . it . 250 

loved the in, and prized his work ; ir Ep. 8 

Francis, muttering, like a in ill-used, 11 . 12 

dream Dream'd by a happy in, . Gardener'sD. 71 
sight to make an old in young . 11 . 140 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



26, 



POEM. 

Dora . 



Then the old m Was wroth, . 

none of all his men Dare tell him 

and he left his men at work, 

he died at peace With all men ; . 

the old m burst in sobs : — . 

clung about The old m's neck, 

all the m was broken with remorse 

hid his face From all men, . Walk, to the M. 15 

You saw the /»— on Monday, was it? — 



LINE. 

22 
- 73 
. 84 
• 142 
. »55 
. 160 
. 161 



55 

11 . 94 

Ed. Morris 7 

11 43. 9°. 9" 

II . 49 

. 7 3 

. StS.Stylites 48 

104 

119 

159 

211 



Like men, like manners : 
know we of the secret of a m? 
When men knew how to build, 
God made the woman for the m, 
III is made of solid stuff, 
yourself alone Of all men happy. 
m hath suffer'd more than I. 
men on earth House in the shade 
what a m 1 am ; A sinful m, . 11 

by surname, Stylites, among men; 11 
if there be a priest, a »/ of God, . n 

love, that makes me thrice a m, . Talking O 
To thai m My work shall answer, Love and Duty 2S 
for a in is not as God, ... 11 

Hike being most a m. . n 

m feel strong in speaking truth ; » 

light shall spread, and™ belikerm Golden Year 
all men's good Be each m's rule, . 11 

cities of men And manners . . Ulysses 
men that strove with Gods. . . " 
In the Spring a young m's fancy . Locksley II. 
g the throngs of men : . 11 . 

M, n, my brothers, men the workers, 11 
In the Parliament of n, . . 11 

And the thoughts of men are widen'd " 

hi is the lesser m, . 11 . 

held it better men should perish . » 

New men, that in the flying of a wheel Godiya 
in the sixth --he moulded m. . Two Voices 
men, thro* novel spheres of thought « 
dared not tarry,' men will say, . 11 
on the fear of ill The fear of men, 11 

Do men love thee ? ..." 
Art thou so bound To men, n 

men with knowledge merely play'd 11 

dreamer, deaf and blind. Named m, 11 
that mixes nt with Heaven : . >• 

if /;/ rot 111 dreamless ease, II 

sat up m the knees of men . . >i 

till thou wert also m : . n 

t the dream 11 

men, n long was blind, m 

truth that sways the souls of men > Day-Din. . 
any m that walks the mead, . t» 

from the paths of men ; 
c Ant was fresh to men, 

i men 
heart within the m's . 
1 vexes public men, 

1 men and things. 
earth is rich in /// and maid . 
1 -1 misty men of letters j . 

ml men, 
keep the l>est m under the sun 
If there be any faith in m.' . « 

in wU] ■ his right. 1 . " 

A m had given all other bliss, SirL.andQ.G. 

f'h .1 in as lean as death, . ' 'itioHO/Sin 60 
:it dies am, . . 11 97, '-' 

re men of ruin'd blood : 
All the windy ways of ffbffl . 
i rough sketch of m, 

life, and lees of >«: 
>i/<v/ and hoi ICS pierced with worms, 
. understand 



. Amfihion . 
Sir C'ltltth/td 

. Will Water. 



To E. I.. . 
Lady Clare 



■ 99 
132,168 
. 189 
. 205 
. 209 

. 322 



m with knobs .ui. 1 wires and vials Princess, Pro.6s 

men and 1 country 11 .83 

tutor, 1 nmon men » .114 

men have done it : bow I hate you .1 . 130 

Far nil" from m ■ like a m's, " . 135 

1 them -ill thai men are taught ; « • 1 - 

neve! m, I think, So muuldcr'd . " . 179 



POEM. 

kind of tales did men tell men Princess, 

Between ihe rougher voices of the men 

in the midst of men and day, 

would send a hundred thousand men 

Whom all men rate as kind . 

little dry old m, without a star, 

woman were an equal to the in. . 

being an easy m, gave it : 

see no men, Not ev'n her brother . 

against all rules For any m to go : 

close upon the Sun, Than our m's earth; 

barren verbiage, current among men, 

tricks, which make us toys of men, 

three years to speak with any men, 

not of those that men desire, 

then the monster, then the m 

that which made Woman and m. . 

learn whatever men were taught : 

Some men's were small : not they 

the least of men ; 
thence the m's, if more was more, 
The highest is the measure of the m 
Sappho and others vied with any m : 

NO U ENTER IN ON PAIN OF DEATH '! 

on the blanching bones of men f ' . 
the wisest m Feasted the woman . 
The total chronicles of m, 
Abate the stride, which speaks of m, 
might a in not wander from his wits. 
Men hated learned women : . 
Girls? more like men!' 
men (for still My mother went revolving 
so they are— very like men indeed — 
'Whj — these — are— men.' . 
noble than three scoreof men, 
phrase well-oil'd, As m's could be ; 
deals in that Which men delight in, 
an even pedestal with lit.' 
move, my friend, At no m's beck, . 
assail this gray preeminence ol m I 
men may pluck them from our hearts, 
lived and roar'd Hcforc in was. 
willing men should come among us, 
all the men mourn* d at his side: . 

voice and vague, fatal to men. 
Knaves are men, That lute and flute 
men grew to rate us at our worth, 
questioned if she knew us 111,11, . 
stronger than men, Huge women . 
men will say We did not know 
hold the woman is the better /// ; . 
1 bear, Tho' in, yet human . 
A m 1 came to see you : 
many a famous in and woman, 
more than poor men wealth, 

no in to nurse despair, . 

that men were in the very walls, . 

Then men had said — but now— . 
make yourself a in to light with men, 
might that m not deserve of me. . 

hs at you and in : 
M is the hunter ; woman is his game: 
defiance down (lagelike to m, 
the piebald miscellany, m, . 

had I seen Such thews of men: . 
home is in the sinews ofa in, 
t.ilk'd down the fifty wisest men, . 
highest Foam of men's deeds — 
in sleeker limes With smoother men : 
set my face Against all men. 
Far off from men 1 built a fold 
sole men to be mingled with our cause 
I men we shall pri/c . 

pt-plague of men ! . 
When the <« wants weight, the woman 
M for the field, and woman . 
.1/ for the sword, and for the needle 
M with the head, and woman » ith the 
.1/ to command and woman to ol 
moulded m. His vis.t^e all 
bridges for the use of men. . 



LINE. 

Pro, 193 

• 237 

I. 15 

• 63 

- 7° 
. 116 

• 13° 
. .48 

• 151 
..• '77 

II. 23 

• 40 

- 49 

• 58 
. 62 
. 104 
. 129 

■ '3° 

• '32 

• I :5 

■ Mi 
. 148 

• >78 
. 182 

• 3-9 

• 359 

• 407 

• 4i7 
. 442 

iii. 27-33 

• 37 

• 39 

• 42 

• 93 
. 118 
. 200 
. 208 
. 211 
. 218 
. 240 

• 278 

■ 3«' 
. ■ 335 

46 

. 1 10 

• 1=7 
. 212 

• 259 

• 337 

• 39° 

• 405 

■ 4-1 

• 4 -'5 

• 439 

• 444 

• 464 

• 5'2 
"■ 34 

. 101 

. 112 

■ M7 
. 170 
. 190 
. 246 

• 257 

. 3'° 

• 375 

• 379 
. 380 
. 40 1 
. 40a 

• 4"7 

• 439 

• 440 

• 5f>9 

>i. 31 



IV, 



264 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM 

Prih 



cess, vi. 141 

r . 181 

f . 204 

' ' 235 

r . 274 

1 . 308 

1 . 316 

1 . 340 

1 vii. 18 

r . 71 

r 219-40 

t .24 3 

r . 245 



. 250 

• 259 
. 260 
. 264 
. 269 

• 277 

• 303 
. 322 

342 
7 



Con. 



. 109 
III em. Pro. 6 
1 . 10 

• 35 

• 36 
*■ 3 



look'd At the arm'd in sideways. 
These men are hard upon us 
Ida — 'sdeath ! you blame the m ; . 
men see Two women faster welded 
maids, That have no links with men. 
men came to woo Your Highness . 
Whatever m lies wounded 
The common men with rolling eyes ; 
?nen Darkening her female field : . 
shining in upon the wounded m . 
random sweet on maid and m 
sons of men, and barbarous laws . 
know The woman's cause is m's: . 
out of Lethe scales with jn . 
shares with ;;; His nights, his days, 
miserable, How shall men grow ? . 
woman is not undevelopt m . 

as the m Sweet love were slain 

vz be more of woman, she of m ; . 

at the last she set herself to in 

the statelier Eden back to men : . 

Interpreter between the Gods and men : 

mask'd thee from men's reverence 

across the wild That no in knows. 

So pray'd the men, the women : . 

men required that I should give . 

Perchance upon the future in: 

madest Life in m and brute . . In 

madest m, he knows not why ; 

merit lives from m to m 

not from m, O Lord, to thee. 

7iien may rise on stepping-stones . 

* Behold the m who loved and lost, 

Beats out the little lives of men. . 

travell'd men from foreign lands ;. 

human-hearted m I loved, 

■m I held as half-divine : 

made me that delirious m 

melt the waxen hearts of men* 

sat the Shadow fear'd of m ; 

Behold a in raised up by Christ ! . 

some voice that in could trust 

M dies : nor is there hope in dust : * 

So then were nothing lost to in ; . 

here the m is more and more 

Had m to learn himself anew 

were such as men might scorn : . 

men the flies of latter spring, 

A sober m, among his boys, . 

grain by which a m may live? 

M , her last work, who seem'd so fair, 

first form was made a m; 

As some divinely gifted m, . 

men and minds, the dust of change 

path that each m trod Is dim, 

sometimes in a dead m's face, 

A m upon a stall may find, . 

stay'd in peace with God and m. . 

labour fills The lips of men . 

mighty hopes that make us men. . 

The picturesque of m and m' 

the in whose thoughts would hold 

dead m touch'd me from the past, 

wants Gnarr at the heels of men, 

Day, when I lost the flower of men; 

m we loved was there on deck, 

thrice as large as in he bent . 

Ring in the valiant m and free, . 

seize and throw the doubts of m; 

men of rathe and riper years : 

mix With men and prosper ! 

at the last arose the in ; 

What matters Science unto men, 

wiser m who springs Hereafter . 

thro' the questions men may try, 

like a m in wrath the heart . 

What is, and no m understands ; 

reach thro* nature, moulding in. 

Result in m, be born and think, . 

Whereof the in, that with me trod " . 137 

old m, now lord of the broad estate Maud, I. i. 19 



Xlll. 


11 


xiv. 


10 


xvi. 


17 


xx i. 


8 


xx ii. 


12 


xxxi. 


13 


XXXV. 


1 


xlii! 

xliii. 


4 
9 
2 


xliv. 


15 


xlvii. 


4 


xlix. 
hi. 

\v. 


10 
2 
8 

9 


be. 


10 


Ixiii. 


2 


Ixx. 


10 


Ixxii. 
lxxiii. 
lxxvi. 


9 

1 

9 


lxxix. 


8 


lxxxiii. 


26 


lxxxiv. 


60 


xxxviii. 


42 


xciii. 


3 


xciv. 


34 


xcvii. 


17 


xcviii. 


4 


cii. 


41 


cv. 

cviii. 


42 

29 

6 


cix. 


2 


cxiii. 


3 


ex vii. 


12 


cxix. 


7 


exxiii. 


9 

7 




15 
22 


Con. 


24 
126 



POEM. 

. Man J, 



xm. 

xvii. 



II.ii. 



35 

75 
19 
25 
3° 
35 
37 
4 1 

8 
61 

5 
13 
14 
59 
60 
63 
67 
68 
24 
17 
19 
40 
55 

9 
32 

9 
31 



83 



the works of the men of mind, 

only not all men lie ; 

whether woman or m be the worse. 

I keep but a m and a maid, . 

We are puppets, M in his pride, . 

we men are a little breed. 

have gone to the making of m : . 

m of science himself is fonder 

desire or admire, if a in could learn it 

Singing of men that in battle array, 

often a m's own angry pride 

Men were drinking together, 

Strange, that I hear two men, 

power that all men adore, 

For a m and leader of men. 

Ah God, for a in with heart . 

still strong m in a blatant land, . 

And ah for a m to arise in me, 

the m I am may cease to be. 

old 111 never comes to his place : . 

Till the red in dance 

And the red ins babe Leap . 

brand His nothingness into m. 

Love, like men in drinking-songs, 

that dead m at her heart and mine : 

To the men of many acres, . 

a learned in Could give it 

Like a shipwreck' d m on a coast 

cannot even bury a in ; 

dead ;;/ there to a spectral bride ; 

what will the old m say ? 

men may come and men may go, (rep.) The Brook 33 

knew the in; the cott would fetch 

Henceforth I trust the in alone, 

lay the m whom we deplore? 

for the 111 of long-enduring blood, 

for the in of amplest influence, 

gray head which all men knew, 

their omens all men drew, 

A 111 of well-attemper' d frame. 

loves thee well, thou famous m, 

blare of bugle, clamour of men, 

all men else their nobler dreams 

great men who fought, and kept it ours 

spoke among you, and the iJ/who spoke 

More than is of m's degree . 

Godlike men we build our trust. . 

any wreath that m can weave him. 

Dearto the in that is dear to God ; ToF.D. Maitrice$6 

Was there a 111 dismay' d ? . . Lt. Brigade 10 

Was ever m so grandly made . Enid 

poor cause that men Reproach you 11 

For all my pains, poor 111, . . i» 

makes a m t in the sweet face of her it 

111 Not turning round, nor looking u 

like a m abroad at morn . . " 

liquid note beloved of men . . tr 

m is m and master of his fate. . " 

your town, where all the men are mad; ir 

a name far-sounded among men, 11 

since the proud m often is the mean, it 

men who served About my person, it 

have let men be, and have their way it 

in this tournament can no m tilt, 11 

fallen m Made answer, groaning, n 

men have seen my fall. 1 . . 11 

cry That Edyrn's men were on them,n 

Edyrn's men had caught them . 11 

Never m rejoiced More than Geraintn 

Men saw the goodly hills of Somerset, ti 

purblind race of miserable men, . ?t 

m upon his tongue May break it, » 

like a 111 That skins the wild beast 11 

every m were larger-limbed than I, 11 

if I fall, cleave to the better lit* . 11 

So lay the in transfixt ... 11 

tell him How great a m you are . 11 

loves to know When men of mark 11 

return With victual for these men 11 

wild men supporters of a shield . it 

what men soever were his friends, tr 



it . 149 

The Letters 31 

Odeon Well. 8 

r< . 24 

tt . 27 

» • 35 

. 36 

" • 74 

. 85 

n . 115 



. 242 
. 266 



. 277 



87 
xi6 
122 
269 
335 
336 
355 
418 
427 
449 
453 
466 
480 
575 
573 
639 
642 
771 
828 
850 
891 
941 
997 
1001 
1015 
1077 
1073 
10S9 
1116 



TEXXYSO/STS WORKS. 



265 



POEM. 

men may bicker with the things . Enid 
this m loves you no more. . 11 

m's love once gone never returns. ri 
moving homeward babbled to his men, 11 
Enid never loved a tn but him, . u 
Seeing that you arc wedded to a m, ir 
at the flash and motion of the ttt . ■» 
if a m who stands upon the brink 11 
Scared but at the motion of the m, n 
1 Horse and m,' he said, 'All of one 11 
m to whom a dreadful loss Falls . u 
charger stood, grieved like a ///. . n 
to lose, and all fur a dead ///, . n 
their lost time, and the dead m t . n 
aught in whole hogs . . 11 
Good luck had your good ///, . 11 
yonder m upon the bier arise, . t» 
yonder m is surely dead ; 11 

Until himself arise a living ///, . i» 
men and women in the hall Rose n 
when they saw the dead m rise, . n 
used you worse than that dead m ; ■■ 
men and women staring and aghast, 11 
men may fear Fresh fire and ruin. n 
true eyes Beheld the m you loved 11 
weds with manhood, makes a m. . 11 
world will not believe a m repents : ir 
Full seldom does a ttt repent, . ■> 
as now Men weed the white horse 11 
a thousand men To till the wastes, 11 
the great Prince and m of men. . >> 
most famous m of all those times, Vivien 
old m, Tho' doubtful, felt the (lattery, 11 
ttt so wrought on ever seem'd to lie 11 
none could find that m for evermore, 11 
ruin'd m Thro' woman the first hour ; >r 
was to be, for love of (Jod and men 11 
Lo now, what hearts have men I . n 
1 .1/ dreams of Fame while woman 11 

Fame with men Being but ampler 11 

for men sought to prove me vile, 11 

good miealoun with good cause. n 

new lord, her own, the first of men. 11 
little glassy-headed hairless ///, . if 
sunders ghosts and shadow-casting m*zi »» 
here was the OT. And so by force 11 
that no /// could see her more, . 11 
old >u Went hack to his old wild . ir 
you are m, you well can understand 11 
sweet Sir Sagramorc, That ardent tn ? m 
whole prey Is m't good name : . ri 

stainless ;// beside a stainless maid ; 11 
* A sober m is Percivale . " 

Arthur,b1ameless Kingand stainless/;; ''., 
' Him ? is he m at all, n 

. m and stainless gentleman, 11 
fun I1:lw; all men true and leal, . 11 

men at most differ as Heaven . 11 
that I had loved a smaller/*// . 11 
loved to make men darker . . n 
worship is allowed Of all men ." . Elaine 
swearing men to vows impossible, 11 

iown before your spear . n 
old, dumb, myriad-wrinkled m, . 11 
I t marvell'd at the wordless m; 11 

he seem'd the goodliest m. . 11 

kindly tn moving among his kind : t, 
speaking of the wordless m . 1. 

tnro' all hindrance finds the m . u 
if seven men had set upon him, . 11 
I am not mat Hiere is the »i.' . 11 
a m Uur-Onr might well perceive . it 
any m that day were left afield, . 11 
Strong men, and wrathful that a strangcrn 
grace and versatility of the m-~ . \% 
hide In - til men , u 

our Lancelot ' that true ////' . 11 

true tn change like a leaf ai last? . i» 
since m's first fall Did kindlier unto//;, ■» 
'.'•r simple blush, . •» 
/// and woman when lliey love their best ■» 



LINE. 

1174 
1178 
1182 
121X 
1212 
1274 
1316 

1321 
1325 
1332 
1345 
1384 
1412 
1424 
1450 
1465 
1505 
1520 
1554 

'579 
1580 
1583 
1652 
1671 
1695 
1716 
1748 
1750 
1784 
1789 
1809 
. 22 

• 39 

• 57 
. 60 
. 212 
. 262 
. 292 
. 310 

• 338 

• 345 

■ 455 

• 467 

• 470 

• 479 

• 489 

• 492 

• 498 

• 547 

• 572 

• 579 

■ 587 

. 605 

. 6;8 

• 630 
. 641 

• 643 
. 663 

• 72' 

• 725 
. J12 

• '3' 
«49"577 

. 170 

• "72 

• »54 
. 265 

• 271 

• 332 

■ 35° 

• 45« 

• 457 

• 458 

• 467 

■ 47' 
. 580 
. 66a 
. 683 

• 8 S5 
. 860 
. 865 



POEM. 

Another world foi the sick m ; . Elaine 

no /// there will dare to mock . n 

mine to love Him of all men . h 

noble m but made ignoble talk. . n 

bid call the ghostly m . . „ 

ghostly tit had come and gone, . 11 

dumb old tn alone Go with me, . n 

tnen Shape to their fancy's eye . 11 

then turn'd the tongueless tn . ,, 

a tn Made to be loved ; n 

now a lonely tn Wifeless and heirless, u 

men worse by making my sin known? h 

a in Not after Arthur's heart ! . n 

Not knowing he should die a holy /// n 
king's blood in a bad in, . . Guinevere 

if a in were halt or hunch'd, . . n 

feast As never tn had dream'd : . 11 

so glad were spirits and men . n 

prophets were they all, Spirits and men." 

King, As well-nigh more than tn, n 

no m knew from whence he came : n 

mystery From all men, like his birth ; 11 

most nobly-manncr'd men of all ; . h 

the best knight and goodliest m, . n 

True men who love ine still, . n 

glorious company, the flower of men 11 

keep down the base in m . . 11 

love of truth, and all that makes a in. n 

that in the worst of public foes . n 

new disease, unknown to men, . n 

worst were that in he that reigns ! h 

no in dream but that I love thee . ■■ 
men look'd upon him favourably : En. Arden 

grave and staid God-fearing in, . n 

he knew the in and valued him, . n 1: 

the best among us — a strong in : . ir 

wed the in so dear to all of them . n 

Surely the m had died of solitude. h 

men Levied a kindly tax . . 11 

Pitying the lonely »«, ... u 

yet a bed for wandering men. . u 

dead m come to life beheld . . >i 

lightly as a sick wis chamber-door, n 

life in it Whereby the in could live J n 

gradually Weakening the m, n 

head high, and cared for no in, he.' >p 

he id is low, and no ///cares for him h 
I am the ///,' 



LINE. 

. 870 
1047 
107 1 
1082 
1093 
1095 
1121 
1244 
1=54 
'355 
1 361 
1407 
1409 
1419 
38 
42 
262 
267 
271 
285 
287 
296 
332 
379 
442 
461 
476 
479 
508 
5'4 
5'9 
556 
56 

113 

t8 S 
292 
481 
622 
663 
66<f 
699 
759 
777 
822 
826 

849 
851 

853 



Sir Aylmer Aylmer that almighty m Aylme>>s F. 13 

sons of men Daughters of God : . 11 

men shall lash you from them . 11 

the fierce old man Follow'd . 11 

m was his, had been his father's . n 

kn«wn a ///, a quintessence of ///, 11 

allowance must be made for men. 11 

hearts of men Seem'd harder too : 11 

haunt a wound, or deer, or men, . 11 

a dead ///, a letter edged with death 11 

thy brother 111, the Lord from Heaven, .. 

often placed upon the sick ill's brow 11 

the m became Imbecile ; . . ir 

(for the /;/ Had risk'd his little) . .SV<i Dreams 

simple Christ to simple men, . 11 

musing on the little lives of men, . 11 

neither God nor /// can well forgive, 11 

surely lives in in and beast . . 11 

/// is likewise counsel for himself . 11 

men and women in dark clusters . 11 

//;<•/; of llesh and blood, and men of stone 11 

dead?' 'The m your eye pursued, n 

devil in ///, there is an angel too, . 11 

strong on his lees, he looks like am Grandmother 2 

father was not the /// t<» s:ive, . 11 

Never a nt could fling him : . 11 

Willy stood up like a ///, . . 11 .45 

he checr'd me, my good ///, . «» .69 

Kind, like a ///, was he ; . . 11 .70 

like a ///, too, would have his way : 11 .70 

and now they're elderly men. . 11 .88 

God, not in. U the Judge of us . n .95 

1 wcunt saay men be luiais, . . .V. Farmer. 27 



44 

325 

330 

344 

388 

410 

453 

57' 

595 

667 

700 

83S 

9 

21 

48 

63 

68 

178 

219 
330 
262 

=67 



266 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

M comes and tills the field . . Tithonus . 3 
this gray shadow, once a m . . 11 . 11 

wealthy men who care not how . t» . 17 

Why should a m desire in any way it . 28 

vary from the kindly race of -men ir . 29 

happy 7nc7i that have the power to die, tr . 70 

each in murmur'd ' O my Queen . The Voyage 63 
phantom bodies of horses and 77ie7i; Boiidicea . 27 
Burnt in each m's blood. . . The Captain 16 
Blood and brains of ineji. . n .48 

dead 7nen lay all over the way, . The Vzctini 21 
If men neglect your pages? . . Spiteful Let. 6 
brute brain within the m's . . Lucretius . 21 
?;z may gain Letting his own life go. it . 112 

Gods there are, for all men so believe if . 117 

wrath were wreak'd on wretched ;;z, it . 128 

men like soldiers may not quit . it , 148 

as the hopes and fears of jnen. . 11 . 180 

what;;z, What Roman would be dragg'd 11 . 230 

beginnings that have made me m 11 . 242 

into 7n once more, Or beast, or bird, it . 244 

not so far when momentary m . ti . 249 

How roughly 7nen may woo thee . m . 269 

Bird's love and 77ze7z's love (rep.) . The Window 68 
And women's love and 7«-?«'j .' . 11 -79 

After-loves of maids and 7nen . it . 130 

?7ianage. 
Hadn't a head to 771, . . . G7'a7idmother 6 

man a7id wife. 

often thought, 'rilmakethenw/zrt'Ztf.' Dora, . 4 
Lord Ronald's, When youxre 7izaw,' Lady Clare 36 
Our bond, as not the bond of ;;z a w, Elaine 1185, 200 

man-al-ar7ns. 
Another hurrying past, a nz-a-a, . E7iid . 1375 

i7iafi-breasted. 
strong 77z-b things stood from the sea, Guinevere . 244 

mane. 
To break my chain, to shake my m: Princess^ ii. 402 
long locks play the Lion's 711 1 . ti vi. 148 

darkness from their loosen'd 7tz's, . Titho7zus . 41 

maizfztl. 
very base Or very ?/z, „ . . Eiiid . . 469 

7naii fulness. 
he, from his exceeding ;?z . . Enid . .211 

ma7i-girdled. 
Than thus m-g here ; . . . Pri7icess, v. 419 

mangled. 
M, and flatten' d, and crush' d, . Maud, I. i. . 7 

vzanhood. 
evil star Drive men in in, ' Love thou thy land* 74 
The darling of my m % . . . Garde?ier sD.i-]i 
more Than growing boys their ;;z ; Pri7icess, iv. 437 
Accomplish thou my m and thyself; ir vii. 344 
civic ;/z firm against the crowd — . it Co7i. 57 

The highest, holiest 711, thou : . InMe7iz.Pro. 14 
truths in ;;z darkly join, . . 11 xxxvi. 1 

wears his 771 hale and green : . it lii. 4 

i7i fused with female grace . . 11 cviii. 17 
glory of 771 stand on his ancient . Maud,\\\.\\. 21 
prince whose ;;z was all gone, . E?iid . . 59 
when it weds with ;;z, makes a man. ti . 1716 

popular name such 711 earns, . Vivien . 636 

grow In use of arms and 771, . Elai7ie . 65 

as great As he was in his ?;z, . Gui7ievere . 298 

ma7iiac. 
Time, a m scattering dust, . . hzMe77t. xlix. 7 

man-i7i-God. 
God-in-man is one with m-i-G, . E71. Arden . 187 

mafikifid. 
like Gods together, careless of;;/. Lotos-E's. . 155 
Altho' I be the basest of ;;z, . . StS. Stylites 1 
my fame is loud amongst ;;z, . 11 .80 

make me an example to ;;z, . . " 185 

in the thoughts that shake ;;z. . Locksley H. 16b 



TOEM. LINE. 

in the tents with coarse m, . . Princess, vi. 53 
had been wedded wife, I knew m, 11 . 307 

Peace and goodwill, to all ;;z. l7iMe?n. xxviii. 12 
This bitter seed among m ; . . it lxxxix. 4 
Ring in redress to all ;;z. . . it cv. 12 

each is at war with ;;z. . . . Mated, I. x, 52 
saving that, ye help to save 171 . Odeo7i Well. 166 
while the races of ;;z endure, . ti . 219 

ampler means to serve ;;z, . . Vivie7t . 339 
golden hopes for France and all ;;z, Aylmer's P. 464 

manlike. 
rued His rash intrusion, 7;z, . . Princess, iv. 186 
i7i end myself ? — our privilege — . Lucretius . 229 

man-minded. 
When his 172-171 offset rose . , Talki7igO. . 51 

manners. 
Her 77i had not that repose . L. C. V. de Vere 39 
Like men, like m: . . Walk.totheM. 55 

Kind nature is the best : those m next it .56 

are indeed the ;;z of the great. . w .58 

cities of men, And ;//, climates, . Ulysses . 14 
the 771 of your countrywomen? . Princess, iv. 133 
sweeter m, purer laws. . . In Mem. cv. 16 

To noble m, as the flower . . n ex. 15 

By the coldness of her m . . Maud, I. xx. 13 
M so kind, yet stately, . . p7iid . 1709 

tenderness Of ;;z and of nature : . Elai7ie . 328 
father's memory, one Of noblest ;;z, Gimievere . 317 
For 7/z are not idle, ... n . 333 

' be vi such fair fruit ? . \\ . 335 

mansio7i. 

have bought A ;;z incorruptible. . Deserted H. 21 

this old i7i mounted high . . Miller's D. 35 

this great m, that is built for me, . Pal. of Art 19 

My spacious ;;z built for me, . it . 234 

Sees a 111 more majestic . . L. of Burleigh 45 

In an ancient ms crannies . . Maud, II. v. 61 

ma7itle (s.) 
sweet Europa's ;;z blew unclasp'd, Pal. of Art 117 
77z's from the golden pegs Droop , Day-Dm. . 39 
His 77z glitters on the rocks — . it . 106 

her blooming ;;z torn, . . . Princess, vi. 129 
spread his ;;z dark and cold, . IizMem. xxii. 14 

A faded ;;z and a faded veil, . Eizid . .135 

brought a ;;z down and wrapt her in it, n . . 824 
vast and shaggy ;;z of his beard . Vivien . 105 

maiztle (verb.) 
Nor bowl of wassail ;;z warm ; . Iiz Me7iz. civ. 18 

17Za7iy-bl0SS077Z i7Zg. 

i7i-b Paradises, .... Boadicea . 43 

many -cobweb' d. 
The dusky-rafter'd 771-c Hall. . E7iid . . 362 

ma7iy-co rridor'd. 
771-c complexities Of Arthur's palace : Vivien . 582 

many-fo U7i ta zkV. 
mfldo.. ..... (Enoize 22, etf>ass. 

maity-headed. 
The 77i-h beast should know. ' You 77zight have won' 20 

maizy-knoited. 
There in the i7Z-k waterflags, . M. d Arthur 63 

many-sh ielded. 
Have also set his m-s tree ? . . Ayli7ier , s P. 48 

ma7zy -sided. 
all forms Of the 7iz-s mind, . . Ode to Mem. 116 

ma7zy- towered. 
To m-t Camelot ; . . . . L. ofShalott, i. 5 

mafzy-w i7Z terd. 
As the J7Z-7U crow that leads . . Locksley H. 68 
m-w fleece of throat and chin. . Vivien . 690 

nzafile. 
This ;;z burn itself away ; , . In Mem. c. 4 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



267 



mar. poem. line. 

scorn At him that m's her plan, . Princess, v. 126 
whatever tempest m's Mid-ocean, In Mem. xvii. 13 
in a comely face with idiot tears . Enid . *399 

m this little by their feuds. . . Sea Dreams 49 
m Their sacred everlasting calm, . Lucretius . 109 
Nothing to m the sober majesties 11 . 214 

marble. 
Stiller than chisell'd in, . . D. o/F. Worn. 86 

As blank as death in /// ; . . Princess, i. 175 
Compact with lucid m's, , . n ii. 10 

I will melt this ;// into wax . . n iii. 57 

half-shrouded over death In deathless ;//.n v. 72 
virgin m under iron heels : . . 11 vi. 331 

Thy m bright in dark appears, . In Mem. lxvi. 5 
as her image in m above ; . . Maud, I. iv. 58 
A mount of ///, a hundred spires ! . The Daisy . 60 

march <s. ) 
ebb and flow conditioning their m, Golden Year 30 
enjoyment more than in this m of mind, Locksley II. 165 
raw world for the m of mind, . Ode on Well. 168 

March (month.) 
thro' wild .1/ the throstle calls, . To the Queen 14 
ashbuds in the front of M.' . . Gardener's D. 28 
Came to the hammer here in M — AudleyCt. . 50 
Flits by the sea-blue bird of M ; . In Mem. xc. 4 
the wreath of M has blossom'd, To F. D. Maurice 43 
swallows in the windy gleams of M : Vivien . 74 
ye bells, in the merry M air 1 . IV. toAlexan. 18 

march (verb.) 

fight and in and countermarch, . AudleyCt. . 39 

M with banner and bugle and fife Maud, I. v. 10 

that I m to meet my duom. . . Guinevere . 447 

marches. 
And there defend his m ; . Enid . 41,1738 

past The m, and by bandit-haunted 11 . . 879 
Lords of waste in, . . . Elaine . 526 

March-morning. 
All in the wild M-m I heard . May Queen, iii. 25 

March-wind. 



whenever a M- w sighs 

mare. 
made a point to post with m's ; 
the gray in Is ill to live with, 



Maud, I. xxii. 40 



Princess, i. 



■a ret. 
There's .1/and Mary, there''. Kate May Queen, i. 6 
1 ' eel pale M, rare pale//, . Margaret 1,54 
What can it matter, .■'/, . " -3= 

Exquisite M, who can tell . *• -36 

I i, a M , . . Sea Dreams 3 
Their M cradled near them, . « -57 

glass with little M's medicine . 11 . 138 

cry Which mixt with little M's, . 11 . 238 



marge. 
round about the fragrant m . 

tnd dry about the ///. 
About the windings of the ;// 
i 1 lie m, 
Horn ;// to m shall bloom 
■ warmth from /// to in. 
every page having an ample m, 
every m enclosing in the mid t 
margin. 
By the m, willow-vcil'd, 
A id bear me to the in; 

, whose in fades forever 
I the in, 



Arabian N's. 59 
M.d Arthur 6.1 

Ed. .Morris . 

In Mem. xii. 

11 xlv. 



94 



Vivien 



7 
16 

5'9 
520 



/-. o/Shalott, i. 19 
. M.d' Arthur 165 
. Ulysses . 20 
Locksley II. 19] 



every m scribbled, crost, and craniiu'd Vivien 



mariner. 
lil'd the weary ins 
M, in, furl youi til ., . 
m, 111, fly no more 
r m's. 

My m's, Soull that have toil'd 

marish. 
thro' the in giccn and still . 



Sea-Fairies . 



I.ntos-Es. 
Ulysses 



42 
173 

45 



Vying Swan 18 



marish-Jlowers. POBBf. line. 
the silvery »/;/"that throng . . Dying Swan 40 

marish-mosses. 
The cluster'd m-m crept. . . Mariana . 40 

marish-pipe. 
moss and braided m-p . . . On a Mourner 10 

mark (s.) 
he thought himself A m for all, IValk.tot/ieM. 65 
thou,' said I, 'hast miss'd thy m, Tiuo Voices 3E8 
push beyond her in, and be Procuress In Mem. Iii. 15 
No single tear, no m of pain : . 11 lxxvii. 14 
master-bowman, he, Would cleave the m. lxxxvi. 30 
men of in are in his territory : . Enid . 1078 

stamp him with her master's m ; . Vivien . 609 

aim'd All at one ///, all hitting : . Aylmer's F. 95 

mark verb.) 
no other tree did in The level waste, Mariana . 43 
1 will stand and m. . . .To J. M. K. 14 
vague in vapour, hard to m; 'Love thou thy land' 62 
vi The landscape winking . /«J/t-///. lxxxviii. 15 
in me and understand, . . . En. Arden . 877 
wine! for your fortunes are to make Aylmer's F. 300 

marked, 
in it with the red cross to the fall, Princess, vi. 25 
m as with some hideous crime, . IiiMem. lxxi. 18 
saw me not, or 111 not if you saw ; Enid . 1718 

Vivien follow'd, but he tn her not ; Vivien . 48 
his face, and 111 it ere his time. . Elaine . 247 

in .Sir Lancelot where he movedapart. 11 1339 

wave, Returning while none /// it, Sea Dreams 227 

market. 
Enrich the m's of the golden year. Golden Year 46 
all the m's overflow. . . . Locksley II. 101 
Thro' the hubbub of the m I steal Maud.W. iv. 6S 
Quaint monsters for the m . . En Arden. 535 
across the m to his death, . . Aylmer's F. 820 

market-cross. 
Not only to the m-c were known, En. Arden . 96 

markei-noight. 
'ed my quart ivry m-n . . . N. Farmer. 3 

marr'd. 
whatfi illows? war; Your own work m: Princess, ii. 212 
at our books, and m our peace, . 11 v. 385 

Had tn Ins face, and niark'd it . Elaine . 247 

M as he was, he seem'd the goodliest 11 . 254 

However ///, "of more than twice n . 257 

M her friend's point ...» . 729 

knew the Prince, tho' m with dust, Guinevere . 37 
beat me down, and;// and wasted me, lithouus . 19 

marriage. 

laws of m charactcr'd in gold . Isabel. . 16 
The queen of nt t a most perfect wife » .28 

I have wish'd this///, night and day, Dora . . 19 

true/// lies Nor equal, nor unequal: Princess, vii. 284 

Her slow consent and ///, . . En. Arden . 709 
was an Ayhner-Averill once . . Aylmer's , 

m's are made in Heaven.' . . 11 . i£3 

This blacksmith-border /// — . . 11 . ■' 1 

naked m's Flash from the bridge, 11 . ;t 3 

marriage day. 
In that it is thy tn d . . . InMemCcu. 3 

marriage-hindering. 

filthy///-// Mammon made The harlot Aylmer's ^.37+ 

marriage-liial.tr. 
For the maids and in-iu's, . . Maud. I. xx. 35 

marriage-morn. 
move mc to my m-m, . 'Mt^-ve eastward, etc. 11 

marriage/ 
To thy widow'd m-p's, . . . Locksley II. 82 

married. 

I /// late, but I would wish to sec Dora . . 10 

Who ///, who was like to be, . Aua/ey Ct. . 29 

are you in yet, i-dward Gray?' . Ed. Giay . 4 



268' 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Had m Enid, Yniol's only child, . Enid . . 4 
know you that I am he Who m — En. Arden . 860 
I m her who 7H Philip Ray. i . ir . S61 

marrow, 

M of mirth and laughter ; . . Will Water. 214 

7iiarry. 

Woo me, and win me, and ?n me, The Mermaid 46 
I cannot 7n Dora ; (rep.) . . Dora . . 21 

learninguntothem? They wish'dtow.- Princess,\\. 441 
That in with the virgin heart. InMemAxxxiv. 108 
where the waters 111 — . . . The Brook . 81 

marries her marries her name.' . Ay liner's F. 25 
twenty boys and girls should m on it, tf . 371 

But m me out of hand : . . Grandmother 52 

* M you, Willy ! ' said I, . m -53 

Ask her to m me by and by ? . The Window 91 

marrying. 
could not ever rue his m me — . Dora . . 143 
Driving, hurrying, in, burying, . Aland, II. v. 12 

Mars. 
pointed to il/Ashe glow'd . . Maud, III. yi. 13 

marsh. 
wild the waste enormous in, . Ode to Mem. 101 

marsh-diver. 
m-d"s, rather, maid, Shall croak . Princess, iv. 105 

marsh-ma rigold. 
the wild 111-111 shines like fire . May Queen, i. 31 

mart. 
labour, and the changing m, In MemXxxxyi. 23 

martin. 

Roof-haunting vis warm their eggs : Day-Dm. . 37 
The fire shot up, the m flew, . u . 143 

martin-haunted. 
almost to the 111-h eaves . . Aylmer's F. 163 

Martin's summer 
A M s of his faded love r . Aylmer's F. 560 

martyr. 
all thy ms die one death? . „ StS.Stylites 49 

martyr-flames, 
m-f, nor trenchant swords ' Clear-headed 'friend, 14 

marvel (s.) 
In m whence that glory came . Arabian N's. 04 
The m of the everlasting will, . The Poet . 7 
No in, sovereign lady : . . D. of F. Worn. 97 

Had m what the maid might be, . Elaine . 724 

marvel (verb.) 
1 I m if my still delight . . Pal. of Art 190 

771 what possess'd my brain ; . .In Mem. xiv. 16 
I would not 7)i at either, . . Maud, I. iv. 40 

marvelV d. 

all My brethren 711 greatly. . . StS. Stylites 68 

I in how the mind was brought . Two Voices . 458 

Lancelot 711 at the wordless man ; . Elaine . 172 

Mary (see Morrison.) 
'Ave M' made she moan, (rep.) Mariana in the S. 9 
There's Margaret and M, there's Kate MayQueen,\. 6 
Dora tvent to M. yi/sat . . Dora . . 54 
My for the sake of him that's gone, 11 . .60 
Then Dora went to M's house, n ro8 

M saw the boy Was not with Dora. 11 . . 109 
My let me live and work with you : ir . -113 
Dora hid her face By M. . n . 154 

31 took another mate ; . . . u . 166 

home to M's house return'd, . In Mem. xxxi. 2 

mask (s.) 

college and her maidens, empty m's, Princess, Hi. 171 

I was half-oblivious of my 711) . n . 320 

Last night, their m was patent, . it iv. 307 

sleeps or wears the in of sleep, In Mem. xviii. 10 

mix -with hollow m's of night; . 11 lxix. 4 

genial hour with m and mime; . 11 civ. 10 



mask (verb.) poem. line. 

m, tho' but in his own behoof, . Maud, I. vi. 48 

masffd. 
'Albeit so in, Madam, I love the . Princess, ii. 195 
M like our maids, blustering . 11 v. 386 

711 thee from men's reverence up, . ir vii. 322 

mason. 
Cloud-towers by ghostly ins wrought In Mem.\x\x. 5 
White from the 771s hand, . . Enid . 244, 408 

mason-work. 
It look'd a tower of ruin'd m-w, . Vivien . 4 

masque, 
m or pageant at my father's court. Princess, i. 195 

masquerade. 
A feudal knight in silken m, . Princess, Pro.-22'j 

mass [\\e2Lp, etc.) 

nies thick with milky cones. . Miller* sD.. 56 

pick'd offenders from the in . Princess, i. 29 

That jewell'd in of millinery, . Maud, I. vi. 43 

a manelike 711 of rolling gold, . Aylmer's F. 68 

mass {the Eucharist.) 
heard m, broke fast, and rode away : Elaine . 414 
gorgeous obsequies, And m, . n 2326 

massacre. 
whelm All of them in one m ? . Lucretius . 204 

massacred. 
moan of an enemy ?«, . . . Boadicea . 25 

mast. 
wind-scatter'd over sails and ins, . D.qfF. Worn. 31 
high m's flicker'd as they lay afloat; ir . 113 

Ruffle thy mirror'd in, . . .In Mem. ix. 7 

clambering on a in In harbour, . En. Arden . 105 
Over 112 and deck were scatter'd . The CaJ>tain 47 

master (s.) 
church-harpies from the ins feast ; To J. M. K. 3 
you, not you, — the M, Love, . Gardener* sD. 168 
one the ill, as a rogue in grain . Princess, Pro. 116 
Where lies the in newly dead ; . In Mem. xx. 4 
loiter'd in the ins field 11 xxxvii. 23 

of old the Lord and M of Earth, . Maud, I. iv. 31 
M of half a servile shire u x. 10 

doubling all his m's vice of pride . Enid . . 195 
youth who scour'd His m's armour; 11 . . 258 
man is man and m of his fate. n 355 

' Great M, do you love me?' . Vivien . 86 

O my M, have you found your voice? if . 118 

; Nay, m, be not wrathful 11 . 230 

O, m, do you love my tender rhyme? tr . 249 

you seem the M of all Art, if . 318 

would make you M of all Vice.' . ?f . 319 

the great M merrily answer'd . if . 39s 

smiling as a M smiles at one . if . 512 

O My shall we call him overqulck " . 574 

stamp hiin with her m's mark ; . 11 . 609 

With you for guide and m, " . 730 

no more subtle in under heaven . Guinevere . 474 
Enoch stronger-made Was m: . En. Arden . 31 
in of the ship Enoch had served in, 11 . 119 

Become the in of a larger craft, . 11 . 144 

when he does, M of all. . . Aylmer's F. 132 

in flood And m's of his motion, . 11 . 340 

to Lucretius, found Her ??z cold ; . Lucretius . 2 
the m took Small notice, . it .7 

My m held That Gods there are . if . 116 

•master (verb.) 
m's Time indeed, and is Eternal InMem.lxxxiv.65 
when his passion m's him. . . Enid . . 892 

7itaster-bowman. 
the m-b, he, Would cleave the mark. InMe7iz. ]xxx\i.2g 

master-chord. 
the 111-c Of all I felt and feel. . Will Water. 27 

masterdom. 
Contend for lovin-g m.- . . . In Mem. ci. 8 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



269 



mastered, poem. line. 

m by some modem term ; ' Love thou thy land,' etc .-i/a 
call them masterpieces: They m me. Princess, i. 145 
111 by the sense of sport, . . 11 iv. 138 

involved and dazzled down And in, 11 . 431 

such A friendship as had in Time ; f11Mem.lxxxiv.64 

mastering. 
M the lawless science of our law, Aylmet's F. 435 

masterpiece. 
scarce can fail to match his ///.' . Gardener 1 s D. 31 
Nocruml — would call them m's: Princess, i. 144 

mast-head. 
like the mystic fire on a m-h . Princess, iv. 255 

Mastodon. 
nature brings not back the M, . The Epic . 36 

mast- th rouged. 
tt-t beneath her shadowing citadel. CEnone . 116 

match (an equal.) 
lighted on Queen Esther, has her in.' Enid . . 731 

match Imarriagc contract.) 

have set my heart upon a m. . Dora . . 12 

Such a in as this ! Impossible . Aylmer's F. 314 

enough was theirs For twenty tries. 11 . 370 

match (verb.) 
fail to m his masterpiece.' . . Gardener' sD. 31 
Will you in My Juliet? u . 167 

May tn his pains with mine ; . StS. S/ylites 137 
find in loss a gain to in' . . In Mem. i. 6 

match' d. 

flf with an aged wife, . . . Ulysses . 3 

all thy passions, tn with mine, . Locksley //. 151 

Were mellow music in with him. . In Mem. Iv. 24 

cither'.s force was m till Yniol's cry, Enid . . 570 

mate (companion, etc.) 
Voitr pride i^ yet no nt fot mine, L.C. V.de Vere ti 
Mary took another in ; . . /'ora . . 166 

and crushing down his m ; . . Princess, \\. 106 
That I shall be thy in no more, . In Mem. xl. 20 
One that was his earliest in ; . n Ixiii. 24 

Feeling from her m the Deed. . The Brook . 95 
weeping for her murdcr'd m . Enid . 1371 

in haste to join Their luckier trie, " 1423 

his in hereafter in the heavens . Guinevere . 630 

male 'officer.} 
m had seen at early dawn . . En. Arden . 632 
in is blind and captain lame, . The Voyage 91 

mated. 
thou art in with a clown, . . Locksley II. 47 
M with a squalid savage — 11 . 177 

matin-chirp. 
low nt-c hath grown Full quire, . Love and Dutyqs 

matin-song. 
the first in-s hath waken'd loud . Ode tn Mem. 68 
me wild skylark's m-s. . Miller's D. 40 

matron. 
i'd many a maid and tn, . Boadicea . 85 
matter s. I 

No tn what the sketch might be ; Ode tn Mem. 05 

treat m. . . The Goose. . 10 

'd old iris over ; . AudleyCt. . 28 

I 1 nuke tins /;/ plain, . Two Voices 343 

but with time. And he with in, 11 . 377 

this in might be sifted clean.' . Princess, i. 79 

. and this /// hangs : . n iii. 299 

left to do, , 11 iv. 438 

m for a flying smile. . . . In Mem\x\ 12 

rapt in m\ daik and deep . . 11 xevi. KQ 

:i trie of the house, .0 . 31 

What m il I go in. id, . Maud, I xi. 6 

me fret? . . u xiii. 2 

1 them hung: . . . The Brook 144-S 

1 ild turn to dearer m'j ToF.D.Mau 

me Mere "/ "I the fancy, . Vivien . 771 

'what in, so 1 help him back . Elaine 



POEM. LINE. 

Lancelot told This m to the Queen, Guinevere 54 
on a m he of life and death : . Sea Dreams 147 

is a harder tn to fight. . . . Grandmother 32 
M enough for deploring , . 1865-1866 . 8 

matter (verb.) 
What can it tn, Margaret, . . Margaret . 32 
then What m's Science unto men, In Mem. cxix. 7 
' Care not thou ! Whattrisi . Lucretius . 277 

matter-moulded. 
In m-m forms of speech, . , In Mem. xciv. 46 

matting. 
conscious of ourselves, Perused the m: Priucess,\\.^4 

ma ttock-ha rdeii'd. 
labour and the m-h hand, . . Maud, I. xviii. 34 

mature (adj.) 
now is love m in ear.' . . .In Mem. lxxx. 4 

mature (verb.) 
M's the individual form. ' Love thouthy land,' 'etc. 40 

Maud. 

of the singular beauty of M ; . Maud, I. i. (7 

M with her venturous climbings .11 .69 

M the delight of the village, .11 .7° 

M with her sweet purse-mouth .11 -71 

M the beloved of my mother .11 -72 

It will never be broken by M, . 11 ii. 2 

Ah, M, you milkwhite fawn, . ti iv. 57 

M with her exquisite face, . . " v. 12 

M in the light of her youth .11 . 15 

Whom but M should I meet rep.) 11 vi. 7 

If .1/ were all that she seem'd, . 11 36-92 

M could be gracious too, no doubt 11 x. 28 

M, M, M, .1/, They were crying 11 xii. 3 

Where was M f in our wood ; .h .5 

M is here, here, here, 11 .11 

M Is not seventeen, n .IS 

M were sure of heaven 11 -19 

Where is M. M. M. ... 1. .27 

M is as true as M is sweet : . « xiii. 32 

M to him is nothing akin : . . 11 -38 

M lias a garden of roses . . 11 I. xiv. I 

M's own little oak-room . . 11 .9 

(Which M, like a precious stone .11 .10 

looks Upon M's own garden-gate : 11 .16 

Make answer. ,)/, my bliss, . . 11 xviii. 57 

M made my M by that lone . ti .58 

talk To gentle M in our walk . n xix. 13 

And .1/ too. .1/ was moved . . 11 .26 

only ;)/ and the brothel Hung " -35 

M's dark father and mine . . 11 -37 

On the day when At was born ; . 11 .40 

.1/, allho' not blind ... 11 -67 

kind to ;!/.' that were not amiss. .11 .82 

For shall not M have her will ( .11 .84 

For, M, so tender and true, . . 11 . 8s 

can be sweeter Than maiden M . 11 xx. 22 

M will wear her jewels, . . II .27 

glance At M in all her glory .11 -37 

Queen .'/ in all her splendour. .11 . 50 

Forgetful of M and me, . . n xxi. 4 

My .1/ has sent it by thee 11 .9 

into the garden, M, (rep.) . " xxii. 1 

Why should it Took like M f. . 11 II. ii. 39 

ma udltn-moral. 
empty glass That makes me m-m. Will Water. 208 

Maurice. 
Come, M, come : the lawn as yet To F. D. Maurice 41 

mavis. 
The clear-voiced in dwelleth . Claribel . 16 

Mavors. 
cry to thee To kiss thy M . . Lucretius . 8a 

manikin. 

or a draggled in, thou, . . Princess, v. 25 

maxim. 
With a little hoard of m'j , Locksley H. 04 

rugged m'l hewn fiom life j . . Ode on Welt. it + 



CONCORDANCE TO 



may (hawthorn-bloom.) poem. line. 
lanes, you know, were white with m, Millers D. 1 30 
I'm to be Queen o' the M, MayQueen,i. 4, etpass. 
they made me Queen of M; . n ii. 10 

with plumes that mock'd the m . Guinevere . 23 

May (month.) 
Last 71/ we made a crown offlowers: MayQueen,\\. 9 
M from verge to verge, . . Gardeners D. 79 

M with me from head to heel . it .80 

old M's had thrice the life of these) ir _. 83 

temper amorous, as the first of M 3 Princess, i. 2 
murmur'd that their MV/as passing: n ii. 439 

glad at heart from M to M : . InMem.xxii. 8 

branchy bowers With fifty Ms, . » lxxv. 14 
happy morning of life and of M, . Maud, I. v. 7 
M or April he forgot, . . . T/ie Brook . 151 
]ast of April or the first of M) , ti . 152 

mid might and flourish of his M, . Elaine . 553 

touch'd his one-and-twentieth M . En. Arden . 57 
tho' it was the middle of M. . . Grandmother 34 
cuckoo, was ever a M so fine ? . The Window 153 

Mayfly. 
The M is torn by the swallow, 

may-pole. 
And we danced about the m-p 

may time. 

(for the time Was m t . 

■maze (s.) 
gauzes, golden hazes, liquid m's, 
To thrid the musky-circled vis, 
Now burgeons every on of quick 

mazed. 
Thou art in, the night is long, 



. Maud, I. iv. 23 
, MayQueen,\\. 11 
„ Guinevere . 385 

. Vision of Sin 31 
, Princess, iv. 242 
. InMem. cxiv. 2 

. Vision of Sin 195 



learns the use of ' I * and * me* . InMem.xliv. 6 

mead. 

any man that walks the m, . . Day-Dm. . 205 

far and near, on m and moor, . InMem. xxv'ui. 6 

Or simple stile from m to m t . tr xcix. 7 

on by many a level 711, ir cii. 21 

the myriad cricket of the m t . Elaine . 107 

■meadow. 
Thro* quiet ms round the mill, . Miller's D. . 98 
711, set with slender galingale : . Lotos-Es. . 23 
reach'd a m slanting to the North ; Gardener* sD.ioy 
■m smooth from aftermath . . Audley Ct. 13 
How fresh the m's look . . Walk.toiheM. 1 

A sign betwixt the m and the cloud, StS. Stylites 14 
Faint murmurs from the ins come, Day-Dm. . 26 
over brake and bloom And m, InMem. lxxxv. 4 
By vis breathing of the past, . ir xcviii. 7 
I smell the vt in the street ; . . n cxviiii. 4 
In the vt under the Hall ! . . Maud, I. v. 2 
move to the m and fall before Her feet ir . 25 

her feet have touch'd the m's . u xii. 23 

to the in and on to the wood . i» xxii. 37 

?n your walks have left so sweet ir -39 

She is walking in the ?n y . . 11 II. iv. 37 
She is singing in the in, ti .40 

A daughter of our m's, . . The Brook . 69 

bore your name About these m's. 11 . 220 

m where the jousts were held, . Enid . . 537 
up the vale of Usk By the flat m, ir . . 832 
■m gemlike chased In the brown wild if 
growing longest by the ins edge, 11 
blossom-dust of those Deep m's Vivien 
green light from the m's underneath Elaine 
in the m's tremulous aspen-trees 
the lists By Camelot in the m, 
dim m toward his treasure-trove, 
dewy Northern ins green. . 
where it dash'd the reddening m 
O the woods and the m's 
Ms in which we met 
By m and stile and wood . 11 191 

Over the m's and stiles, . w 199 



Ay liner's F. 
The Voyage 
Eucretins . 
The Window 1S2 



1047 
1 106 
■ 13 1 

• 4o7 

• 409 
428 

53i 
36 

49 



7iieadow-bases. poem. line. 
From level m~b of deep grass . Pal. of Art 7 

me a dow-cra ke. 
the m-c Grate her harsh kindred . Princess, iv. 106 

meadow-gra ss. 
come and go, mother, upon the vi-g, May Queen ,1.33 

meadow-ledges, 
m-l midway down Hang rich in flowers, CEnone 6 

vie a dow-sweet . 
waist-deep in m-s. . . . The Brook . 118 

meadow-trenches. 
by the m-t blow the faint sweet . May Queen, i. 30 

meal (repast.) 
sweetest m she makesOn the first-born Vision qfSini4$ 

meal (flour. ) 
Made misty with the floating m. . Miller's D. 104 
Some pretext of fineness in the m. En. Arden . 338 

meal-sacks. 
The m-s on the whiten'd floor, . Millers D. 101 

mealy-mouth' 'd. 
nursed by m-711 philanthropies, . The Brook . 94 

mean (adj.) 

weep for a time so sordid and ;/z, Maud, I. v. 17 

the proud man often is the m, . Enid . . 449 

never yet had look'd so ?;z. if 610 

mean (verb.) 
which you had, I m of verse . The Epic . 26 

For they know not what they m. Vision of Sin 126 
tears, I know not what they m. . Princess, iv. 21 
spirit does but m the breath : . In Mem. Iv. 7 
rose-garden And m to linger in it Maud, I. xx. 42 
' What m's the tumult in the town?' Enid . . 259 
no ; I do not m blood : . m 1187 

good king vis to blind himself, . Vivien . 632 
I do not m the force alone, . . Elaine . 470 
Nay, I m nothing ; so then get you if . 772 

What might she m by that? . n . 830 

m Vileness, we are grown so proud— Aylmer'sF. 755 
I m your grandfather, Annie : . Grandmother 23 
Whether I 111 this day to end myself, Lucretius 146 

mechid. 

An* I niver knaw'd whot a m . N. Farmer 19 
I m to a stubb'd it at fall, . . if .41 

Done it ta-year I m, ... t» . 42 

meaning (part.) 

life He gave me, in to be rid of it. Enid . 1701 

111 by it To keep the list low . Vivien . 441 

m all at once To snare . . . Elaine . 71 

meaning (s.) 
So Was their in to her words. . The Poet . 53 

Like a tale of little m . . . Lotos-Es. . 164 

take the in, Lord : . . St S. Stylites 21 
A m suited to his mind. . . Day-Dm. . 208 
To search a m for the song, . . ir . 247 
if you find a 111 there, it . 270 
Nor the m can divine, . . , L. of Burleigh 54 
since we learnt our m here, . . Princess, iii. 206 
there's a downright honest m in her ; 11 v. 270 
Her secret m in her deeds . . In Mem. liv. 10 

1 will not ask your in in it : . . Enid . 1591 
guess'd a hidden in in his arms, . Elaine . 17 
thinking that he read her 111 there, ir . 87 
nothing to her : No m there, . En. Arden . 495 

meanness. 
sense Of m in her unresisting life. Aylmers F. 801 

means. 

a gentleman of broken in . . Princess, i. 52 

works in the very in of life . . Maud, I. i. 40 

bore The m of goodly welcome, . Enid . , 387 

m were somewhat broken into tf 455 

ampler m to serve mankind, . Vivien . 339 

should strike upon a sudden m . it . 509 

;;z to pay the voice who best . En. Arden . 265 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



27r 



meant. POEM. LINE. 

alien lips. And knew not what they m; Princess.iv. 102 
vacant chaff well /// for grain. . In Mem. vi. 4 
She in to weave me a snare . . Aland, 1. vi. 25 
death-white curtain m but sleep, . 11 xiv. 37 
met, but only vt to part, . . The Letters 12 
what m the hubbub here ? . . Enid . . 264 
vt to eat her up in that wild wood . Vivien . 109 

vt to stamp him with her master's mark 11 . 609 

vt once more perchance to tourney in it Elaine . £06 
rough sickness ///, but what this >u 11 . 884 

(He in to break the passion in herj 11 1073 

' the simple, fearful child ^/nothing, Guinevere . 368 
never /// us anything but good. . En. Arden . 888 
you find That you in nothing — , Aylmer's F. 313 
I should find he in me well : . . Sea Dreams 149 
he m, he said he in, Perhaps he in, 

or partly m you well.' 11 . 174 

but I 111 not thee ; 1 111 not her, . Lucretius . 85 
m Surely to lead my Memnius . " . 118 

M f I m ? I have forgotten what I /// : 11 .121 

That she but in to win him back, , 11 . 275 

measure (s.) 
hearts of salient springs Keep in . Adeline . 27 
one that rose Twenty by m ; . St S. Stylites 88 

And wanton without in ; . . Ampkton . 58 
Tread a in on the stones, . , Visiono/Sin 1S0 
The highest is the 111 of the man. . Princess, li. 141 
draw The deepest m from the chords: In Mem.xWW. 12 
by the in of my grief ... n Ixxiv. 3 

The rich Virgiiian rustic in . . The Daisy . 75 
meted by his in of himself . . Aylmer's F. 316 

measure (verb. ) 
m time by yon slow light, . . St S. Stylites 93 

measured. 
three paces til from the mound, . Princess, v. 1 

measuring. 
jEonian music 111 out . . .In Mem. xciv. 41 

meat. 
ev'n of wretched wand drink, . Maud, I. xv. 8 
with knife in /// and wine in horn. Vivien . 544 

with m's and vintage of their best Elaine . 266 
the m's became As wormwood, , » 739 

Had whatsoever 111 he lung'd for . Guinevere . 263 

viechanic. 
the raw vis bloody thumbs . Walk, to the J/.67 

vtedicine. 
blush and smile, a m in themselves Princess, vii. 47 
glass withlittle Margaret's ///in it ; Sea Dreams 138 

meditated. 
while I /// A wind arose . . Princess, i. 95 

meditating-. 
long and bitterly m. . . . Boadicea . 35 

meditation. 
In a silent in Eleanore . 105 

medley. 
This -.oere a ml wc should have him Princess,Pro.i-ip 

meed. 

claiming each This /// of fairest . CF.uone . 85 

The m of saints, the white robe . S/S. Stylites 20 

this was my 111 for all. . . . Princess, iv. 283 

meek, 

lips depress'd as he were >//, . A Character 25 

And Dora promised, being ///. . Dora . . 44 
arc very mild and /// : . Two Voices 250 
vi Seem'd the full lips, . . . Princess, vii. 210 
why come you so cruelly m, . Maud, I. in. 1 
maiden of our century, yet most m; The IS rook 68 
how /// soe'er he seem r hunter Haute 155 

Aylmer's F, 753 

meeker. 
M than any child to a rough nurse, Elaine . 353 

meekness. 
Shaped her heart with woman's m L. 0/ Burleigh 71 



meet (adj.) poem. line. 

AT is it changes should control Love tlwu thy land' 41 
not ///, Sir King, to leave thee thus, M.d' Arthur 40 
scarce vt For troops of devils, . SlS. Stylites 3 
whole, and clean, and in for Heaven. 11 . 210 

surely rest is ///; .... In Mem. xxx. 18 
Becoming as is /// and fit . . >i xxxix. 14 
only m for mowers ; ' . . . Enid . 1058 

/)/ for the reverence of the hearth, Aylmer's F. 333 
should pause, as is most /// for all 1 Ttthonus , 31 

meet (verb.) 
clothe the wold and /// the sky . L.n/S/talott, i. 3 
could /// with her, The Abominable, ilinotte . 219 
until he /// me there ! . . . MiiyQueeit,m. 14 
token when the night and morning m : 11 22 

She heard the torrents ///. 'OJolUsat Freedom, etc. 4 
should /// the offices of all, . . M '. d' Arthur 125 
trie a friend who hails him, . Walk, to the M. 34 
robed and crown' d, To /// her lord, Godtva . 78 
two likes might in and touch. . Tivo Voices 357 
airs of heaven That often /// me . Sir Galahad 63 
Sometimes two would /// in one, , Will Water. 95 
To /// and greet heron her way ; . Beggar Maid 6 
loved to m Star -sisters . . Princess, ii. 405 

endured to m her opening eyes, . ?r iv. 177 

fear'd To vi a cold ' We thank you, 1. . 309 

like lire he ins the foe, ti . 560 

to /// us lightly pranced Three captains 1 v. 244 

drew Her robe to m his lips, . 11 vi. 140 

Psyche as she sprang To /// it, . 11 . X93 

/// her Graces, where they deck'd her » vii. 153 
In which wc two were wont to ///, /// Mem. viii. 10 
1 shall know him when we ///: . 11 xlvi. 8 

envying all that m him there. . 11 lix 8 

seem to /// their least desire, . 11 Ixxxiii. 37 

O tell me where the passions m, . 11 Jxxxvii. 4 
vis the year, and gives and lakes 11 cxv. 3 

And unto meeting when we ///, . 11 cxvi. 7 

they /// they look And brighten . 11 Con. 30 

To in and greet a w Inter sun : . " .78 

Whom but Maud should I m . Maud, I. vi. 7 
She remembers it now wc ///. . 11 .88 

woody hollows in which wc in . n xxii. 43 
When I was wont to /// her . . nil. iv. 5 
In a moment wc shall /// . • 11 • 39 

And the faces that one m's -93 

farm where brook and river ///. . The Brook . 38 
never ran : she moved To /// me, . 11 .88 

' Cold altar, Heaven and earth shall /// The Lett, n 7 
To /// the sun and sunny waters, . The Daisy . 1 1 
m's the surging shock, . .11 ill . . 8 

may in the horsemen of Earl Doorm, Enid . 1141 

Moving tow him in the castle court .Elaine . 175 
suddenly move, M in the midst . 11 . 456 

we two May /// at court hereafter : 11 . (03 

never loved him: an I /// with him, 11 1062 

in state to court, to /// the Queen. 11 jm8 

as it were, Diamonds to m them, >■ 1230 

if thou tarry we shall »« again, . Guinevere . 89 
if we 111 again, some evil chance . 11 .9° 

t*> /// And part fur ever, . n • 97 

that 1 march to /// my doom. , » . 447 

We two may m before high God, . 11 . 5(0 

/// myself Death, or I know not what 11 . 570 

round again to /// the day . . En. Arden . 823 
broad seas swell'd to m the keel, . The Voyage 13 
nothing that she vis with base, . On a Mourner 4 
"O years, that /// in tears, . . iS6i;-i8f.6 . 4 
Two little hands that ///, . The Window 134-7 

meeting (part ) 
Two strangers m at a festival ; . Circumstance 3 
stranger ///them had surely thought Lmd . .883 

meet:' 
might I tell rt m's. of farewells— Gardener sD. 246 
A ///somewhere, love with love, In. Mem. Ixxxiv.99 

Their m's made December June,, n xevi u 

l*3to /// when wc meet » cxvi, 7 

For the /// of the morrow, . . Mmid,l\.i 

perilous nr under the tall pines /•. 414 

oft at Bible m's, o'er the lest . Sea Dreams 10, 



272 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Meg. POEM. LINE- 

tavern-catch Of Moll and M, . Princess, iv. 140 

melancholy. 

the influence of mild-minded m; . Lotos-E's. . 109 

Your m sweet and frail . . . Margaret . 7 

Settled a gentle cloud of m ,* . Princess, iv. 547 

To beguile her «z," . . . Maud, I. xx. 3 

fell upon him a great m; . . Vivien , 45 

have broken up my in.' . 11 . .116 

came a cloud Of in severe, . . Elaine . 324 

lived a life of silent in. . . . En. Arden . 259 

Melissa. 

M, with her hand upon the lock, . Princess, ii. 301 

( Ah — M — you! You heard us?* 11 . 309 

M hitting all we saw ti . 444 

approach'd M , tinged with wan . it iii. 9 

pardon, sweet M, for a blush?' . n . 50 

M shook her doubtful curls, . ir -59 

Shame might befal M, n . 132 

Cyril kept With Psyche, with M Florian 11 . 337 

lilylike Afdroop'd her brows ; . 11 iv. 143 

last of all, M: 11 . 211 

shaken with her sobs, M knelt ; . ti . 271 

stoop'd to updrag M: 11 . 348 

with her oft, M came ; . 11 vii. 41 

mellay. 
here and everywhere He rode the m, Princess, v. 491 

mellow. 

as his brain Began to m, . . Princess, i. 17S 

mellow-deep. 
Drawn from each other m~d ; . Eleanore . 67 

mellowed. 

m all his heart with ale, . . The Brook . 155 

mellowing. 
into mournful twilight m, . . Princess, vi. 174 

mellowness. 

Touch'd by thy spirit's in, . . Eleanore . 103 

melody. 

ancient in Of an inward agony, . Ciaribel . 6 

with light And vagrant melodies . The Poet . 17 

modulated so To an unheard m, . Eleanore . 64 

drew Rivers of melodies. . . Pal. of Art 172 

Plenty corrupts the in . . . The Blackbird 15 

with precipitate paces To the ?«, . Vision of Sin 38 
The nerve-dissolving m . 11 -44 

chanted a m loud and sweet, . Poet's Song . 6 

herald melodies of spring . . InMern,xxxviu.6 

And talk and minstrel in . . Elaine . 267 

melon. 
A raiser of huge ins and of pine, . Princess,Con. 87 

Melpomene, 
my M replies, .... In Mem. xxxVii. 9 

melt. 
I wish the snow would in . . MayQueen'ii. 15 
from it in the dews of Paradise, . St S. Stylites 207 
shall slowly in In many streams . Golden Year 33 
I will in this marble into wax . Princess, iii. 57 
embrace me, come, Quick while I m; u vi. 268 

M's mist-like into this bright hour 11 vii. 334 

in the waxen hearts of men.' . InMent.xxi. 8 

They in like mist, the solid lands u cxxii. 7 
warmth within the breast would in 11 cxxiii. 13 
A purer sapphire m's into the sea. Maud, I. xviii.52 
M into stars for the land's desire ! IV. to Alexan. 21 

melted. 
before his burning eyes M like snow. The Poet . 40 
The twilight m into morn. . . Day-Dm. . 18c 
911 Florian's fancy as she hung, . Princess, iv. 351 
7it into mere effeminacy ? . . Enid . . 107 
Amazed and m all who listen'd . En. Arden , 650 

melting, 
■m the mighty hearts Of captains D. ofF. Wom.ij$ 

member (M.P.) 

The Tory m's elder son . . Princess, Con. 50 



Memnius. poem. line. 
Surely to lead my M in a train . Lucretius . 119 

Memnon. 
from ./1/drew Rivers of melodies. . Pal. of Art 171 
jW smitten with the morning Sun." Princess, iii. 100 

memorial. 
I stored it full of rich in : . . Princess, v. 381 

memory. 
Thou dewy dawn of m. (rep.) . Ode to Mem. 7 
Unto mine inner eye, Divinest.A/7 11 . 50 

hast thou done, great Artist M, . » .80 

Makes thy m confused : . . A Dirge . 45 
His in scarce can make me sad. . Miller sD. . 16 
laid Since my first mV . . Pal. of Art . 236 

put strange memories in my head. L,. C. V. de Vere 26 
brood and live again in in, . . Eolos-E's. . 110 
Dear is the m of our wedded lives, 11 .314 

No m labours longer from the deep D. of F. Worn. 273 
His in long will live alone . . To J. S. . 49 
M standing near Cast down her eyes, ir . 53 



Revolving many memories, . 
So blunt in m, so old at heart, 
this orbit of the in folds 
came M with sad eyes, 
the most blessed 111 of mine age. 
learn to slight His father's ?n ; 
to Ms darkest hold, 



M. d' Arthur 270 

Gardener s D. 52 

11 • 73 

11 . 238 

11 . 273 

Dora . .151 

Love and Duty 87 



Drug thy memories, lest thou learn it, Locksley /A77 



Princess, ii. 

11 vi. 

11 vii. 
In Mem. xliv. 
11 lxxxix. 
ti xci. 

11 xciii. 
11 xciv. 
if xcviii. 
it xcix. 



Con. 
Maud,\\. iv. 
Ode on Well. 



112 
34i 
369 
375 
376 
293 
96 
9i 



The in of the wither'd leaf . . Two Voices 

Because my m is so cold, 

The haunts of 111 echo not. . 

Incompetent ofm: 

in dealing but with time, 

From out a common vein of m 

Rose from the distance on her in 

memories of her kindlier days, 

whence clear in may begin, 

count their memories half divine 

I hear a wind Of m murmuring 

The in like a cloudless air, . 

for intellect to reach Thro' m 

Memories of bridal, or of birth, 

Some gracious 111 of my friend ; 

year by year our m fades 

lands where not a m strays, . 

To whom a thousand memories call 

My drooping in will not shun 

Mix not m with doubt, 

brawling memories all too free 

to His./!/ — since he held them dear Ded. of Idylls 

Nor let me shame my father's 711, Guinevere . 316 

Her 111 from old habit of the mind 11 . 376 

thousand memories roll upon him, En. Arden 725 

old, and a mine of memories . Aylmer's E. 10 

left their memories a world's curse — 11 . 796 

painting some dead friend from m ? Coquette, iii. 4 

Hope and M, spouse and bride, . On a Mourner 23 

mend. 
How m the dwellings of the poor To F. D. Maurice 38 

mended. 
Robins — a niver m a fence : . N. Farmer 50 

Mene. 
Wrote ' M, m, y and divided quite Pal. of Art 227 

mentioned. 
bill I in half an hour ago !' . Day-Dm. . 160 

day, that Enoch m, came . En r Arden . 238 

merchant. 
As tho' they brought but m's' bales, In Mem. xiii. 19 

vierclian iman. 
served a year On board a in, . En. Arden . 53 

Mercury. 
as it were with M's ankle-wing . Lucretius . 198 

mercy. 
God in his m lend her grace, L.ofShaloit, iv. 53 

He taught me all the m, . . Alay Queen, i'u. 17 
Have in, Lord, and take away my lSV^S". Stylites 8 
Have m, in; take away my sin. . n 44, 83, 118 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



iS77 



ah God's m what a stroke 
His m choked me. 



POEM. LINE. 

Elaine . 24 

Guinevere . 609 



mere. 

Crimsons over an inland in . . Elednore . 42 

fling him far into the middle in : . M.d' Arthur 37 

voice, or else a motion of the in. . 11 -77 

and paced beside the 111, . . 11 -83 

drew him under in the in. . . 11 146, 161 

on the in the wailing died away. . ti . 272 

When nis begin to uncongcal, . Two Voices 407 

bare me, pacing on the dusky iff. Elaine 1401 

fling me deep in that forgotten in, 11 1416 

merge, 
m ' he said ' in form and gloss In Mem. lxxxviii. 41 

merged. 
fulfill'd itself iff in completion. 
loug disquiet in in rest. 

merit (s. ) 
m lives from man to man, 
makes by force his in known 
1'hat were a public in, far, . 



. Gardener* 'sD. 234 
. Two Voices 249 

. In Mem, Pro. 35 
11 hclii. 9 

. Maud, II. v. 91 

merit (verb.) 
is it I can have done to m this; 1 . St S. Stylites 132 
m well Your term of overstrain'd. Vivien . 3S5 

Merlin. 
M sware that I should come again M.d' Arthur 23 

At M's feet the wily Vivien lay . Vivien . 5 

M, who knew the range of all .11 . 23 

she follow'd .)/ all the way, . . 11 .52 

M once had told her of a charm, .it -54 

'*> M, do you love me?" rep.; .11 .84 

ced his hand in hers . . <> 139-320 

O, M, teach it me. ..... . 180 

O, . '/. may this earth, if ever I, . 11 . 195 

M loosed his hand from hers 11 . 206 

d and ball" believed her . • » . 250 

answer'd M, careless of her words. .. 550-604 

M, to his own heart, loathing, 11 . 639 

Vivien deeming j*f overborne ■■ . 649 

' O .'/. tho' you do not love me, save, " . 793 

her M, the one passionate love . 11 . 804 

M, ovcrtalk'd and overworn, . 1: . 814 

mermai I. 
With the >ff\j in and out of the rocks. The Merman 12 
would be A in fair, . . '/Vie Mermaid 2, 9 

mermaiden. 

in the light the white in swam, . Guinevere . 243 
He heard a fierce 111 cry, . . Sailor Boy . 6 

merman. 
would be A m bold . . . The Merman 2,8 
all the mermen under the sea . The Mermaid '38 
and play With the mermen . . .. .34 

bold merry mermen under the sea : 11 .42 

mer rily ■ b lowing. 
m-b shrill'd the martial fife ; . . Princess, v. 241 

merriment. 

With m of kingly pride, . . Arabian .Vs. 151 

merry. 

Ill, make in and carouse, . Pal. of Art 3 

m Maui, 1. xau 101 

I make 11-. in as we may. . Enid . . 373 

m,ask'd Limours h 114', 

irts, And make him in En. Arden . 199 

ler . •> . 386 

lie in all birds tu-d.iy rup. ) . . The Window 144 

merry-making. 
mirth It here or m-m sound. . Deteried H. 14 

while the rest were loud in m, . En. A rden . 77 

Mersey. 
Newcomers from the M, . Ed Morris 10 

ittt-siirs. 
m of the jasmine and the lose : . Prinettt, i. 210 



message. poem. line. 

flash'd a saucy m to and fro . . Princess, Pro. 78 
a 111 here from Lady Blanche.' . ti ii. 298 

ceasing, came a m from the Head. 11 iii. 152 

With m and defiance, went andcame; 11 v. 360 

Some dolorous 111 knit below . Jn Mem. xii. 3 

Till on mine ear this m falls, . 11 lxxxiv. 18 

Yniol with that hard m went : . Enid . . 763 
with His 111 ringing in thine ears, Ay liner's F. CC6 
the vi is one of Peace. . . . Grandmother 96 



messuages. 
lands in Kent and m in York, 



met. 



Ed Morris 127 



statesmen at her council 111 . . To l/ie Queen 29 
talking to himself, first m his sight: Love and Death b 
111 with two so full and bright — . Miller's D. fc6 
angels rising and descending m . Pal. 0/ Art 143 
When thus he 111 his mother's view, L.C. V.deVere 34 
or as once we m Unheedful, . Gardener 

I in my lady once : . . . Walk.totheM.40 
those moments when we m . . Ed. Morris 69 
crown of all, we in to part no more 11 . 70 

we m ; one hour I had, . . i» . 104 

am a part of all that I have in; . Ulysses . 18 
M me walking on yonder way, . Ed. Gray . 1 
Here Cyril m us, A little shy . Princess, v. 42 
And ever m him on his way . . Jn Mem. vi 22 
all we 111 was fair and good (xxiv. 5) ti xxiii. 17 
From every house the neighbours m, 11 xxxi. 9 
1 in with scoffs, I in with scorns . 11 lxviii. 9 
For other friends that once I m; . 11 lxxxiv. 58 
God and Nature 111 in light ; . 11 ex. 20 

Unpalsied when he in with Death, 11 cxxvii. 2 
I in her to-day with her brother, . Maud, I. iv. 14 
To entangle me when we in, . 11 vi. 28 

To find they were in by my own ; 11 viii. 7 

Alas for her that m me, . 11 II. iv. 73 

111 the bailiff at the Golden Fleece, The Brook . 146 
then we in in wrath and wrong, . The Letters 1 x 
We m, but only meant to part. .. .12 

when they in In twos and threes . Enid . . 56 
descending m them at the gates. .11.. 833 
M his full frown timidly firm, .... . 950 
in her, Vivien, being greeted fair. Vivien . it 

often when they m Sigh fully .11 -37 

here we ;//, some ten or twelve . .. . 257 

one a king, had in And fought . Elaine . 40 

oft they 111 among the garden yews. .. . 642 

They m, and Lancelot kneeling utter'd " 1 1 73 

their eyes in and hers fell, . . 11 1303 

And still they lit and in. . . Guinevere . 94 
Passion-pale they m And greeted >> . 98 

once by night again the lovers m. Ay liner's F. 4 1 3 
in him suddenly in the street, . Sea Dreams 142 
may be m and fought with outright, Grandmother 31 
New Year and OKI Year 111, . . 1S65-1S66 2 

Meadows in which we ///. . The Window 185 

metaphysics. 
' How,' she cried ' you love The in '. Princess, iii. 283 

mete. 
I in and dole Unequal law-, . . Ulysses . 3 
111 the bounds of hate and love— . Two Voices 135 

meted. 
As in by his measure of himself, . Aylntei's F. 316 

meteor. 

Some bearded 111, trailing light, L. ofShalott.w.36 

like a ncw-fali'n in on the grass, . Princess, vi. 11; 

Now slides the silent in on, . . m vii tl j 

The in of a splendid season, . . Ay Inter's : 

method. 
M's of transplanting trees, . . Amphion . 79 

metre. 
mellow m's more than cent for cent; The Prrrt; . c 

All 1 om| I in .. m ol I itullus, //.•«..•' 

tical is the dainty 111. . ,, .14 

metrification. 
V luV tins in of CatulliM, . Htndti a ti Ua 

S 



272 



CONCORDANCE TO 



metropolis. poem. line. 

gray m of the North. . . . The Daisy . 104 

mettle. 

It stirr'd the old wife's *», . . The Goose . 26 

j/ietu. 
Here it Is only the m that wails . Sea-Fairies 19 
and wail'd about with m's. . . Princess, iv. 263 

Michael A 7igelo. 
The bar of M A . . In Mem. lxxxvi. 40 

Michaelmas. 
for Squoire come M thirty year. . IV. Farmer 48 

microcosm. 

holy secrets of this m, . . Princess, iii. 296 

mid-channel. 

in the gurgling wave M-c . . Princess, iv. 170 

midmost. 

the m and the highest Was Arac : Princess, v. 246 
at the m charging, Prince Geraint Enid . . 934 

midnight. 
rode till in when the college lights Princess, i. 204 
Sees the midsummer, m, . . n iv. 552 

midnoon. 
It was the deep m ... CEnone . 90 

mid- November. 
as a leaf in m-N is . . . Enid . . 611 

■mid-ocean. 
Than labour in the deep m-o . Lotos-E's. . 172 
whatever tempest mars M-o, . In Mem. xvii, 14 

mid-October. 
To what it was in m-O, . . Enid . . 612 

midriff. 
shake The m of despair with laughter Princess, i. 198 
from the m of a prostrate king — . Ay liner** F. 16 

mid-sickness. 

great knight in his m-s made . Elaine . 874 

midsummer. 

Sees the 771, midnight, . . Princess, iv. 552 

mid-warmth. 
In the m-w of welcome . . Enid . 1129 

mien. 

One her dark hair and lovesome m. Beggar Maid 12 

might. 

Losing his fire and active m . Eleanore , 104 

O Love, Love, Love ! O withering in ! Fatima 1 
tasks of in To weakness, ( Love thou thy land,' etc.13 

smote on all the chords with 7n; . Locksley H. 33 

great year of equal 771 s and rights, Princess, iv. 56 

could wing my will with m . In Me77i. xl. 10 

with 7)i To scale the heaven's . 11 cvii. 6 

In the mid 771 and flourish of his May, Etai7ie . 553 

viightier. 
things seen are vt than things heard, En. Arde7i 767 

mightiest. 

must learn Which is our ;;z, . Elaine . 64 

my right arm, The ?n of my knights. Guiiievere 427 

mighty. 
thou shalt be the 771 one yet ! . Boddicea . 40 

771 igh ty -jn tithed. 
O 771-771 inventor of harmonies . Milton . 1 

mignonette. 

A long green box of 771, . . Miller's D. . 83 

parlour-windows and the box of in. May Queen, ii. 48 
miss'd the 771 of Vivian-place, Pri7icess, Pro. 164 

Milan. 

O M, O the chanting quires . The Daisy . 57 

771 i Id. 
to make 771 A rugged people, . Ulysses . 36 
His lips are very m and meek : . Two Voices . 250 



POEM. LINE. 

mother was as 771 as any saint, . Princess, i. 22 
771 the luminous eyes, ... u vii. 211 

stern were 771 when thou wert by, InMe77i. cix. 9 
A higher hand must make her ;«, it cxiii. 17 

However 771 he seems at home, . Elaine . 311 

milder. 

M than any mother to a sick child, Elai7ie . S54 

mildewed. 

Who had m in their thousands, . Aybner*s F. 383 

mild-eyed. 

The 7n-e melancholy Lotos-Eaters Lotos-E's. . 27 

mildly. 

77i, that all hearts Applauded . E7tid . 1805 

mild'77ii7ided. 
the influence of m-771 melancholy , Lotos-Es. . 109 

mile, 

a ??z, More than a m from the shore, Maud, I. be. 1 

milk. 

fed you with the 771 of every Muse ; Princess, iv. 276 
The 77i that bubbled in the paii, InMem. Ixxxviii. 51 
clean as blood of babes, as white as m: Vivien. 194 
like the kid in its own mother's ?n ! it . 718 

milk-bloom. 

One long 771-b on the tree ; . . Maud, I. xxii 46 

milkier. 

77i every milky sail . . . hi Mem. axiv. 10 

m ilking-mazd. 
burnt the grange, nor buss'd the 771-771 Pri)tcess,v. 213 

milkmaid. 

When merry m's click the latch, . The Owl, i. 8 

77iilky-bcll d. 
A m-b amaryllis blew . . Tfie Daisy . 16 

milky-way. 

this, a 771-1x7 on earth . . * AylmeSs F. 160 

milky-ivhite. 
Taller than all his fellows, 77t-w, . Enid . . 150 

mill. 

quiet meadows round the 771, . Miller's D. o3 

brook groan'd beneath the 771; . 11 . 113 

yon old 7/* across the wolds ; . it 240 

'ground in yonder social ;« . In Me 7n. Ixxxviii. 39 

climbs to one tall-tower'd m; . En. Arden . 5 

street that clamber"d toward the 7)i tf . 60 

flour From his tall 711 . . 11 . 340 

Lords of his house and of his ?;z . 11 . 348 

Blanch'd with his 7n, they found . ir . 364 

street, the 771, the leafy lanes, . 11 . 60S 

milldam. 

The 77t rushing down with noise, . Milter s D. 50 

millenniwn. 

let Thy feet, 771 s hence, be set , Two Voices 89 

miller. 

I see the wealthy 771 yet, . . Miller s D. 1 
It is the 771's daughter, n . 169 

Philip Ray the m's only son, . E71. Arden . 13 
'This m's wife' He said to Miriam 11 . 805 

7nilli7iery. 
That jewell'd mass of 771, . . Maud, I. vi. 43 

millionaire. 

New-comers from the Mersey, m's, Ed. Morris 10 

be gilt by the touch of a 7n : . Maud, 1. i. 66 

Britain's one sole God be the ?« ; 11 III. vi. 22 

771 Hi io7i -my riled. 
hide them, 771-771 wilderness, . Lucretius . 2c t 

millstone. 
Mav make my heart as a 771, . Maud, I. i. 31c 

as if he held The Apocalyptic ?;?, Sea Dreams 26 

77 til l-ivhe el. 
Beside the m-uo in the stream, . Miller s D. if 7 



TEXNYSO.V'S WORKS. 



iP 



Milton. roE.M. line. 

M like a seraph strong, . . Pal. of Art 133 

M, a name to resound for ages ; . Milton . 4 



mime. 
genial hour with mask and in ; 



In Mem. civ. 10 



But I cannot m it ; . . . T/ie Owl, ii. 9 

of gems To m heaven ; . Pal. 0/ Art 189 

should in this raw fool the world, Walk, to the M. 96 

mimicry. 
Soul of mincing ml . . . Princess, ii. 403 



Princess, iv. 494 



m's of each other's fame, 

mind (5.) 

rooted in the garden of the m, . Ode to Mem. 
deep m of dauntless infancy. . 11 

ail forms Of the many-sided m, . 11 

honey-converse feeds thy m, Adeline 



. A Character 

. The Poet . 

. Poet's Mind 

. Miller's D. 236 

. Patima . 5 

. CEnoue . 107 

" . 223 

.With Pal. of Art 7 

. Pal. 0/ Art 90 

11 . 126 

11 . 200 

C. V. de Vere 

6 



May Queen, ii. 



stood aloof from other m's 

m's did gird their orbs 
Vex not thou the poet's m (rep.) 
Two spirits to one equal m — 
falling from my constant in, 
with one m the Gods Rise up 
that I might speak my m, 

varieties of mould and m) To 

fit for every mood of m, 
the supreme Caucasian m 
I lake possession of mail's m 
could not stoop to such a in. J 
old time, and all my peace of ;;; 

ring took hold on all my 77/, 11 in. 35 

keep it with an equal 111 . . Lotos-E's. . 153 

ilf a in to die with you, D.o/theO. Year 26 

say a noble m. . . .To J. S. . 48 

1 men, and growth of 77/'j. ' 'Love thou thy land '20 

many m's, 11 . 35 

dividing the swift 111 In act to throw : M. d* Arthur 60 

new men, strange faces, other m's.' 11 . 238 

all my m » uli a doubt) 11 . 258 

my uncle's m will change !' . . Dora . . 45 

■ .1 wayward modern 111 Ed. Mortis 87 

division of the records of the 111' . Locksley II. 69 

more than in this march of m, . » . 165 

left alone, the passions of her 77/, . Godiva . 32 

give him in, the lordliest Proportion Two Voices 19 

truth within thy m 11 . 25 

111 my m 11 . 31 

tinted m,' he said, 11 . 79 

a quiet mind.' . 11 -99 

the whole in might orb about — . 11 . 138 

ihem, . . ■■ -177 

Thai ' ! 'is ;;; . 11 . 292 

1 iii m and frame — . 11 . 366 

I darker ;//. . 11 . 372 

how the m was brought 11 . 458 

A meaning suited to his m. . . Bay-Dm. . 208 

1 of the pensive m : . » . 260 

■ the in, . Will Water. 12 

' Are ye out of your >n, my nurse, . J.ady Clare 21 

And her gentle mwas such . . /.. of Burleigh 74 

brought My book torn: Princess, Pro. 120 

rets of the m : n ii. 160 

them ungofthcframc.ii . 359 

in all things ... 11 iii. 75 

liar with h'-r, . n iv. 210 

11 -341 

" v. 118 

the authentic mother of her m; . ■■ . 423 

iron will was broken in her m, . ■■ vi. 102 

ur ; . 11 . 269 

fcar'd that I my m, . 11 vii. 84 

"■• ; 11 . 268 

all in rce Swav'd to her 11 . 306 

ttt and soul. I ling well, . in M,in. Pro. 27 

mt 11 iii. 16 

without a 111, . 11 xii. 7 

Xviii. 18 

weep the fullness from the m i . 11 xx. 6 



POEM. LINE. 

Nor other thought her m admits InMem. xxxii. z 
Tho' following with an upward m 11 xl. 21 

train To riper growth the m . 11 xli. 8 

So rounds he to a separate m, . 11 xliv. 9 
lives to wed an equal m; . 11 lxi. 8 

makes a desert in the m, . . 11 Ixv. 6 
men and m's, the dust of change, . 11 lxx. 10 
Sung by a long-forgotten m. . 11 Ixxvi. 12 

same sweet forms in cither m. . 11 lxxviii. 8 
An image comforting the m, . 11 Ixxxiv. 51 

on m and art. And labour . . 11 LxxxvL 22 
tasted love with half his in, . . 11 lxxxix. 1 
He faced the spectres of the m . 11 xcv. 15 
He thrids the labyrinth of the m, n xcvi. 21 

with one m Bewail'd their lot ; . n cii. 45 

Ring out the grief that saps the m, 11 cv. 9 

native growth of noble in. . . 11 ex. 16 

she is earthly of the m, . . 11 cxiii. 21 

the works of the men of m, . . Maud, I. i. 25 
He still, for you only trouble the m 11 v. :o 

cut off from the m The bitter springs n x. 48 

The fancy nattcr'd my in, . 11 xiv. 23 

So dark a m within me dwells, . 11 xv. 1 

To the faults of his heart and in, . 11 xix. 68 
111, when fraught With a passion . 11 II. ii. 58 
for she never speaks her m . . 11 v. 67 

awaked, as it seems, to the better/;;; 11 III. vi. 56 
rolling in his m Old waifs of rhyme Tlie Brcok . 198 
raw world for the march of 111, . Ode on Well. it8 
a life, a heart, a m as thine, . Ded. of Idylls 32 

Across her m, and bowing over him, Enid . . 84 
ever in her m she cast about . 11 . . 895 

one 77; and all right-honest friends! 11 . *333 

//; all full of what had chanced, . 11 . 1626 

My m involved yourself the nearest Vivien . 149 

wish'd to give them greater m's : . 11 . 346 

kept his in on one sole aim, . . 11 . 476 

condensation, hard To m and eye ; 11 . 529 

sleek her ruffled peace of tn . . " . 748 

shape and colour of a m and life, . Elaine . 334 

counsel up and down within his 77/, n . 368 

look'd and was perplext in ;;;, . 11 . 834 

So cannot speak my in. . 11 1216 

loyal nature, and of noble ;;;.' . Guinevere . 334 
memory from old habit of the ;// . n . 376 

Philip did not fathom Annie's ;/; : En. Arden . 341 
there is a thing upon my in, 11 . 396 

has been upon my ;;; so long, . 11 . 3^7 

folk that knew not their own m's . 11 . 475 

)/ is 1 hanged, for I shall see him, 11 . 898 

but I in :.ik my ;;;, . Grandmother 53 

;;; Half-buried in some weightier . Lucretius . 8 
my 111 Stumbles, and all my faculties 11 . 122 

How should the in, except it loved them, 11 .164 

mind (verb.) 
m us of the time When we made . Princess, iv. 109 
1 ;;/ him coming down the street ; En. Arden . 848 

mindful. 
Guinevere, not m of his face, . Enid . . 191 

miitd-ntist. 
yourselfthc nearest thing In that m-m: Vivien . 130 

mine. 
labour'd m's undrainable of ore . OZnone . 113 
till he crept from a gutted in . Maud, I. x. 9 

tin full of golden rri s, . Vivien . 437 

proffer of the league of golden m's, n . 496 

Old, and a /;/ of memories — . Aylmer's F. xo 

11 some Peruvian m, . . Sea Dreams is: 
there is no such 111 None ; 11 .78 

she said, ' by working in the m's:' n .110 

mm 

Thought and motion m, M ever. . EUintrrl . 60 
To;;; with the human race, 'Of old sat l-ii-edsiil,' etc. 10 
star-like m's with the stars. . . Sir Galahad 48 

M madness, tn scorn I . . . Vision of. 
Ps ml ;;; with your likes. . Prnuess, vi. vi 

To 7/7 with the bounding main : . In Mem. xi. u 

m's all without a plan T .\ 



272 /6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



In 



POEM. LINE. 

Me7n. cxxviii. 12 
Guinevere . 672 

A rabian N y s. 74 
D.ofF. Wont. 282 
Gardener 'sD. 142 
Princess, ii. 32 
11 v. 401 

Enid . 1447 

En. Arden . 644 
Lucretius , 18 



772 all the world with thee 
m with your rites ; 

mingled. 
Ceasing not, #z, unrepress'd, 
what is ;« with past years, . 
?n with her fragrant toil, 
rank you nobly, m up with us. 
sole men to be m with our cause, . 
And 7)i with the spearmen : . 
ever as he 771 with the crew, 
at times, she m with his drink, 

vii7iiat7tre. 
A 77t of loveliness, .... Gardener sD. 12 

minister. 
Who may 772 to thee ? Summer her- 
self should 771 . . . Ele&7iore . 31 
ministering. 
Friday fare was Enoch's 771. . . En. Arden . 100 

nmiistratiofi. 
And for the power of 771 in her, . Guinevere . 686 

77iiuistries. 
tender 771 Of female hands . . Princess, vi. 56 

Mi7ineih. 
from Aroer On Arnon unto M.' . D. o/F. Woin.o.-^ 



77117 17 tow. 

see the m's everywhere 

mi7ister. 
windy clanging of the 771 clock ; . 
The sound of 711 bells. . 
whose hymns Are chanted in the 772, 

?7ii7ister-fro7it. 
on one of those dark nz-fs — 

77ii7ister~ tower. 
bridge Crown'd with the m-t's. 

minstrel. 
and the 711 sings Before them 
ring the fuller 711 in. . , 

every 771 sings it differently ; 
77 ii7 it. 
he has a 771 of reasons : ask. . 
moulded like in nature's 711; 

vzinied. 
Creation ;?z in the golden moods . 

yizinuet. 
thro' the stately 771 of those days : 

77ii>iute (adj. J 
How exquisitely 772, 

minute {%) 
sweat her sixty 77z's to the death, . 
The 7;2\y fledged with music : ' 
came a 772'^ pause, and Walter said. 
For a 771, but for a 7/2, . 
suffering thus he made Ms an age: 
'Stay a little! one golden 7iz's grace: 

miracle. 
So great a 772 as yonder hilt. 
A certain 772 of symmetry, 
they say then that I work'd 772' s, . 
may be I have wrought some 772V, 
Can I work 772'.? and not be saved ? 
' O 772 of women,' said the book . 
O 772 of noble womanhood ! ' . 
A 7;2 of design ! 

With signs and m's and wonders, 
simple 771 s of thy nunnery ? ' 
he by 772 was approven king : 
as by 772, grow straight and fair — 

miraculous. 
gaped upon him As on a thing 771, 

77i ir age. 
a moist 772 in desert eyes, 



. Millers D. 51 

. Garde7ier*sD. 38 
Talking O. 272 
Vivien . 616 



Sea Drea77is 235 

Garde7ie7*sD. 44 

Lotos-Es. . 121 
/72 Mem. cv. 20 
Vivie7i . 308 

TJie Epic . 33 
InMem.lxxvm. 6 

Princess, v. 186 

Ay liner* s F. 207 

Maud, I. ii. 7 

Golden Year 68 
Pri7icess, iv. 19 
ti Con. 4 
Maud, I. xx. 45 
Enid . . 964 
Elaine . 681 

M.d'Arthur 156 

Gardener sD. 1 1 

St S. Stylites 79 

11 . 134 

If . I48 

Pri7icess,Pro. 35 
n . 48 

Maud, II. ii. 8 

Gui7ievere . 220 
11 . 228 

11 f . 294 

Aylmers F. 676 

Elaine . 452 

Maud, I. vi. 53 



77lire. POEM. LINE. 

great heart and slips in sensual 772, Princess, v. 191 

Miriam (see Lane.) 

Between a cymbal'diT/anda Jael, Princess, v. 500 

'This miller's wife' he said to M . En. Ardeii . S06 

half- frighted, M swore. n . 844 

M watch'd and dozed at intervals, » . 908 



harpies 772 every dish, 



Lucretius . 159 



L.o/S halott, ii.io 
n . 24 

11 . 29 

" 111. 34 
43 
3i 
739 



77iirror. 
moving thro' a 772 clear . 
sometimes thro' the 772 blue . 
To weave the 772'^ magic sights, . n 

He flash'd into the crystal 772, . ir iii. 

The 772 crack'd from side to side ; it 

On the liquid 772 glow'd . Mariana iiitkeS. 

Without a 772, in the gorgeous gown E7iid . 

mirth. 

no more of 772 Is here . . . Deserted H. 13 

murmuring in her feastful 772, . Pal. of Art 177 

not the less held she her solemn 772, 11 . 215 

in a fit of frolic 772 . . . . Talking O. 137 

Marrow of 772 and laughter ; . . Will Water. 214 
Lilia woke with sudden-shrilling 771 Princess, Pro. 210 

etiquette to death, Unmeasured 772; 11 v. 17 

mirthful. 

772 he but in a stately kind 

7niscella7iy. 
Not like the piebald 772, man, 

mischance. 

Seeing all his own 772 — , 

touch of all 772 but came As night 

by great 772 He heard but fragments E7iid 

What I by mere 772 have brought, Elai7ie 



. Elaine . 321 

. Pri7icess, v. 190 

L. of ShalottjVt. 12 
Priiicess, iv. 550 
112 



hearing his 772, Came, 

now that shadow of 772 appear'd 

mischief. 

they kept apart, no 772 done ; 

miscounted. 
Were all 772 as malignant haste 



£71. Arden . 120 

u . 128 

. Priiicess, iv. 321 

. Princess, iv. 315 



77iiserable. 

'Ah, 772 and unkind, untrue, . M. d* Arthur 119 
More 772 than she that has a son . Pri7icess, iii. 243 

If she be small, slight-natured, 772, n vii. 249 

loves most, lonely and 772. . . Enid . . 123 

Hating his own lean heart and 772. Aylmers F. 526 

hide their faces, 772 in ignominy . Boddicea . 51 

misery, 

1 Thou art so full of 772, . . . Two Voices 2 

'Thou art so steep'd in 772, . . u 



47 
382 



misfaith. 
anger born Of your 772; . . Vivien 

misled. 
ill counsel had 772 the girl . . Princess, vii. 226 

7izis77zated. 
Not quite 772 with a yawning clown Enid . 1275 

Miss: 
The wither* d M*es\ how they prose Amphioii . £1 

miss (verb.) 
772 the brother of your youth ? . To J. S. . 59 
fear That we shall 77z the mail : Walk, to the M. 102 
live in vain, and 772, Meanwhile, . Princess, iii. 227 
Why should they 772 their yearly InMem. xxix. 15 
772,' he answer d, 'the great deeds Elaine . . 82 

772 the wonted number of my knights, Guinevere 404 
772 to hear high talk of noble deeds 11 . 495 

7iziss , d. 
thou,' said I, 'hast 772 thy mark, . Two Voices 3S8 
have 772 the irreverent doom ' You might have won 1 9 
772 the mignonette of Vivian-place, Princess, Pro. 164 
O yes, you 772 us much. . . it .167 

here is proof that you were 772 : . n . 175 

blind with rage she 7iz the plank, 11 iv. 159 



TEM.VTSO.VS WORK'S. 



277 



POEM. LINE. 

even those that m her most, In Mem. xxxix. 27 

head hath m an earthly wreath : n lxxii. 6 

in, and brought Her own claw back, Vivien . 349 
Caught at and ever m it, . . En. Arden . 753 



missing. 
one flash, that, m all things else, 

missile. 
whelm'd with m's of the wall, 



Vivien . 781 
Princess, Pro. 45 



perform'd my »« which I gave? . M.d' Arthur 67 

nappy with the m of the Cross ; . Golden Year 43 

Her lavish m richly wrought, In Mem, lxxxiii. 34 

A soul on highest m sent, . . 11 cxii. 10 

If this were all your »: here, . .1 cxxvii. 12 

lushing 7ii to me . . Mand,l.xxi. n 

on a m to the bandit Earl ; . . Enid . 1376 



let our m thro', 



Princess, v. 



»6 



mist. 



thou earnest with the morning m. Ode to Mem. 12,21 
deem'd no m of earth could dull . 11 -38 

see the morning in . . CEnone . 212 
spirits falter in the m, ' You ask me 7uhy,' etc. 3 
tit of morn Clung to the lake. . Ed. Morris 107 
I nswalhed sometimes in wandering m, SlS.Stylilesji 
Rain out the heavy m of tears, . LoveandDnty 43 
As over rainy m inclines , . Two Voices 188 
softly, thru' a vinous in, . . Will Water. 39 
colours gayer than the morning m, Princess, ii. 415 
Answer each other in the ///. In Mem. xxviii. 4 

then 1 know the m is drawn . 11 Ixvi. 13 

I tig, folded in the m. . . 11 ciii. 4 

They melt like m, the solid lands, 11 exxii. 7 

lands in a in of green, . The Brook . 14 

o'er her meek eyes came a happy m Enid 1617 

in the noon of m and driving rain, / 'ivien . 486 
clave Like its own m's . . . Elaine . 39 

lilurr'd by the creeping m, . , Guinevere . 5 
The while ///, like a face-cloth . 11 .7 

iw, Wet with the m' s • 11 . 591 

himself became as m lieforc her, 11 . 598 

ilded nis. ami gleaming halls Tithonus . 
[lion like a m r<.se into towers . <• 

years were a m that rolls away . ' ' ofCautertt. 
' The 



63 

6 
Windowio6 



1'hc m and the rain, the in and the 

mist-llottttl. 
a great m-i light Flared on him . En. Arden . 681 

mistletoe. 
Thorns, ivies, woodbine, m's, 

mist -like. 
Melts ///-/into this bright hour, 
mistress. 
iicf be her own /// still 
. .1 m of the world 
nal ///, but a wife, 
While Annie still was /// ; 



Day-Dm. . 63 
Princess, vii. 334 

. To 7. .9. . 41 
. Gardeners II. 57 
. /// Mem. lviii. 3 
. En. Arden . 26 
mistrust. 
never shadow of >// can cross . Enid 815,1097 

mis t-ivrea then 
Across a break on the m-w isle . En. Arden , 633 

misty. 
Made m with the Boating meal. . Miller's D. 104 
"/ were her meek blue eyes Enid . 1620 

misused. 
CancclI'd a sense m. . . . Godiva 



to m himself with Life. ' Love thou 
1 myself must /// wii 

it m'es man with Hea 
No /// tor rvcr with the past, 
//' the I aming draught Of fever . 
111 not wilh the rest ; 
hand ambrosia, tn The nectar: 

I 1 [ell M with hi. hi 
might m his draught with death. . 



72 

thy land, ' etc. 56 
Lockslty II . 98 

ICet 210 

Will Water. 201 
Princess, ii. 233 

...• 339 

1. 111. 97 

11 v. 445 

" VI. 260 



m with hollow masks of night 

O tell me where the senses m. 

They /// in one another's arms 

May she /// With men and prosper ! n cxiii 

M not memory with doubt, . Maud, II. iv. 57 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. Ixix. 4 

11 lxxxvii. 3 

23 



my nature longer m with thine? . Tithonus 

The sands and yeasty surges m . Sailor Boy . 9 

mixed — mixt. 
m her ancient blood with shame. . The Sisters . 8 
M with the knightly growth . M. d' Arthur 220 

/// with shadows of the common Gardener's D. 134 
A welcome /// with sighs. . . TalkingO. . 212 
lights of sunset and of sunrise m Love and Duty 70 
The elements were kindlier ///.' 
In mosses /// with violet 
M with cunning sparks of hell. 
And /// wilh these, a lady 
/// with inmost terms Of art and science 
m with those Six hundred maidens 
our dreams ; Perhaps he m with them : 
stumbled m with floundering horses. 11 v. 

like night and evening /// . . 11 vi. 

/// with all this mystic frame . In Mem. Ixxvii. 
He /// in all our simple sports ; . 11 lxxxviii. 
M their dim lights, like life and death, n xciv. 
m with God and Nature thou, . " exxix. 11 
a world in which I have hardly m, Maud, I. vi. 76 
M with kisses sweeter sweeter . 11 II. iv. 9 

/// my breath With a loyal people 11 III. vi. 34 

wildly fly, M wilh the flyers . Enid . 1332 

/// Her fancies with the sallow-rifted Elaine . 995 
Nor with them ///, nor told her name, Gjiincvere 146 
/// Upon their faces as they kiss'd Aylmei J s E. 429 
Broke, /// wilh awful light. . Sea Dreams 208-28 
cry Which m with little Margaret's, 11 . 238 

M with myrtle and clad with vine, The Islet . 19 
hands they ///, and yell'd . . Lucretius . 56 



Tiuo Voices 
SirL. andQ. G. 30 
. Vision of Sin 1x4 
Princess, Pro. 32 
»• 4=3 

...• 447 
iii. 204 

v. 487 
"S 
lS 



63 



mixen. 
cast it on the /// that it die.' . 

mixing. 
He m with his proper sphere, 

Mizpeh. 
From M's tower'd gate 

Mnemosyne, 
claspt the feet of a M, . 



. Enid . 



. 672 



/// Mem. lix. 5 
D.o/E. Wont. 199 
Princess, iv. 250 



II 


45 


. Miller's D. . 


57 
42 


. Pal. 0/ Art 


280 


. Lotos-Ks. . 


62 


. Two Voices . 


221 


. Princess, vii. 


206 


Maud, I. xviii. 62 


. Elaine 


1272 


. I'n. Arden . 


613 


. Boiidicea . 


25 



moan (s.) 
'Ave Mary,' made she ///, . Mariana in the -J. 9-21 
breath'd in sleep a lower ///, 
She whispcr'd, with a stifled m 
In firry woodlands making ///; 
the low M of an unknown sea ; 
And make perpetual ///, 
Nor sold his heart to idle m's, 
m of doves in immemorial elms, 
that enchanted /« only the swell 
to all other ladies, I make ///. 
low /// of leadcn-colour'd seas. 
/// of an enemy massacred, . 

moan (verb.) 
what is life that we should /// f May Oueeu, iii. 52 

the deep M's round with many voices. I 'iysses 56 

such as m's about the retrospect, Princess, iv. 67 

hear the dead at midday ///, . Maud. I. vi. 70 

Spirits of the wasle and weald .1/ Guinevere . 129 

or thought she heard them m : . 11 . 129 

lowest roll of thunder m's, . . I.laretius , 108 

bits of roasting ox M round the spit 11 . 132 

moaned. 

She heard, she moved, She ///, . Princes*, v. 

in herself she /// ' loo lale . . Guun-.ere . 

the passion in her /// reply . . In. Aia'cit , 

ever and aye the Priesthood m . TA* Victim 



69 

130 
285 
»3 



moaning 'part.) 

Nor m, household shelter crave . Two I 'oices 

And circle m in the air . /// Mem. xii. 

M and calling out of other lands, / 'ivitn 



'5 
811 



278 



CONCORDANCE TO 



moaning (s.) poem. line. 
The 7n's of the homeless sea, . I?i Mem. xxxv. g 

evening, and the ms of the wind. Elaine . 997 
Yes, as your jns witness, . . Aylmer*s E, 749 

moat. 
malice is no deeper than a m, . Enid . 1189 

?nob (s.) 
Confused by brainless 77z's . . Ode on Well. 153 

mob (verb.) 
From, my fixt height to m me up Princess, vi. 289 

mock (s.) 
the loud world's random vi . . Will . . 4 

mock (verb.) 
I would 77i thy chaunt anew ; . The Owl, ii. 8 
We 77t thee when we do not fear : InMem, Pro. 30 
there will dare to m at me ; . . Elai7ie 1047 

but he never 771 s, .... Guinevere . 625 
' Af me not ! 711 me not ! love let us go.' The Islet 30 
m at a barbarous adversary. . Boadicea . 18 

mock-disease. 

old hysterical m-d should die.' . Maud, III. vi. 33 

mocked. 

77i the wholesome human heart . The Letters 10 

smote his thigh, and ?;z ; . . Elai7ie . 661 

with plumes that 711 the may ; . Gtiinevere , 23 

77i me when he spake of hope ; . ir . 624 

vi him with returning calm . . Lucretius . 25 

mocker. 
Betwixt the 77i's and the realists : Priztcess, Con. 24 

i7zockery. 
my 77iockeries of the world. . . Visio7tofSiiz 202 
I seem A 7/z to my own self. . Prz'zzcess, vii. 317 

not wholly brain, Magnetic 77Zockeries ; I7zMe77z.cx.ix.. 3 
J7z of my people, and their bane.* Gzdtzevere . 522 
m is the fume of little hearts. . m . 626 

A 7/z to the yeomen over ale . Ayhzzer's E. 497 

77zock-heroic : 
The sort of m-h gigantesque . Princess, C071. 11 

mock-honour. 

Did her m-H as the fairest fair, . Ezzid . 1681 

mock-Hy zzzezi . 
M-H were laid up like winter-bats, Prizzcess, iv. 126 

mock-love. 
same ;;z-/, and this Mock-Hymen Prizzcess, iv. 125 

mock-loyal. 
With reverent eyes 77?-/, . . Vivien . 13 

77zock-sole77tn. 
something so 7zz-s, that I laugh'd Prizzcess, Pro. 209 

77zode. 
Odalisques, or oracles of 7?z, . 
Ring in the nobler zzz's of life, 

model. 

why should any man Remodel 
dozen angry 7/z's jetted steam : 
Lay by her like a 7/z of her hand. 
This mother is your ?/z. 
serve as 171 for the mighty world, 

model! d. 
Is but ;7z on a skull. 
Neither 771, glazed, or fram'd : 

moderate. 
statesman-warrior, 77Z, resolute, 
77todest. 
How 77z, kindly, all-accomplish'd, Ded, of Idylls 17 

Modred. 
like his own Of M, Arthur's nephew E7zid 
Sir M's brother, of a crafty house, Elai?ie 
her cause of flight Sir M; . . Guizievere 
M still in green, all ear and eye, . ir 

to think of M's dusty fall, . . tr 

M's narrow foxy face, ... u 

M brought His creatures to the basement 11 



Pri7zcess, ii. 

IzZ Me77Z. cv. 



t's ? The Epic . 38 

. Prz7icess y Pro. 73 

" iv- 574 

_" vn. 315 

Guizzevere . 462 

. VisiozzofSizi 178 



Ode on Well. 25 



POEM. LINE. 

that Sir M had usurped the realm, Guinevere 152 

M whom he left in charge of all, . n . 193 

many more when M raised revolt, » . 438 

clave To M, and a remnant stays 11 . 440 

77zodzilate. 
M me, Soul of mincing mimicry ! Pri7icess, ii. 403 

modulated. 
77Z so To an unheard melody, . Eledzzore . 63 

moind. 
D'ya 77z the waaste, my lass ? . N. Far77ier 29 

77ZOZSt. 

77t and dry, devising long, ' Love thou thy lazzd,' etc. 38 
fancy of it, Made his eye 77z ; . Eziid . 1199 

fear'd his eyes M as they were, . ir . 1200 

mozste7i. 
hand falter, nor blue eye M, . E7zid . 1362 

77zole. 
the 77z has made his run, . . Aybzzer's F. 849 

Moll. 
tavern- catch Of M and Meg, . Pri7zcess, iv. 140 

molten. 

77i on the waste Becomes a cloud : Pri7zccss, iv. 54 

noble heart was 772 in her breast ; tr vi. 103 

The rocket ;7z into flakes . . l7zMe77z.xcvi\. 31 

And 77z up, and roar in flood ; . n cxxvi. 13 

77z down in mere uxoriousness. . E7zid . . 60 

77ioly. 
propt on beds of amaranth and ;;z, Lotos-E's. . 133 

mo77tent. 
At the 77t of thy birth, . . . Eled7iore . 35 
flower of each, those ;;z*5 when we met, Ed. Morris 69 
One earnest, earnest 77Z upon mine, Love andDztty 37 
Every 77z, lightly shaken, ran itself Locksley H. 32 
The fountain of the 77Z, . . . Prz7zcess, Pro. 61 
a 77Z, and once more The trumpet, ?r v. 476 

the last of those last 771s came . E7Z. Arde7i . 217 
the ?7Z and the vessel past. n . 243 

She spoke : and in one 7?z as it were, it . 449 

77Z07Z (man.) 
( what a ;;z a bea sewer-ly ! ' . N. Farzzzer 54 

Mo7ia. 
While about the shore of M . Boadicea . 1 

Mo7zaco. 
city Of little M, basking, glow'd. The Daisy . 8 

mo7iaged. 

And I *a 7?z for Squoire . . N. Ear7zzer 48 

Mo7iday. 

Saw the man — on M, was it ? — Walk, to the M. 22 

77i07iey. 

not a room For love or 7;z. . . Azidley Ct. . 2 

understand how 77z breeds, . . The Brook . 6 

?7z can be repaid ; Not kindness . E7Z. Arde7i . 319 

77l07lk. 

Old Summers, when the 77Z was fat, Talki7zgO. . 41 

mo7ikey-spite. 
No lewdness, narrowing envy, 77z-s, Lztcretius . 208 

77Z07ZOt07lOZiS. 

M and hollow like a Ghost's . Guz7zevere . 417 

mo7ister. 
wallowing 77z spouted his foam-fountains Lotos-E's. 152 
Seven-headed 771s only made to kill Pri7zcess,Pro. 200 
then the 77z, then the man ; . tr ii. 104 

we seem a kind of ;;z to you ; . tr iii. 259 

These 771 s blazon'd what they were, tt iv. 326 
loom to her Three times a 7iz : . tr v. 125 

A 77z, then, a dream, A discord. . /7z Me77z. Iv. 21 
Quaint ;7z'i for the market . . En. Arden . 535 
7?z lays His vast and filthy hands . Lucretizts . 216 

77io7istrozis. 
hateful, 77Z, not to be told ; . . Maztd, III. vi. 41 
So lean his eyes were ;« ; . . Vivzeti . . 474 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



279 



Monte Rosa. poem. line. 

how phantom-fair, Was M R. . The Daisy . 66 

month. 

weeks and m's, and early and late, The Sisters 10 
Earn well the thrifty m's t 'Love thou thy land,' etc, 95 
take a m to think, . . . Dora . . 27 

before The m was out he left .11 . -35 
in one m They wedded her . . Ed. Morris 125 
Oft I fall, Maybe for m's . . StS.Stylttes 101 

rt is various to present . Two Voices 74 
Link'd tu to m with such a chain . 11 . 167 

1 must work thro' m's of toil, . Amphion . 97 
Each m, a birth-day coming on, . Will Water. 93 
floating on for many a m and year Vision of Sin 54 
ere the silver sickle of that in . Princess, _ i. 100 
The all-assuming m's and years In Mem. Ixxxiv. 67 
tho' the m s, revolving near, . " xci. 11 

As nine m's go to the shaping . Maud, I. iv. 34 
m's ran on and rumour of battle . u III. vL 29 

weeks to m f 5. Them 's will add . Guinevere . 617 
a change — a m — Give hera ;// 'rep.) En. Arden 458 
/// by tu the noise about their doors, Ay-liner's F. 488 
With twenty nts of silence, . n . 567 

with a in's leave given . Sea Dreams 6 
* A //; hence, a m hence.' . . The Window 168 

mood. 

fixed shadows of thy fixed tu, . Isabel . . 9 

In lazy m I watch'd the little circles Miller's D. 73 

m And change of my still soul. . Pal. 0/ Art 59 
fit for every /// of mind, . 11 .90 

from which m was born Scorn , " . 230 

from out that /;/ Laughter ti . 231 
by change, and so 1 swuy'd AWm's. D.ofF.Wom.131 

more human in your ins, . . Margaret . 47 
but betwixt this in and that, . Gardener sD. 152 

I went thro' many wayward m's . Day-Dtn, . 6 

with that tit or this, . Will Water. 107 

in her 1, . . Princess, iv. 361 

f golden iw's Of sovereign artists ; . n v. 186 

eft her woman, lovelier in her tit . 11 vti. 147 

woman thro* the crust of iron m's n . 321 

My lighter m's are like to these. . In Mem. xx. 9 

I envy not in any m's . . *> xxvii. 1 

Merc fellowship of sluggish m's, . 11 xxxv. 21 

bit the m Of Love on earth 1 . ■» xlvi. 11 

when harsher m's remit, . >• xlvii. 6 

1111 1 thy harsher m's aside. . . »i lviii. 7 

Korle in livelier m's . iilxXXVUL 2Q 

as my father ra^ed in \w* m f . Maud, 1. i. 53 

My m is changed, for it fell . 1. III. vi. 4 
coming up unite dose, and i" his //; Enid . 1562 

. rough t upon his cloudy tit . linen . 12 

i - kindlier m's, it . 30 

in the glass of some presageful m, n . 144 

from Arthur's court To break the m. 11 . 147 

that dark ;// of yours. . 11 . 16 J 

' 1 ustful /'/ 11 . 170 

m as that* which lately gloom'd . " . 174 

high as woman in her selfless ///, . 11 . 293 

erstrain'd affection, . h . 371 

I gathering somewhat of his in, 11 . 691 

I upon lus /// and hugg'd him 11 . 797 

His m was often like a fiend. . Elaine . 251 

Arthur to the banquet, dark in ///, 11 . 563 

I hi*, m's I-cft them, . 11 . 795 

n or the m, . Aylmer's F. 71 

1 i\ /// had fallen 11 . 404 

cruel Secm'd the Captain's ///. . The Captain 14 



POEM. LINK. 

Lit with a low large tit. . . Pal. of Art . 68 

In hollow'd m's of gems, 11 . 188 

I It was when the m was setting, May Queen, hi. 26 
I above the valley stood the m ; . Eotos-E's. . 7 
between the sun and m upon the shore \% . 38 

in the in Nightly dew-fed ; ,11 -74 

Once, like the m, I made . D.ofF. Worn. 132 

Far-heard beneath the m. , . n . 184 

The balmy m of blessed Israel . 11 . 185 

next in was roll'd into the sky, . 11 . 229 

Which the m about her spreadcth, Margaret . 20 
While the stars burn, the m's increase, To J. S. 71 
a great water, and the m was full. M. a" Arthur 12 



in the in athwart the place of tombs, 

winter in Brightening the skirts . 

lightnings in the splendour of the m. 

long glories of the winter m. 

colourless, and like the wither* d m 

for some three careless m's . . Gardener's D. 15 

beneath a i/s, that, just In crescent, Audley Ct. 79 

thirty ins, one honeymoon to that Ed. Morris 29 

tagg'd with icy fringes in the m, . StS, Styiites 31 

his orbit, and the M Her circle. 

day wanes : the slow m climbs : 

mellow m's and happy skies, 

like Joshua's tn in Ajalon I . . 11 

like a summer m Half-dipt in cloud Godtra 

every worm beneath the m . . Two Voices 



46 

53 

3 37 

192 

. 213 



Love and Duty 22 
, Ulysses . 55 
. JLocksley II. 159 
. 180 
45 
178 



in'-"u. 

At midnight the m cometh, . 
nifll - . winter m ; 

ever when the tit was low 

ry low, . 

mighty /// was gathering light 

Uu ; 

try, . 

■11 the w wa - 

unset ami the /// ; 
( tlcam'd to the flying m I 
like a d.uzkd illuming ///. 



Cl'irtlel 

Isabel . 
Mariana 



'3 
-"' 
49 

" .53 

! Death 1 

The Merman 21 

1 L.o/Shaitftt, 1 ; \ 

■ ... " »■ 33 

. Eieanore . 124 
. Millet's D. 116 
, Fatinia . 16 



snows Arc sparkling to the m : . St Agnes' Eve 
A thousand m's will quiver ; . A Farewell 14 

.'^ shines the m in clouded skies, Beggar Maid 9 
long and troubled like a rising m, Princess, i. 58 
Come from the dying m, and dIow « ii. 461 
Under the silver m 11 . 470 

with the sun and tn renew their light 11 iii. 238 

main - weary m's before we came . 11 . 302 

brief the nt of beauty in the South. " iv. 95 

babbli d for you, as babies for the m, 11 . 408 

maiden w that sparkles on a sty, n v. 178 

likea clouded 111 In a still water: 11 vi. 253 

set a wrathful Dian's tn on flame. n . 348 

the in may draw the sea ; 11 . 364 

Her secret from the latest m .'' 

No lapse of m's can canker Love, 

in is hid : the night is s- 1 ill ; (ciii. 2) 

when a thousand m's shall wane . 

Or sadness in the summer m's? . 

A ballad to the brightening m : . 

ii I; and cove ; 

glowing like the m Of Kden 
use, O tu. from yonder down, 
white As ocean-foam in the m 

a hush with the setting m. . 

half to the setting m arc gone, 

I murmur under wand stars 

our (hid Himself is wand sun. 

by night With m and trembling stars Kind 

nfs confused his fatherhood.' . i'ivicn 

.1 /'/ unseen albeit at full, . . Cvifuvere 

beneath a clouded m lie like a lover En. Arden 659 

music of the 111 Sleeps in the plain eggs Aylmer's /•'. 102 

a pale and uniropassion'd m, . 11 . 334 

The m like a rick on fire . . Grandmother 39 

I ') 1 11. the naked /;/ across . . The Voyage 29 

"hen in heaven the starsabout the m Spec e/ 'Iliad 11 

Sun comes, m comes, . . . The Window 162 

Sun sets, nl sets, ... II . 164 

moon-faced. 
the tn-f darling of all— . . Maud, I. i. 72 

moon-lid. 
Their m-l waters white, . . ral.o/Art 252 

moonlight. 
II shine and by m, 
lake in on a falling shower '! 
Are as 111 unto sunlight, . 

full >ea glazed with muffled m, 
When on my bed the "/ fal 
I rem "ii my bed the m dies ; 

■ ss in the /" shake. 
The 111 touching o'er a terrace 



In Mem. xxi. 
xxvi. 
xxviii. 
11 Ixxvi. 
11 Ixxxii. 
11 Ixx.wiii. 
11 C 

11 Con. 

Ma mi, I, xiv. 

" xxii. 

11 

, The Brook . 

Odeon If.//. 



8 
8 
28 
16 
27 
109 
18 
18 

.3 

-'7 
8 

562 
6 



Oriana . 24 

net . 4 

\ley II. 152 

Princesi t 1 .11 

/// Mem. IxVI. I 

II . 10 

The I'aisy . 82 
11 



2S0 



CONCORDANCE 70 



moon-lit. poem. line. 

The sloping of the m-l sward . Arabian N's. 27 

narrow m-l slips of silver cloud. . (Enone . 274 

moon-rise. 
little before m-r hears the low Moan Pal. of Art 279 

moonshine. 

tip the pass All in a misty in, . Elaine . 49 

eyes all wet, in the sweet in : . Grandmotlter 49 

moor. 
From far and near, on mead and m, InMem.xxviu. 6 

oft when sundown skirts the ni . 11 xl. 17 

sick of the m and the main . . Aland, I. i. 61 

there is fatter game on the ;;/; n -74 

as she rode by on the in; . . 11 iv. 15 

Betwixt the cloud and the in, . 11 be. 4 

over the sullen-purple in 11 x. 21 

Go back, my lord, across the in, . n xii. 31 

meanwhile far over in and fell . it xviii. 76 

When I bow d to her on the in. . u xix. 66 



moorland. 
Dreary gleams about the in . , Locksley H. 
Many a morning on the m . . \\ 

O the dreary, dreary ml . " 

all the glimmering in rings . Sir L. andQ.G. 

mooted. 
ne'er been in, but as frankly theirs Princess, v. 

moral. 
if you find no m there, . . . Day -Dm. . 
What in is in being fair. . n 

is there any in shut ir 

You'd have my in from the song, 11 

Are clasp'd the in of thy life, . m 

The 711 s, something of the frame . Princess, ii 



morass. 
low in and whispering reed, . In Mem, xcix. 6 

Moreland. 
Sweet Emma M of yonder town . Ed. Gray . 1 
Sweet Emma # spoke to me : .11 .5 

Sweet Emma M, love no more u .7 

morion. 
shone Their ins, wash'd withmoniing,/V*?«YW l v.254 

morn. 
Either at in or eventide. . . Mariana . 16 
cold winds woke the gray-eyed in n . 31 

Ray-fringed eyelids of the m 'Clear-headedfriend* 6 
the amber m Forth gushes . . Ode to Mem. 70 

Wander from the side of the m, . Adeline . 52 
More inward than at night or in, Mariana in tlte S. 58 
'The day to night, the night to m, 11 . 82 

night comes on that knows not m, 11 . 94 

Thou wert born, on a summer in, Eleanore . 7 
Each m my sleep was broken thro' Miller's D. 39 
in the dark in The panther's roar (Enone . 209 

from her lips, as m from Memnon, Pal. of Art 171 
but I fall asleep at m; . . . May Queen, n. 50 
The dim red in had died, . . D. ofF. Worn. 61 
M broaden'd on the borders of the dark, 11 . 265 
■without help I cannot last till in. . M. d" Arthur 26 
a streamer of the northern m, . n . 139 

church-bells ring in the Christmas m. h Ep. 31 
brightening to his bridal in. . . Gardener's D. 72 
that 111 with all its sound . it .82 

I come to-morrow m. . . . AudleyCt. . 69 
mist of in Clung to the lake. . Ed. Morris 107 

when my marriage m may fall, . Talking O. 285 
while as yet 'tis early in : . . Locksley H. 1 
make that m, from his cold crown Two Voices 85 
Or in the gateways of the in. . n . 183 

* Behold, it is the Sabbath m.* . n . 402 

The twilight melted into m. . Day-Din. . 180 

cock crows ere the Christmas in, . Sir Galahad 51 
They two will wed the morrow m: Lady Clare 7 
We two will wed to-morrow in. . m .87 

Have a rouse before the in : Vision of Sin 96, 120 
on her bridal in before she past . Princess, ii. 243 
M in the white wake of the morning star i« iii. 1 
tumble, Vulcans, on the second in.' u . 56 



POEM LINE. 


7.' Princess, v. 


4i3 


rr vii. 


3° 


. tl 


335 


" Con. 


9* 


. In Mem. xi. 


1 


11 xx vi. 


13 


" XXX. 


29 


11 lxviL 


8 


n lxxxiii. 


29 


11 Con. 


58 


. Enid . 


69 


11 


157 


" 


335 


" 


691 


•1 


734 


11 


1318 


. Elaine 


902 


11 


1398 


. Guinevere . 


131 


. Grandmotlter 67 


. Tithonus 


10 


11 


74 


Spec, of Iliad, Note 


On a Mourner 


24 



the Northern and the Southern m 

m by m the lark Shot up 

and this Is m to more, 

redder than a windy m ; 

Calm is the m without a sound, 

ere yet the m Breaks hither . 

Rise, happy m, rise, holy m, 

Reveilee to the breaking in. . 

With promise of a m as fair : 

Mute symbols of a joyful m, 

it chanced that on a summer in 

Guinevere lay late into the in, 

like a man abroad at m 

gladly given again this happy m. 

white and glittering star of m 

darting fish, that on a summer m 

in by 111, arraying her sweet self 

eve and in She kiss'd me saying 

cold wind that foreruns the m 

I shall see him another in : . 

mists, and gleaming halls of m. 

renew thy beauty in by m . 

waiting the throned m . 

From out the borders of the in, 

m That mock'd him with returning calm Lucretius 25 

morning. 
It haunted me, the m long, . . Miller s D. . 69 
that m, on the casement-edge . " .82 

Gargarus Stands up and takes the m: (Enone . 1 1 
Far up the solitary in smote .11 * 54 

In the early, early in . . . MayQueeii,'i\. 22 
rose the m of the year ! . . u iii. 3 

when the night and m meet . ir .22 

It is a stormy in.' .... The Goose . 44 
every m brought a noble chance, . M-.d' Arthur 230 
This in is the m of the day, . . Gardener' sD. 1 
The northern in o'er thee shoot, . Talking O. . 275 
in dnv'n her plow of pearl . . Love and Duty '96 
Many a 111 on the moorland . . Locksley H. 35 
sees the sacred m spread . . Two Voices 80 
In her still place the m wept : . u . 275 

And in the in of the times. . . Day-Din. . 232 
I saw that every in, far withdrawn Vision of Sin 48 
shoneTheirmorionSjWash'dwithw, Princess, v. 254 
mused on that wild in in the woods, 11 . 460 

Death and M on the silver horns, 11 vii. 1S9 

m on the blind half-world ; . . " . 331 

With in wakes the will, . . In Mem. iv. 15 

in wore To evening but some heart 11 vi. 7 

At earliest 111 to the door. . . n vii. 8 

Singing alone in the m of life, . Maud, I. v. 6 
happy m of life and of May, .11 .7 

M arises stormy and pale . . » vi. i 

when the in came In a cloud .11 .20 

O when did a in shine So rich . 11 xix. 5 

For a breeze of m moves, . . m xxii. 7 

'Tis a m pure and sweet . . ■» 11. iv. 31-5 
with the in all the court were gone. Enid . . 156 
booty from the ins raid ; . .11. 1413 

ms earliest ray Might strike it, . Elaine . 5 
o'er and o'er For all an April in. . 11 . 893 

ten slow ms past, and on the eleventh 11 1127 

Enoch faced this in of farewell . En. Arden . 182 
uttermost Parts of the ni ? 11 . 224 

kindlier glow Faded with in, . A rimer's F. 412 
such a star of m in their blue, . " . 692 

the winds are up in the in ! (rep.) Tlie Window 5 
this is the golden in of love '» . 1S8 

morning-breath. 
dewy meadowy in-b Of England ! . En. Arden. 661 

morn ing-star. 
Sung by the in s of song, . . D. ofF. Worn 3 
maiden splendours of the m-s . 11 -55 

Toward the m-s. .... m . 244 

whistled to the m s. . . Sailor Boy . 4 

Morris. 
with Edwin /Jifandwith Edward Bull Ed. Morris 14 
Edwin M, he that knew the names » . 16 



T£.v.vysoys works. 



2Sr 



Morrison. poem. 

A labourer's daughter, Mary M. . Dora . 



LINE. 

• 38 



morro~.v. 
when the m came, she rose and took Dora . .78 
burn* Above the unrisen m: ' . Princess, iv. 65 
For the meeting of the ;//, . . Maud, 11. iv. 28 

mortal. 
Her stature more than m . . Princess, Pro. 40 
to choose Of things all m, . In Mem. xxxiv. 11 
earth yawns : the m disappears ; . Odeon Ir'ell. 269 

mortality. 
from the low light of m . . Aylmer's F. 641 

mortify. 
At Your flesh, like me, . St S.Stylites 176 

mosaic. 
was all m choicely plann'd . . Pal. of Art 145 
rough kex break The starrM m, . Princess, iv. 60 

moss. 
With blackest m the flower-plots . Mariana . 1 
bluebell rings To the m'es underneath '! Adeline 35 
creeping tries and clambering weeds, DyingS'aian 36 
huclcss m'es under the sea . . The Mermaid 49 
those long m'es in the stream. . Miller's D. 48 
cool m'es deep And thro' the m the ivies Lotos-Es. 54 
then for roses, m or musk, . Gardener's D. 189 
learned names of aganc, m and fern, Ed. Morris 17 
In m'es mixt with violet . Sir L. andQ. G. 30 
refuse patch'd with ///, . . Vision of StH 212 

wine -flask lying couch'd in m. In Mem. Ixxxviii. 44 
m and braided marish-pipc ; . O n a Mourner 10 

moss-bed. 
Soft are the m-i's under the sea ; The Merman 39 

moth. 
rich as tn'i from dusk cocoons, . Princess, ii. 5 
not a »i with vain desire . . InMcm.lm. 10 

mother. 

In her as M, Wife, and Queen : . TotheQueen 28 

Complaining ' M. give me grace Mariana in theS. 29 

Sweet M, let me not here alone . <• . 50 

My m thought, What ails the boy? Milter's D. 93 

iv in brought , . ti . 1 37 

The doubt my in would not sec : . <t . 154 

\t^(Eiioiie22,etpass. 

O in. hear me yet before 1 die rep., it . 203 

ijectures of the features . >• . 247 

laid him at his m's feet. . . The Sisters 35 

thus he met his m's view, /.. C. V, </-■ / 'ere 34 

call me early, in dear i . MayQneen.i. \,etfass. 

blame Hebrew m's' l>. ofF, Worn. 215 

m of majestic works, * Of old sat Freedom 13 

1 t" slight His///; . Dora . . 119 

when the boy beheld His ///, . .. . . 1 - 

'. and the Saints ; St S.Stylitesno 

e . . Talking 0. 111 

ne from the > . Locksiey 11. 90 

tn'i brought Their children, clamouring. Godhta 14 

anil Ill's will : Ed. i,r,iy . 10 

lid, ' if this be true, . Lady Clare 30 

S've one kiss to your m dear 1 . h 49-53 

///, ///. ///,' she said ... 1, .51 

My in dear, if this be so, 11 -54 

me, in, ere I go." ... .1 .56 

so, my /« said, the story ran. . Princess, i. 11 

m pitying made a thousand prayers ; •» . 21 

Id as any saint, . 11 .22 

m of the sweetest little maid, . 11 ii. 260 

■ 1rt.n1 .1/ with emotion, 11 . 263 

Our ///, is the well? „ . 290 

April daffodilly Her «"» colour] . %, . 304 

nil jealous temperament — . » . 317 

breast, . ii 

while yet you may ! My a* knows:' .. iii 13 

My " 'it ... n .10 

m went revolving on the word] . " -38 

.• in clutch'd The truth . ■, .44 

• 011s, . . ., -6} 

my in still Affirms your Psyche . " -75 



Prt 



l>: 



Mem vi. 



. Ma 



XXMX. 

xcix. 
, I. L 



I tried the m's heart, 
then, demanded if her m knew, . 
and you me V'our second m : 
half on her m propt, 
to live No wiser than their m's, . 
beat my girl Remembering her /// : 
III m that I was to leave her 
won Your m, a good m, a good wife, 
she of whom you speak, My ///, . 
ATs — that all prophetic pity, 
what m's blood You draw from, . 
risk'd it for my own ; His m lives : 
child Of one unworthy m ; . 
the authentic m of her mind. 
The m makes us most- 
good Queen, her tit, shore the tress 
spied its in and began . 
stood the unhappy m open-mouth'd, 
grief and m's hunger in her eye, . 
The sacred m's bosom, panting, . 
The m, me, the child ; . 
thy m prove As true to thee . 
from your m now a saint with saints 
You shame your m's judgment 
Not only he, but by my m's soul, 
Happy he With such a m ! . 
This /// is your model. . 
() ///, praying God will save . 
Dear .is the m to the son, 
tears are on the m's face 
That feed the m's of the flock : 
The shrill-edged shriek of a in 
a Mammonite in kills her babe 
Maud the beloved of my tit, . 
Your m is mute in her grave 
My ///, who was so gentle and good? 
Her /// has been a thing complete, 
Made her only the child of her in 
Darken'd watching a m decline . 
Of my m's faded cheek 
To speak of the m she loved 
thought It is his nil hair, 
fr i.m the plaintive m's teat he took The 
My m, as it seems you did 
' M, a maiden is a tender thing, . Enid 
arose, and raised Her m too,. 11 

a costly gift Ofher good m, . 11 

while the /// show'd it, and the two » 
lo ! it was her /// grasping her . 11 
ceased the kindly m out of breath ; o 
Hclp'd by the m's careful hand . " 
that good m making Enid gay . 11 
glance at her good m's face, . m 

/// silent too, nor helping her, . 11 
seeing cloud upon the m's brow, . m 
' O my new m, be not wroth . k 

the m smiled, but half in tears, . 11 
like the kid in its own m's milk ! 
/// of the house There was not : 
Wish'd it had been my in, . . 11 
than any m to a sick child, . . " 
by the m of our Lord himself, . u 
Lady of the Lake Stole from his in 11 
111 cared for it With all a m's care : En. Ardcn 
new in came about her heart, . 11 

m glancing often toward her babe, i» 

S ' like her ///, . . 11 

Annie, whom I saw So like her in. 



LINE. 

ess, iii. 131 



iv. 214 
. 278 

• 348 

• 493 
v. 86 

• 90 

• '59 

• 'SS 

• 371 

■ 394 

• 398 
. 421 

■ 423 

■ 496 
vi. 97 

. 120 

• '27 

• "3° 

• >3* 

• 137 
. 186 
. 2x6 

• 244 

• 3'S 
vn. 309 

3'5 



II. ii. 
Brook . 



I 'r.-ien 



16 
16 
45 
72 
58 
07 
35 
40 
8 
»9 
27 
70 

• "9 
. 225 
. 510 

• 536 
. 632 
. 636 
. 676 

• 732 

• 738 

• 757 
. 766 
. 768 

• 777 

• 779 

• 823 
. 7 tS 

• >77 
. 671 

• 854 
1224 
1396 

. 261 
. 520 

• 755 
■ 792 
. 884 



Heard the good /// softly whisper Aylmer's F. 187 



m of the foul adulteries 

m flow'd in shallower acrimonies : 

the sad m, for the second death . 

with the in he had neverknown, . 

childless /// went to seek her child 

wail'd and woke The /»/. 

Virgin M standing with her child 

the child Clung lo the m, 

M, let me lly away. 

My PPS cl my neck, 

Chop the breasts from offtl 



376 
" 
ti . 604 

M . 69O 

. 829 

Sea Drt 

>7 
(8 






Every /«\t son— Dowu they dropt— 1 he Captain 50 



282 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Tlie Victim 32 
Lucretius . 100 



Locksley H. 108 
. J 8 5 



They found the m sitting still ; 
glad Nosing the m's udder, . 

mother-age. 

thou wondrous M-A I 
M-A (for mine I knew not) . 

mother-city. 
gain'd the m-c thick with towers, . Princess, 

motion. 
A m from the river won 
Thought and in mingle 
M's flow To one another, 
With m's of the outer sea : . 

1 had no m of my own. 

those names, that in their m were Pal. of Art 
onward-sloping m's infinite . . p 

enough of acticn, and of m we, . Lotos-E's. 
no m in the dumb dead air, . . D. of F. Worn. 6$ 
with sudden in from the ground . n . 170 

A in toiling in the gloom — ' Love thou thy land' 54 
or else a m of the mere. . . M. d Arthur 77 

those blind ins of the Spring, . Talking O. . 175 
her eyes on all my ins . . . Locksley H. 22 
Nature made them blinder rns 
We find no in in the dead.' . 
m's, checks, and counterchecks, 
Nature's living in lent 



. Arabian N's. 
. Elednore 



Miller's D. 



Two Voices 



. Maud, I. 
. Enid 



facestowardusandaddress'd their wz; Princess,\v. 530 

about his in clung The shadow . 11 v. 247 

heart Made for all noble in : 

That all thy ins gently pass. 

muffled m's blindly drown . 

As, unto vaster m's bound, . 

O heart, with kindliest m warm, . 

No dance, no m, save alone . 

In all her m one with law : . 

O, having the nerves of m . 

horse in in toward the knight, 

at the flash and in of the man 

scared but at the m of the man, 

Her constant in round him, . 

No shadow past, nor m: 

in flood And masters of his in, 

the in of the boundless deep 

in of the great deep bore me on. 

the in of the current ceased, 

rascal in the ins of his back, 

All in quantity, careful of my in, H endecasyllabics 5 

no mortal m jars The blackness . On a Mourner 26 

motto. 
this for in, * Rather use than fame, 
Blazon your ins of blessing . 

mould (shape.) 
all varieties of?;; and mind) To- 



In Mem. xv. 10 

if xlviii. 15 

if lxii. 10 

it Ixxxiv. 34 

if civ. 23 

cxxi. 8 

63 

206 

. ir . 1316 

- 11 • 1325 

• » ■ 1773 

. En. Arden . 711 
. Ay Inzer's F. 340 
. Sea Dreams 89 
M . 107 

" . 113 

. 163 



Vivieft. . 330 

W. toAlexan. 12 



- WithPal. of A rt 7 
That are cast in gentle in. . . To J. S. . 1 
this m of hopes and fears . . Tzvo Voices 28 
That I was first in human m ? rr . 342 

Than in her m that other, . . Princess, vii. 148 
niched shapes of noble 111, . . The Daisy . 2^ 

mould (earth. ) 
you may Jay me low i' the nt . May Queen, ii. 4 
render him to the m. . . . Ode on Well. 48 

mould (verb.) 
Unto her limbs itself doth in . Day-Din. . 86 

7)i The woman to the fuller day.* . Princess, iii. 314 
m a generation strong to move . ti v. 406 

m a mighty state's decrees, . . InMem. lxlii. 11 

moulded. 
M thy baby thought. . . . Elzanore . 5 

M by God, and temper' d Ta — -WithPal. of Arti8 
m like in nature's mint; . . fuMemAxxviii. 6 
And m in colossal calm. . . n Con. 16 

m by your wishes for her weal ; . Enid . . 799 
Heaven in lavish bounty in, . Ay liner's F. 107 

moulder. 
cannons m on the seaward wall ; . OdeonWell. 173 
rotting inward slowly m's all. . Vivien . 245 

heads should m on the city gates 11 , 444 



mouldered. poem. line. 

man, I think, So in in a sinecure . Princess, Pi 0. 180 

mouldering. 
Before the in of a yew . 
ocean tosses O'er them in, . 



InMeinAxxv. 3 
The Captain 70 

I nMem. cxxiu. 24 

Arabian IV s. lot 
Lotos-E's. . 112 
Gardener' sD. 209 
Dora . . 70 
• 79 
Princess, iv. 535 



165 r 
. 306 



Ode to Mem. 98 



moulding. 
reach thro' nature, m men. . 

mound (s.) 
A realm of pleasance, many a in, 
Heap'd over with a m of grass, 
sat we down upon a garden m, 
sat upon a in That was unsown, 
child once more, and sat upon the m 
gain'd a petty m Beyond it, 
three paces measured from the m, n 

here and there on in and knoll, . Enid . 
whelm all this beneath as vast a m Vivien 

mound (verb.) 
heaped hills that in the sea, . 

mount (s.) 
A m of marble, a hundred spires ! 
o'er a in of newly-fallen stones, 
on the m Of Badon 1 myself 

mount (verb.) 
Before he ins the hill, I know 
As m's the heavenward altar-fire, 
never m As high as woman . 
the wanton say ? ' Not in as high ; 
Nor sound of human sorrow m's . 

7)iouniain. 
the brain of the purple m 
m draws it from Heaven above, . 
Across the in stream'd below 
The wind, that beats the in, 
Among the m's by the winter sea ; 
curves of in, bridge, Boat, . 
The 111 stirr'd its bushy crown, 
weed That blows upon its in, 
fold to fold, of m or of cape ; 
storm Broke on the in and 1 cared 
league of in full of golden mines, 
And the cairn'd 111 was a shadow, 
So long, that m's have arisen since 
would pare the in to the plain, 
The ni wooded to the peak . 
A m, like a wall of burs 
facets of the glorious m flash 
m there has cast its cloudy slough, 
in serenest air, A m o'er a m, 
in quickens into Nymph and Faun 

rnou)itain-brook. 
listen near a torrent m-b, . . Enid . 1020 

mountain-eaves. 
shepherds from the m-e . . Amphion . 53 

mountain-gorge. 
in a seaward-gazing in-g . . En. Arden . 559 

mountain-ground. 
He finds on misty m-g . . .In Mem. xcvi. 2 

mo un ta in-mere. 
Sometimes on lonely m-ins . . Sir Galahad 37 

moun ta in - range. 
uprose the mystic m-r: . . Vision of Sin 208 

mountain-shade . 
the m-s Sloped downward . . (Enoue . 20 

mountain-side. 

up there on yonder )n s. . . StS.Stylites 71 

like its own mists to all the in s: . Elaine . 39 

Struck out the streaming m-s, . Lucretius . 29 

■moun ta in- top. 
three m-t's, Three silent pinnacles, Lotos-E's . 15 
chanted on the smoky m-t's, . Guinevere . 280 

mountain-tract. 
then I look'd up toward a m-t t , Vision of Sin 46 



The Daisy . 


60 


Enid . 


361 


Slavic 


302 


Fatima 


22 


In Menu xl. 


3 


Vivien 


292 


' " 


662 


Lucretius . 


10t) 


Poet's Mind 


20 


i' 


32 


Pal. of Art 


34 


To J. S. . 


1 


M. a" A rthur : 


Ed. Morris 


5 


Antpkion 


=5 


Princess, vi. 


94 
366 


not Vivien . 


353 


11 


437 


11 


488 


11 


S25 


u 


678 


En. A rden . 


573 


Sea Dreams 


"5 


The Islet . 


22 


Lucretius . 


177 


11 


179 


; 11 


187 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



2*3 



mountain-wall. poem. line. 
thro' the m-vj's A rolling . . Sir Galahad 74 
He watches from his m ids . . The Eagle . 5 

mounted. 
from a throne M in heaven . . To y. M. K. 13 
this old mansion m high . . Aimer's D. 35 
while day sank or m higher . . Pal. of Art 46 
m our good steeds . . . Princess, i. 201 

m, Ganymedes, To tumble, Vulcans 11 iii. 55 
M, and reach'd a hand, . . Enid . 1607 

Set her thereon, and m on his own, Guinevere . 122 
what you will — Has m yonder . Lucretius . 127 

mourn. 
' Where I may tn and pray. . Pal. 0/ Art 292 

to m and rave On alien shores. . Lotos-E's. . 32 
to clamour, m and sob, . . StS.Stylites 6 

tn half-shrouded over death . . Princess, v. 71 
to those that m In vain ; . . In Mem. ix. 5 
To m for any overmuch ; . . n lxxxiv. 6-* 
They know me not, but m with me. 11 xcviii. 20 
M, for to us he seems the last . Ode on Well. 19 
M for the man of long-enduring blood 11 . 24 

M fur the man of amplest influence, it . 27 

those who tn a friend in vain, . Lucretius . 142 

mourned. 

Deeply m the Lord of Burleigh, . L. of Burleigh 91 

all the men m at his side : . . J'rincess, iii. 335 

m his absence as his grave, . ' En. Arden 246 

mourning (part.) 
I went tit, ' No fair Hebrew boy . D. o/F. lVom.213 
ever m over the feud . . Maud, I. xix. 31 

M when their leaders fall, . . Ode on Well. 5 

mourning (s.) 
the tn of a mighty nation, . . Ode on Well. 4 
in in these, and those With blolsofit Aylmer's F.61Q 

mouse. 
tit Behind the mouldering wainscot Mariana . 63 
shrieking rush of the wainscot tn, Maud, I. vi. 71 
Within the hearing of cat or ttt t . m II. v. 43 

thin weasel there Follows the m, . Aylmer's /•'. 853 

mouth (s. ) 
crush'd them on my breast, my m : Fatima . 12 
common m So gross to express delight Gardener sD. 54 
smite him on the check, And on the m. Two Voices 251 
often told a talc from tn to m Princess, Pro. 189 

Walter warped his m at this . 11 . 208 

twitch of pain Tortured her tn, . 11 vi. 90 

on her tn A doubtful smile .... . 252 

A rabbit in that is ever agape — . Maud, I. x. 31 
And a rose her tn. ... 11 xvii. 8-28 

deathful-grinning m's of the fortress .. III. vi. 52 
le to of Hell . . . Lt. Brigade 25 
Hack from the tn of Hell, . . 11 .47 

King Arthur's hound of deepest in, Enid . . 186 
in the m's of base interpreters, . Vivien . 644 

white in of the violent Glcm ; . Elaine . 288 

any m to gape for save a Queen's— 11 . 771 

Were added m's that gaped, .. 1242 

downward crescent of her minion m, Aylmer's F.S33 
sudden twitch of his iron m; 11 . 732 

unctuous m which lured him, . Sea Dreams 14 
M, forehead, eyelids, growing . Tithouus . 58 
flat, and floods Of mighty >«, . The Voyage 46 

mouth (verb.) 
How she m's behind my back . Vision 0/ Sin no 

mouthed. 
in her hunger tn and mumbled it, Princess, vi. 196 

mouthing, 
m out his hollow ocs and acs, . The Epic . 50 

mouthpiece. 

I come the m of our Kin- to l)oorm Enid 1644 

tnoz'e. 

-r still Shalott. . . I., of Shalott, \\\. n 

II and m, . Eleinort . 11 1 

with joy, . M tiler's P. 95 

there 1 m no louder now, . . May Queen, iii. 51 



POEM. LINE. 

did m Me from my bliss of life, D. ofF. Worn. 209 
You wnot in such solitudes, . Margaret . 43 

He lieth still : he doth not in : D.qftkeO. War u 
full music seem'd to in and change Ed. Moms 35 
m's among my visions of the lake, .. . 144 

wake and sleep, but all things in; Golden Year 22 
M onward leading up the golden year .. . 26 

For ever and for ever when I tn. . Ulysses . 21 
sweetly did she speak and ml . Locksley 11. 71 
Science m's, but slowly slowly, . 11 . 134 

Some hidden principle to tn, . Tivo Voices 133 

m's not on the rounded curl. . Day-Dm. . 84 

gouty oak began to tn, . . A lit/'hion . 23 

I could not tn a thistle ; . . n 66 

mightier transports tn and thrill ; . Sir Galahad 22 
m the trees, the copses nod, . .. . 77 

Begins to tn and tremble. . . Will Water. 32 
wheresoe'er thou m, good luck . 11 . 215 

thou wilt never in fromhence, it . 217 

lifethatw Vstograciousends. ' You might have ivon' 6 
Till the graves begin to in, . . Vision o/Sin 165 
M eastward, happy earth, ' Mote east-card,' etc. 1 
m me to my marriage-morn, . 1. .11 

m as rich as F.mperor-moths, . Princess, Pro. 144 
m among a world of ghosts (iv. 539) .. i. 17 

Who m's about the Princess ; . .. -75 

whene'er she m's The Samian Here rises . 1 iii. 98 
found her there At point to in, . 11 . 115 

in, my friend, At no man's beck, . 11 . 210 

after-hands May in the world, . t. . 247 

in The minutes fledged with music' 11 iv. 18 

a generation strong to in . . 11 v. 406 

to 111 in old memorial tilts, .. . 468 

in the stony bases of the world. . 11 vi. 42 

speak, nor m, nor make one .. vii. 138 

cease to tn so near the Heavens, . 11 . »8o 

m's with him to one goal, .. . 247 

m's his doubtful arms, and feels . In Mem.xxn. 3 
For I in spirit saw thee in . . n xvii. 5 

this it was that made me lit . . it xxv. 5 

doubtful joys the father m, . . .. xxxix. 9 
Should 111 his rounds, and fusing all .t xlvi. 2 

canst not in me from thy side, . 11 li. 7 

My centred passion cannot in, . 11 Iviii. 9 

111 thee on to noble ends . . 11 lxiv. 12 

Her faith is fixt and cannot tn, . n xcvi. 33 
As down the garden-walks I 111, . it ci. 6 

m his course, and show That life . 11 cxvii. 19 
.!/ upward, working out the beast, 11 . 27 

Who m's about from place to place, 11 exxv. 10 
To which the whole creation m's. 11 Con. 144 
Do we 111 ourselves, or are moved Maud, I. iv. 26 
m to the meadow and fall before . 11 v. 25 

For a breeze of morning m's . . 11 xxii. 7 

only m's with the moving eye, . 11 II. ii. 37 
Pass and cease to m about ! . . .. iv. 59 

I ;// the sweet forget-me-nots . The Brook 172 
If love of country m thee there . Ode on Well. 140 
dark crowd m's, and there are sobs .. . 268 

nor m's the loud world's random mock //';'// . 4 
pushing could m The chair of Idris. Enid . 542 

fiartcd from you, m's me yet." . 11 1196 

cave To 111 to your own land, . .. 17 7 

cannot m To these fair jousts?" . Elaine . 80 

strike spur, suddenly m, .... . 455 

down his enemy made them m. . 11 . 810 

rough Torre began to heave and 111, 11 1060 

as Arthur's Queen I m and rule : .. 1215 

moving m's the nest and nestling, Sea Dreams 279 
Phantom of a wish that once could in, Cogttettefi. 10 
creeps a cloud, or m's a wind, . Lucretius . 106 

moved. 
you rose anil m the light, . . Milter's D. 125 
Your ripe tips /// not ... .. .11 

ing the dawn he tn. . . CEnone 
Floated the glowing sunlights, as she «< .. .178 

bells that swung, Mat themselves, Pal of Art 130 
Its office, m with sympathy. Love thou thy lot 

with oar .lii.l s;,il ,1/ |>,, 11 the brink M. <t'A>:/. 

m away, and left me, statuc-likc, Gardener's D. 158 



204 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LTNE. 

?n, Like Proserpine in Enna, . Ed. Morris in 

in old days M earth and heaven ; Ulysses . 67 
You m her at your pleasure. . Amfikion . 60 

M with violence, changed in hue, Vision of Sin 34 
There in the multitude, . . Princess., Pro, 57 

for still we in Together, 11 i. 55 

so To the open window m, . . 11 iv. 471 

Set into sunrise ; then we m away. 11 . 553 

She heard, she ?n, She moan'd . n V. 68 

Yet she neither spoke nor m. . n . 539 

Yet she neither vi nor wept. . ir . 543. 

711 by this, or was it chance, . . 11 vi. 81 

771 beyond his custom, Gama said : n . 212 

the small king in beyond his wont. 11 . 248 

on they 711 and gain'd the hall, . n . 332 

own clear element, they 771. . . 11 vii. 13 

rounder seem'd : I m : I sigh'd : . n . 122 

7iz, and at her feet the volume fell. 11 . 238 

from their orbits as they m, . . 11 . 307 

I in as in a strange diagonal, . m Con. 27 

The Wye is hush'd nor in along, . In Mem. xix. 9 
M in the chambers of the blood ; . n xxiii. 20 
We saw not, when we m therein? ir xxiv. 16 
771 Upon the topmost froth . . n li. 3 

Had m me kindly from thy side, . n lxxix. 3 

771 thro' life of lower phase, . . h Con. 125 

772 by an unseen hand at a game . Mand ) I. iv. 26 
771 To speak of the mother she loved u xix. 26 
Katie never ran : she 711 . . The Brook . 87 
She faintly smiled, she hardly 77t ; The Letters 14 
and we see him as he m, . . Ded. of Idylls 16 
sweet voice of Enid in Geraint, . Enid . . 334 
M the fair Enid, all in faded silk, 11 . . 366 
they 7n Down to the meadow n . 536 
and wings M in her ivy, ti 599 
711 the Prince To laughter 11 1144 
harder to be 771 Than hardest tyrants n . 2542 
771 so much the more, and shriek'd 11 - 1630 
light came from her when she 711; Vivien . 417 
thus they m away : she stay'd . Elaine . 3S9 
Must needs have 711 my laughter : n . 594 
M to her chamber, and there flung it . 606 
771 about her palace, proud and pale. ir . 611 
lifted her fair face and 711 away : . 1* . 679 
had devised the letter, m again. . t» 1280 
Sir Lancelot where he in apart, . tf *339 
noblest, while you m Among them, Guinevere . 323 
lifted up in spirit he in away . En, Arden . 327 
A phantom made of many phantoms m n . 603 
01 he himself M haunting people, u . 605 
'The Gods are 111 against the land.' The Victim 6 

movement* 
it absorbs With swifter m . . Isabel . . 32 
loveliest in all grace Of on . . CEnone . 74 
without light Or power of 711, « Pal. 0/ Art. 246 

moving. 
711 thro' a mirror clear . . L.ofShalott,\\. 10 
hidden ore That glimpses, 711 up, D. of P. Worn. 275 
M thro' a fleecy night. . . Margaret . 21 

M in the leavy beech. ... 11 . 6r 

771 toward the stillness of his rest. Locksley H. 144 
711 after truth long sought, . . Two Voices 62 
and was in on In gratulation, . Princess, ii. 167 
711 thro' the uncertain gloom, . 11 iv.' 397 

Slided, they 111 under shade : . " vi. 66 

M about the household ways, . In Mem. lix. 11 
■711 up frora high to higher, . . n lxiii. 13 
Eternal process m on, ir lxxxi. 5 

711 side by side With wisdom, . it cxiii. 19 
And see'st the 111 of the team. . 11 cxx. 16 

lost in trouble and 111 round . . Maud, I. xxi. 5 
711, cast the coverlet aside . . Enid . .73 
711 toward a cedarn cabinet, 11 136 

saw you nz by me on the bridge, 11 429 

7u without answer to her rest . " . .530 

711 downward to the meadow ground, it . 1053 

711 up with pliant courtliness, . 11 . 1x27 

711 homeward babbled to his men, tr . 1211 

7n back she held Her finger up, . n . 1301 

711 out they found the stately horse, n . 1600 



POEM. LINE. 

Edyrn m frankly forward spake : Enid . 1632 

m everywhere Clear'd the dark places 11 . 1790 

M to meet him in the castle court ; Elaine . 175 

kindly man m among his kind : . u . 265 

by the wind they made In m, . tr . 480 

barge that brought her in down, . 11 2382 

ahead Of his and her retinue in, . Guinevere . 382 

111 thro' the past unconsciously, . it . 399 

m ghostlike to his doom. tr . 599 
111 homeward came on Annie pale, En. Arden . 149 

711 up the coast they landed him, . it . 666 
in 711 on I found Only the landward Sea Dreams 93 

711 moves the nest and nestling, . tr , 279 



mower. 
and 711 s mowing in it : . 
Bare victual for the nis : 
coarse, And only meet for nis ; ' . 
Ate all the nis* victual unawares, 
Fresh victual for these nis . . 
costlier than with nis' fare.* 
when I left your nis dinnerless, . 
lusty nis labouring dinnerless, 



Enid 



1048 
1051 
1058 
1064 
1074 
3080 
1083 
1100 

1048 



and mowers m in it : . . . Enid . 

much-beloved. 
And he the 711-b again, . . .In Mem. xli. 6 

7iinck. 
Ran a Malayan ?k against the times Ay Inzer's P. 463 

77tud. 
with pig, wallowing in sun and 17Z. Walk, to the M. 80 
Fish are we that love the 77Z. . Vision of Sin 101 

muddle. 

lond ater raea thot 771's ma quoit ; N. Farmer . 58 

7izuddy. 
clear stream flowing with a 111 one, Isabel . . 30 

mud-honey. 
His heart in the gross ni-h of town, Maud, I. xvi. 5 

7iiuffle. 
O 7iz round thy knees with fern, . Talking O. . 149 

muffled. 

The panther's roar came m . . CEnoize . 2to 

sitting in in dark leaves, . . Gardeners D. 37 

chimneys in in the leafy vine. . Audley Ct. . 18 

we three Sat m like the Fates: . Princess^ ii. 443 

standing, in round with woe, . In Mem. xiv. 5 

m round with selhsh, reticence. . Vivien , 186 

in u Iberry -faced. 
made the m-f Dictator's orgies worse Lucretius 54 

mule. 
Her cream- white w his pastern set: SirL.andQ. G. 31 

multiplied. 

Thus truth was won truth, . The Poet . 33 

Thrice 7iz by superhuman pangs, . St S.Styliies n 

multitude. 
moved the m, a thousand heads : . Princess, Pro. 57 
and so press in, perforce Of in, . Lucretius . 168 

77zu77zbled. 
in her hunger mouth'd and ?« it, . Priizcess, vi. 196 

mumbling. 
Muttering and m, idiotlike . . En. Arden . 640 

murder. 
And the spirit of in works . . Maud, I. i. 40 
the rust of m on the walls — . Gtanevere . 74 

i)zur7izur (s.) 
Overblown with nis harsh, . . Ode to Mem. 99 
And no m at the door, . . Deserted H. 7 

There comes no 111 of reply. . Pal. of Art 286 

To hear the moi the strife, . . Margaret . 23 
7iz broke the stillness of that air Gardener's D.146 
Not whisper, any nz of complaint. St S. Stylites 22 
The nis of the drum and fife . TalkingO. . 315 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



2S; 



rOEM. LINE. 

The vi of the fountain-head — . Two Voices 216 
A in ' He of better cheer.' . . i> . 429 

taint tit's from the meadows come, Day-Din. . 26 
Made am in the land. . . . L.oJ Burleigh 20 
And they speak in gentle in, . 11 -49 

vis of her beauty from the South. Princess, i. 35 
a m ran Thro' all the camp . " v. 106 

tit's from the dying sun : . . In Mem. iii. 8 
dull'd the m on thy lip, 11 xxii. 16 

The m of a happy Pan : . .. n xxiii. 12 
A single in in the breast, . . i» ciii. 7 

cackleof your bourg The ttt of the world ! Enid . 277 
take the rustic in of their bourg . 11 . 410 

tn's 'lo, thou likewise shalt belong.' Elaine 



On a Mourner id 



Locksley H. 106 
Princess, iii. c > 



neither light nor in there . . En. Arden 

a m heard aerially, . . . Boadicea . 24 

tn's of a deeper voice 

tnunnur (verb.) 
And the nations do but in 
dove nay in of the dove, 
Should m from the narrow house, In Mem. XXX v. 2 
I in under moon and stars, . . The Brook . 178 
Will in, lo the shameless ones, . Elaine . 101 

tllltrinur'il. 
Before Our Lady in she . Mariana in the S. 28 
low voice, full of care, M beside me D.o/F. Wont.24g 
in Arthur, ' Place me in the barge M. d Arthur 204 



Talking O. . 160 
. L.ofBurleighZi 

. Trine ess, Tro. 55 

11 ii. ny) 

11 iii. 81 

11 iv. 416 

/;/ Mem. xxxvii. 21 

. Elaine . 888 

. Ay liner's F. 617 

. t he Voyage 63 

In Mem.xorm. 9 



And sweetly in thine. 

And she m, ' Oh, that he 

all the sloping pasture 111, 

tn that their May Was passing : 

rian gazing after her. . 
The mellow breaker 111 Ida. 
1 in, as 1 came along, . 
vi, 'vain, in vain : it cannot be. 
double death were widely in, 
each man in ' O my Queen, . 

vturmtirest. 
Who in in the foliaged eaves 

murmuring. 

m, as at night and morn, . Mariana in the S. 46 
m in her fcastful mirth, . Pal. of Art 177 

Muttering and in at his car 'Quick M. d' Arthur 179 
and heard The voices tn. . . Princess, iv. 537 
vi of innumerable bees." . . u vii. 207 
wind Of memory m the past. . In Mem.xa. 8 
The brooks of Eden mazilym, . Milton . 10 

muscle. 
on which the standing m sloped 
the warmth and in of the heart, 

muscular. 
So in he spread, so broad of breast. 

Muse (s. ) • 
The modern M's reading. 

the M, . 
The M, the jolly M. it is! . 

I ciiicd M's of the cul 
M's .mil the (iraccs, group'd in . 
every M tumbled a science in. 
but tin I uch'd . 

pheme the m .' . 
I 1 with the milk of every M\ 

marble M's, lookin 
For I am but an earth 

'i M answer' d : ' \\ hcrefore 
A life that all the M's deck'd 

w thro 1 all the M's walk ; 
>:l, to such .1 

muse (verb. ) 
in a trance, 
Wliil- 1 ;/; upon thy face : . 
m and iin in 

I in on joy thai 
with my heart I «.• 

shine Upo •■, while I m 

The treat Sir Lancelot in at uie ; 



Enid '. .76 
Ay liner's F. 1 bo 

Gardener's D. 8 



A mfihion 


76 


Will Water. 


9 


Princess, Pro 


10s, 
178 


11 11. 


«3 


" 


377 


■ 1 111. 


5 


II IV. 


119 


: H 


276 


11 




In Mem.xxxvu. 13 


11 lvii. 


9 


11 h 


45 


11 CVIIt. 


4 


Ode oil Hell. 


75 


von 


7S 


11 




I'.'s. . 


IIO 


sir Galahad 


65 


In Mem. iv. 


4 


cxv. 


IO 


Elaitu 


1049 



ttt used. POEM. LI N E. 

while they w, Whispering tu each Sea-Fairies 4 
Lancelot /// a little space , . E.o/Shalott ,w . " 1 

while 1 in came Memory . . Gardener \sZ>. 238 

while I tn, Love with knit brows . n . 240 

won that wildmorninginthe woods. Princess, v. 4C0 
tn on all \ had to tell, . . . In Met/:, vi. 19 
is it pride, and tn and sigh'd . Maud, I. viii. 12 

M, and was mute. . . . The Brook . 201 

M fur a little on his plea, . . Enid . . 42 

m a little, and then clapt her hands Vivien . 715 

to her father, while he tn alone . Elaine , 74.1 

Lancelot later came and tn at her : m 1261 

ttt upon it, drifting up the stream Sea Dreams 104 

museth. 
tn where broad sunshine laves . D.o/F. H'om.iBg 

music. 
while a sweeter tn wakes, . . To the Queen 13 
///(lowing from The illimitable years. Ode toMem 41 
led With tn and sweet showers . 11 -77 

/// rcach'd them on the middle sea. Sea-Fairies 6 
With a in strange and manifold, . Dying Swan 29 
Rain makes in in the tree, . . A Dirge , '.0 
wave would make m above us . The Merman 22 
with plumes, and lights, And ///, . L.o/Shaiott t \i.-$-2 
slowly to a in slowly breath'd, . (Fnone . 40 

came a swell of in on the wind. May Queen, iii. 32-6 
The Messed m went that way . .» .42 

/// in his ears his beating heart did Lolos-E's. , 36 
sweet /// here that softer falls . ir . 46 

M that gentlicr on the spint lies, 11 . 50 

M that brings sweet sleep . 11 .52 

a m centred in a doleful song . ir . 162 

who made His?// heard below ; , D.o/F. Wont. 4 
that flow Of /// left the lips of her . 11 . 195 

Deep-chested in, and to this result. The Ff>:c , 51 
To some full /// rose and sank the sun, Ed. Morns 34 
I scarce hear other tn : . . , 11 .57 

The /// from the town— . . Talking O. 214 

pass'd in in out of sight. . . Locksuy If. 34 
overtakes Far thought with /// . Two Voices 438 
leave his m as of old, ' You might have won,' etc. 14 
voluptuous /// winding trembled, VistOftq/Sin 17 
m touch'd the gales and died : " . 23 

move The minutes, fledged with ///:' Princess, iv. 19 



. 436 

• 567 

• I VI. 40 

11 vii. 270 

ii , 308 

In Mem. Pro. 28 

11 iii. io 



as the)- say, The seal docs m ; 
at a dance to change The m — 
in in the growing breeze of Time 
Like perfect in unto noble words 
And girdled her with in. 
May make one in as before, 
With all the in in her tone, . . 11 
mellow in match'd with him. . n 

I hear a wizard in roll, . . 11 

Shall ring with m all the same : . 11 
m in the bounds of law, . . 11 

tn in measuring out . . n 

At last he beat his in out. . . 11 

A in out of sheet and shroud . 11 

With festal cheer, With books and tint 

Is ;;; more than any song. . . 11 

She sits by her m and 

the noiseless m of the night . 

as the lit clash'd in the lull ; 

sound of dancing m and flutes 

mournful martial 111 blow ; 

With banner and with in 

■ r s golden sea . . 11 

urthen m, kept, . The Daisy 
by and by will make the m miirr. Vivien 
mass, and rolling m, like a Queen. Elaine 

i Mr, and he paused . Guinevere 
as the m of the in".. n Sleej s 
cluing fitfully lake broken ill, 

into nature's m . 
: I hat altogether v. 

Lessening to the 
swell'd again Slowly to ;/.- ; . 
1 c.r.inl but little m there 
A m harmonizing out \\ il 



• 1 
1 1 
'4 

.-•( 

10 

M 
-J 
4 
I I 



lv. 

Ixix. 

I.wvi. 

lxxxvi. 

xciv. 

xcv. 

cii. 

cvi. 

Con. 

Maud, 1. mv. 

11 xviii. 77 

11 xxii. 94 

II. v. 76 

Ode oil It 'eil. 1 7 

11 . 81 

. 252 

. 77 

, - 1 

Aylmeri . 

» • 477 

11 
Sea I 



1 
' 1 

2:6 
=4i 

Make in, Obird, m the uewbudded W.loAlexan n 



286 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Gardener'sD. 228 

. Princess, ii. 161 
. Sea Dreams 250 

. In Mem, Ixiii. 27 
. Enid . -295 
. En Arden . 208 
. Sea Dreams 48 



Arabian N's. 9 



■musical. 
More m than ever came in one, 

•musician, 

M, painter, sculptor, critic, . 
The discords dear to the in. . 

musing. 
Or in the furrow m stands ; . 
7u sat the hoary-headed Earl, 
M on him that used to fill it 
m on the little lives of men, 

musk. 
mossorwz, To grace my city-rooms; Gardener* sD.iZg 
Smelling of m and of insolence, . Maud, I. vi. 45 
And the m of the roses blown. . 11 xxii. 6 

musky-circled. 
began To thrid the m-c mazes, . Princess, iv. 242 

Mussulman. 
True M was I and sworn, 

mute. 
When all the house is m. . . M.d' Arthur 178 
answer us to-day, Meantime be m ; Princess, iii. 151 
lying stark, Dishelm'd and m : 
m she glided forth, 
Your mother is m in her grave 
Mused, and was m. 
Our chief state-oracle is 711: . 
statued pinnacles, m as they. 
m As creatures voiceless 
I will kiss you for it ; ' he was m : 
do you love me V he was in. 
by and by will make the music m, 
both were m, till Philip glancing up En. Arden 437 
He laugh'd ; and then was m ; . Aylmer's F. 402 
M with folded arms they waited. The Captain 39 

mutter* 'd. 
paw'd his beard and m ' catalepsy.' Princess, i. 20 
And ever he m and madden'd . Maud, I. i. 10 
m in himself ' tell her the charm ! Vivien 
hearing 'harlot' m twice or thrice, ti 
* him or death ' she m, . . . Elaine 
to her own sad heart m'the Queen. Guinevere 

muttering. 
M andmurmuringathisear'Quick, M.d'Arthur 179 



II VI. 


85 


II VII. 


i^ 


. Maud, I. iv. 


S8 


. The Brook . 


201 


. Ode on Well. 


27, 


. The Daisy . 


64 


. Enid . 


JH4 


■ Vivien 


78 



241 



6s£ 



Francis, m, like a man ill-used, 



Ep. 12 



thereat the crowd M, dissolved : . Princess, iv. 



after 111 'the great Lancelot' 
M and mumbling, idiotlike . 
Repeated in ( cast away and lost ; ' 
m discontent Cursed me 



Elaine 
En. A rden 



The Flower 



muzzle. 
creature laid his m on your lap, 

myriad. 
of the many tongues, the m eyes 
AT 's of topaz-lights, and 
To vis on the genial earth, . 
And unto vis more, of death. . 11 

woodland lilies, M's blow together Maud, I. xii. 8 
Against the m's of Assaye . . Ode on Well. 99 
world on world in in ins roll . 11 . 262 

That codeless in of precedent, . Aylmer's F. 436 

my riad-m vided. 
Subtle-thoughted, m-m. . . Ode to Mem, 

my ria d-rolling. 
Thine the vi-r ocean. . . . Boadicea 

myriad-room' d. 
Puff'd out his torch among the m-r Vivien . 581 

my riad-wrinkled. 
an old, dumb, m-w man, . . Elaine . 170 

myrrh. 
holy Elders with the gift of m. . M.d 'Arthur 233 

myrrh-bush. 
leave the m-b on the height ; . Lotos-E's. . 103 

myrrh-thicket. 
deep m-fs blowing round . . Arabian N's 104 



Princess, ii. 253 

Ode to Mem. 47 

M.d'Arthur 57 

Jn Mem, xcviii. 1 4 

11 . 16 



118 



42 



myrtle. poem. line. 

Mixt with m and clad with vine, . The Islet . 19 

mystery. 

All the m is thine; . . . Madeline . 24 

Mof mysteries, Faintly smiling . Adeline . 1 

canvass'd human mysteries, . . A Character 20 

dissolved the in Of folded sleep. . D.of F. Worn. 262 

His heart forebodes a m : . . Two Voices 290 

No purple in the distance, m, . Princess, vi. 179 

Of thy prevailing mysteries . In Mem. xxxvli. 12 

In vastness and in m, 11 xcvi. 7 

O ye inysie ries of good, . . tf cxxvu. 8 

that his grave should be a m . Guinevere . 295 

that in Where God-in-man is one . En. Arden . 186 

O 771 ! What amulet drew her . Aylmer's F. 506 

77iystic. 
in white samite, m, wonderful, M.d'Arthur^, 144-59 

mythology. 
As old mythologies relate, . . Two Voices 349 



N 

Nadir. 
hard earth cleave to the N hell . Vivien 

Naiad. 
smilest still, As a A^in a well, . Adeline 
N's oar'd A glimmering shoulder. To E. E. 

nail (s.) 
children cast their pins and n's, . Vivien 

nail (verb.) 
n me like a weasel on a grange . Princess, 



16 
16 



1 88 



naked. 
All n in a sultry sky, . . . Fatuna . 37 
Nthey came to that smooth-swarded CEnone . 93 
' Ride you n thro' the town, . Godiva . 29 

N I go, and void of cheer: . . Two Voices 239 
Far too n to be shamed ! . . Vision of Sin igo 
N, a double light in air and wave, Princess, vii. 152 
hands Lay n on the wolfskin, . Elaine . 809 

nakedness. 
shall see The 11 and vacancy . Deserted H, n 

Grimy u dragging his trucks . Maud, I x. 7 

prodigies of myriad u'es, . . Eucreiius . 356 

name (s.) 
Wisdom, a n to shake All evil dreams 

of power — a sacred n. . . The Poet . 46 

round the prow they read her n, E.ofShalott,vv. 44 
From thy rose-red lips my 11 . Eleanore . 133 

tell my n again to me, n . 142 

when some one spoke his 11, . . Fatiina 15 

those n's, that in their motion were Pal. of Art 165 
Lost to her place and n; w . 264 

know you proud to bear your n, E. C. V. de Vere 10 
ask thou not my 11 : . . . D. ofF. Worn. 93 
heard my n Sigh'd forth with life 11 . 153 

crown about my brows, A 11 for ever ! 11 . 163 

11 of Britain trebly great — 'You ask me why,' etc. -2-2 
betray'd thy nature and thy n, . M.d' Arthur 73 
call'd him by his u, complaining loud 11 . 210 

when I heard her n, My heart . Gardeuer'sD. 61 
cuckoo told his u to all the hills ; . m . 92 

carved my n Upon the cliffs . . Andley Ct. . 47 
set the words, and added n's I knew. u . 60 

knew the n's, Long learned n's . Ed. Morris 16 
I spoke her n alone. ... 11 . 08 

n's Are register'd and calendar'd . St S.Siylites 129 
Say thou, whereon I carved her 11, TalkingO. 33-97 
tell me, did she read the n . n . 153 

found, and kiss'd the u she found tr . 159 

I am become a ?i ; . . . Ulysses . n 

built herself an everlasting u. . Godiva . 79 
how thy?-; may sound Will vex thee Two Voices no 
sons grow up that bear his n, . 11 . 256 

He names the u Eternity. 11 . 291 

n of wife And in the rights that n 

may give ..... Day-Din. . 265 
have won the Poet's n, 'Vou might have won,' etc. 1 



TEXNYSOX'S IFOR AS. 



2C7 



POEM. LINE. 

What care I for any n ? . . VtsionofSin 05 

A' and fame! to fly sublime . . » . 103 
lovelier than their n's, . . . Princess, Pro. 12 

hail'il a score of n's upon her, . ir . 155 

His » was Gama ; . ... » i. 113 

albeit their glorious n's Were fewer, 11 11. 1 39 

great » flow on with broadening time ■■ iii. 148 

stony lis Of shale and horneblcnde » . 343 

Proctors leapt upon us, crying 'N's: u iv. 240 

-1 forget her «— . 11 v. 283 

Whose n is yoked with children's, 11 , 408 

happy warriors, and immortal n's, it vi. 77 

must wed him for her own good « ; 11 vii. 5^ 



liiMem. xviii 



7 

xxxvi. 3 

lviii. 16 

lxiv. 9 

Ixvi. 7 

lxxii. 16 

l.xxxvi. 17 

CX. 22 



Among familiar n's to rest 
yield all blessing to the n 
hardly tell what n were thine 
Since we deserved the n of friends, 
Along the letters of thy n, . 
force that would have forged a «. 
Another n was on the door: . 
The grand old n of gentleman ; . 

Sweet Hespcr-Phosphor, double « 11 cxx. 17 

four n's, which shall be read, 11 Con. 57 

the n's are sign'd, and overhead . •• ,60 
my own sad « in corners cried, . Maud, I. vi. 72 

learned man Could give it a clumsy «. u II. ii. 10 
sudden malting of splendid n's, . 11 III. vi. 47 
of one n and heart with her. . . The Brook . 76 

'Willows.' 'No!' 'Thatismyw.' " . 212 

fhost of one who bore your u . u . 219 
11 that .dread sound to the great ;/, Ode on Well. 71 

1 ' mu ■:, to such an « irep.) . 11 -75 

lal honour to his u. . . 11 .150 
household", Hereafter, thro' all time Ded. oj Idylls 41 

Forgetful of his glory and his 11, . Enid . . 53 

ly lord and not his 11 . 92 

1 his 11, and sent Her maiden 11 . . 192 

'Surely I will learn the «,' 11 203 

. but no, good faith, n 405 

own maiden to demand the «, . 11 . .411 

a it far-sounded among men 11 427 

let his ;/ Slip from my lips n 445 

earn'd himself the « of sparrow-hawk 492 

11 will yet remain Untarnish'd . n . . 500 

: her own 11 had slipt away) 11 . . 507 

I m the fallen man 11 . . 575 

stately queen whose » was Guinevere," . . 667 

. fair // was breath'd upon, n . 1799 

lent when hern was named. Vivien . 8 

1 nd « . . 11 63,224,819 

My use and « and fame. . . n 1 

slowly ebbing, n and fame.' 11 . 287 

My >', once mine, now thine, . 11 . 296 

when my // was lifted up, 11 . 352 

whole prey Is man's good n: . » . 579 

popular // such inanlior.il earns, . 11 . 636 

like a fire among the noblest n's, . 11 . 651 

mish in a it of note, . n . 681 

n his 11 1 . Elaine . 29 

and by that it Had named them, .11 -32 

together; but their/At were lost.n . 41 

I.: r ill his lay, . 11 . 11 j 

your u.i .11. piers : . 11 13 ,, 57 ;j 

by what 11 Livest between the lips? 11 . 

bout, 11 . 233 

' hair lord, whose it I know not — 11 . 359 

hear, but bold my u Hidden, . 11 . 415 

n for the m Of Lancelot, 11 . 476 

therefore would he hide bis 11 . 11 . 570 

learn bis n P . 11 . 651 

1 is Lam '|..t 't ' 11 , 7^3 
win his honour and to make his /;, „ 

I thy ».' and fame, . . ■■ 1363 

' 1 1. and fame, . 1, 1,91 
f '.oil on in v // to me ... 11 

• n // shames me , ., j ^ 

1 

evermore a » of scorn. . Guinevere . 61 

sanctuary, " rask Hern, ■ . 11 . 141 

told hern ■> . 146 

fsiul enjample from fair n's, . . .1 



IDEM. LINE. 

mine will ever be a « of scorn. . Guinevere . 620 
but that « has twice been changed — En. Arden. 860 
' he that marries her marries the n ' A) Inter's F. 25 
almost all the village had one « ; . 11 . 35 

sjw'd her n and kept it green . 11 .88 

one transmitter of their ancient u, 11 . 206 

A, too, » / Their ancient u ! . 11 . 377 

Fall back upon a n ! rest, . . 11 . 385 

make a u, A', fortune too : . h . 394 

crying upon the n of Leolin, . 11 . 576 

that moment, when she named his n, 11 . 581 

never look that useful « in vain ; . Sea Dreams 185 
if you love not my good «.' . . Grandmother 48 
so well that your good « is mine . o -So 

Milton, a n to resound for ages ; . Milton . 4 

make the 11 Of his vessel great . The Captain 18 
reliance, For his noble n, . . 11 . 53 

take That popular n of thine . Lucretius . 96 

one « with her Whose death-blow 11 . 232 

name verb.) 
yet to h my spirit loathes . T>. 0/ F. Worn. 106 

He n's the name Eternity. . . Two Voices 291 
That 11 the under-lying dead. . J 11 Mem. ii. 2 
wish loo strong for words to u . 11 xcii. 14 
The Sultan, as we 11 him, — . . Maud, 1. xx. 4 
Let him n it who can, . . . n II. ii. xi 
Since you n yourself the summer fly Vivien . 219 
break faith with one 1 may not n '. Elaine . 682 

named. 
dreamer, deaf and blind, .V man, Two Voices 176 
bawl for civil rights, No woman n : Princess, v. 378 
was our England's Alfred it ; . Cite nit Well. 188 

grateful people » Enid the Good : Enid . 1811 
lavish comment when her name was n Vivien . 8 
be as great as you are n, . . 11 18s 

n them, since a diamond was the prize. Elaine 33 
here He » the day) . . En. Arden . 215 
moment when she « bis name, . Aylmer's F. 581 

nameless. 
and I am n and poor. . . . Maud, I. iv. 18 

naming. 

u each, And ;; those, his friends, . The Brook . 130 
never 11 God except for gain, . Sea Dreams 1S4 

nap. 
'Twas but an after-dinner's «. . Day-Dnt. . 156 

nape, 

very « of her white neck Was rosed Princess, vi. 323 
and the skull llrako from the //, . Elaine . 51 

napkin. 
« wrought with horse and hound, Audley Ct. 20 

That with the n dally ; . . Will Hater. 118 

Naples. 
quite worn out, Travelling to .V*. . The Brook . 36 

narcotics. 
Like dull lis, numbing pain. . In Mem. v. 8 

narrow (adj.) 
Oh! it, 11 was the space, . . Oriana . 46 

In, < areful hand,— Tke space was n En. Arden 177 

narro-.v (verb.) 
tho' the gathering enemy « thee, BoSdicea . 39 

narrolv'd. 
river as it n to the hills. . . Princess, iii. 180 

-V her goings out and comings in ; Aylmer's I 

narrowing'. 

N\n to where they sat assembled 1 'isiono/Sin 16 

narrowness. 

Nor ever « or spite, . .In Mem. ex. 17 

nation. 

And the n's do but murmur, .7. I0 6 

From the iii airy navies .... . 154 

A n yet, the rulers and the ruled Princess, Con. 53 
tinting of a mighty n, . Ode on Well, 4 

u weeping, and breaking on my test t .. 



2 S8 



CONCORDANCE TO 



native. ' poem. line. 
Who look'd all n to her place, . Princess^ vii. 304 

nature. 

a perfect whole From living N y . Pal. of Art 58 
Carved out of N for itself, 11 . 127 

Lord over A r , Lord of the visible earth, u . 179 

bliss of life, that N gave, . . D.o/F. Worn. 210 
Great _Vis more wise than I : . To J. S. . 35 
English ris t freemen, friends, ' Love thou thy land' 7 
A 7 " also, cold and warm, . 11 * 37 

if N's evil star Drive men . . <r -73 

n brings not back the Mastodon. . TJte Epic . 36 
betray'd thy n and thy name, . M. d Arthur 73 
To what she Is : a 71 never kind ! Walk, to tfteM. 54 
Kind n is the best : ... n -56 

fit us like a u second-hand; . . it - 57 

\ov& for N is as old as I ; . . Ed. Morris 28 
love for N and my love for her, . v . 31 

those and theirs, by N's law, . Talking O. . 73 
grossness of his n will have weight Lockstey H. 48 
err from honest Ns rule ! . 11 .61 

Nay, but N brings thee solace ; . 11 -87 

I am shamed thro' all my n . 11 . 148 

A^made them blinder motions . it . 150 

Here at least, where 11 sickens, . n . 153 

Young N thro' five cycles ran, . Two Voices 17 
If N put not forth her power . n . 160 

In N can he nowhere find . . tr . 293 

N's living motion lent 11 . 449 

applications lie In Art like A 7 ", . Day-Dm. . 210 
Oh, 71 first was fresh to men, . Ampkion . 57 

lift your n's up : Embrace our aims : Princess^ li. 74 
' Wild ns need wise curbs : . p v. 165 

as frankly theirs As dues of A/". . n . 196 

dwelt an iron n in the grain : . n vi. 34 

Love and A", these are two more terrible ti . 149 

Thaw this male n to some touch . 11 . 287 

with man The shining steps of A', 11 vii. 246 

ict thy n strike on mine, it . 330 

all the phantom, N, stands — . In Mem. hi. 9 
words, like A r , half reveal 11 v. 3 

tho' my n rarely yields . . 11 xl. 33 

From arc, from «, from the schools » xlviii, 1 
pangs of ;/, sins of will, . . rt liii. 3 

Are God and A 1 " then at strife, . 11 Hv, 5 

That N lends such evil dreams? m 

A 7 , red in tooth and claw . . n lv. 15 

That N's ancient power was lost : u lxviii. 2 

And cancell'd n's best : . . u Ixxi. 20 

1 curse not «, no, nor death ; . 11 Ixxii. 7 

moulded like in ns mint ; . . 11 Ixxviii. 6 
doest expectant u wrong ; . 11 Ixxxii. 3 

' Can clouds of n stain 11 lxxxiv. 85 

High 71 amorous of the good, . «i cviii. 9 
Will let his coltish n break . . 11 ex. 7 

Where God and iV met in light ; . n .20 

dying N^s earth and lime ; . . 1? cxvii, 4 
reach thro' n t moulding men. . 11 cxxiii. 24 

mix'd with God and xV thou, . ir exxix. it 

Is A" like an open book ; . . 11 Con. 132 
For n is one with rapine, . . Maud, 1. iv. 22 
in his force to be N's crowning race. 11 * 33 

An eye well-practised in « if . 3S 

Because then ?i's are little, 11 -53 

Should A^ keep me alive, . . 11 vL 32 

Sweet wgildedby thegraciousgleam Ded. oj 'Idylls 38 
suffer any taint In 71 .' . . . Enid . . 32 
suspicious that her 71 had a taint u . .63 
filial tenderness, Or easy n, . tr * 798 

n's prideful sparkle in the blood tr » 1C ^75 

Like simple noble ?t*s, credulous . u • 1723 

charm Of « in her overbore . Vivien . 446 

judge all 71 from her feet of clay, . <■ . 6S4 

tenderness Of manners and of n, . Elaine . 328 

all was 7i t all, perchance for her. . n . 329 

some discourtesy Against my « ; . ir ' 1295 

not idle, but the fruit Of loyal ?i, Guinevere . 334 
as A" packs Her blossom . . En. Arden . 178 
thought and « fail'd a little, . tr . 793 

n crest Was mother of the foul . AyhnersF. 375 
Lrokc into us music when they saw 11 . 694 



my 71 longer mix with thine ? 

laws of 71 were our scorn ; 

N, so far as in her lies, 

seem'd A void was made in AT; . 

powers and genial heat Of N, 

with how great ease A' could smile, 

Twy-natured is no 71 : . 

womb and tomb of all, Great N, . 



bore alongthe 11 Her pendent hands, Aylmer's E.812 

navy. 

From the nations' airy navies _ . Locksley H. 124 
gay 71 there should splinter on it, . Sea Dreams 327 



POEM. LINE. 


Tithonus 


6s 


T/ie Voyage 


«4 


O71 a Mourner 1 


Lucretius . 


■vi 


11 


98 


» 


174 


•t 


191 


11 • 


241 



near. 
now I think my time is n. 
Ride on ! the prize is «.' 
He seems so n and yet so far, 
red rose cries, ' She is 71, she is n ; 
not weep — my own time seem'd so n. 
Dear, n and true — no truer Time . 
both are 71, and both are dear, 

near'd. 
71 His happy home, the ground. . 
So rapt, we n the house ; 
only 71 Her husband inch by inch, 
71, Touch'd, clink'd and clash'd 
Till she 71 the foe . 



MayQueen,nu 41 
Sir Gala/tad 80 
IfiMem. xcvi. 23 
Maud, I.xxii. 63 
Grandmother 72 
A Dedication r 
The Victim 63 

Gardener 'sD. 90 
11 . 141 

Ayhner's E. 806 
Sea Dreams 130 
The Captain 36 



nearer. 
make you evermore Dearer and k, A Dedication 3 

nearest. 
"\Vereitour?*,Wereitourdearest(rep.) Tlie Victim 13 

near7iess. 
Desire of « doubly sweet ; . . InMem.cx.vi. 6 
thro' that n of the first, . . Aylmer's E. 605 

7ieat. 
a home For Annie, 71 and uestlike, En. Arden . 59 

neater. 
Be the n and completer; . . Maud, I. xx. 20 

neat-herds. 
while his n-k were abroad ; . . Lucretius . £S 

necessity. 
seem'd So justified by that 71, 
The vast 71 of heart and life. 
neck. 
Round thy 71 in subtle ring 
A glowing arm, a gleaming », 
touch her 71 so warm and white, 
round her 71 Floated her hair 
rode sublime On Fortune's 71: 
clung about The old man's 71, 

grazing iron collar grinds my 71: . StS.Stylites 115 
A third would glimmer on her 71 . Talking O. . 221 
leap forth and fall about thy n, . Love and Duty i,i 
Disyoke their n's from custom . Princess, 11. 127 
Drew from my 71 the painting . 11 vi. 94 

See, your foot is on our n's, ti . 150 

nape of her white 71 Was rosed . " . 323 

fell in silence on his n : . . . Di Mem. cii. 44 
bays, the peacock's n in hue ; . The Daisy . 14 
Shore thro' the swarthy 71, . . Enid . 1576 

curved an arm about his n, . . Vivien . 90 

mantle of his beard Across her 71 . 11 . 106 

kiss each other On her white u — . ir - 306 

lithe arm round his ?z Tighten, . u . 464 

eyes and ?; glittering went and came: tr . 809 

Ji to which the swan's Is tawnier . Elaine 1178 

necklace for a 71 O as much fairer 11 1221 

flung One arm about his n . . it 13^6 

King's breath wander o'er her n, . Guinevere . 576 
My mother clings about my «, . Sailor Boy . 17 

necklace. 

And I would be the «, . . . Miller's D. . 1S1 

I To make the « shine ; . . . TalkingO. . 222 



. Enid . 
. Vivien 




[=45 
774 


. Adeline 
. Millers 


D.'. 


58 

78 


. GLnone 
. D.o/F. 
. Dora . 


Worn 


17+ 

17 

.142 

160 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



2S? 



POEM. LINE. 

fling the diamond « by.' . _ . Lady Clare 40 
« for a neck to which the swan's . Elaine 1178 

» for a neck O as much fairer— . 11 1221 

nectar. 
For they lie beside their u, . . Lolos-Es. . 156 
hand ambrosia, mix The n ; . . Princess, iii. 98 

need (s. ) 
wasted Truth in her utmost 11,'C 'lear-headed friend' '19 
dusted velvets have much u of thee Tof.M.K. 4 
if some dreadful « should rise 'Love thou thy laud' 91 
where there was never n of vows, Gardener's!). 253 
his child, if good « were, .Princess, ii. 267 
How know 1 what had « of thee, . /nJIfem.lxxii. 3 
cruel n Constrain'd us, . . . Lmd . . 715 
to be there against a sudden n ; . 11 . 1224 

««</(verb.) 
all Life tt's for life is possible . Love and DulyZ'j 

natures » wise curbs. . . Princess, 

they ;; M 1 of culture: . 11 . 180 

Whether 1 n have Hcd ? . . Maud, II. ii. 72 

needed. 

• it « help of Love : . .In Mem. xxv. 8 

1 no charm to keep them . / ivten . 307 

ill that seamen « . . . En. Arden . 139 

thrice -Asoftasw— . " . 143 

thro' the want of what it n most, 11 . 264 

best could tell What most it « — . 11 . 266 

needing. 
father lying sick and n hinij . En. Arden . 05 

needle. 
bave hid her » in my heart, . . Ed. Morris 62 
Man for the sword and for the n she : J f rtitcess,\'.tt^Z 
Are sharpen' d to a it's end ; . . I11Mau.bt.xv. 4 

ncglci t. 
If men n your pages? . . . Spiteful Let. C 

ut elected. 
thanks it seems lill now u, . . 1 'ivien . 157 

neighbour. 

all the it's shoot thee round, . The Blackbird 2 

And ran to tell her n's: . . The Goose . 14 

y the it's when they call, . Ampltion . 5 

I! 'tis 111 my ns ground, . " -75 

.'. ife. . . VisionofSin 118 

in his n's ear ; . . Princess, v. 14 

i ic lis m< 1 . In Mem. xxxi. 9 

The foolish n's come and go, . u lix. 13 

came a it. . . Aytmer's F. 251 

and laugh and gossip, Grandmother yt 

With «'i laid along the grass, . Lucretius . 211 

hbourhood. 

S from human u, . . . Eleauore . 6 

ic blissful «, . . Two Voices 430 

e low voice to one dear «, . Aytmer's . 

n'd. 

h all gladness as they came, Enid . 1603 

.» at a friend's voice, Guinevere . 526 

'■inc. 
: n's of the wild white Horse Elaine . 298 

'terry, 
■ air . The Brook . 17 

Nemesis, 

en'd future, Princess,vi.i$i 

u <■/•>' 

>w-hawk, My curse, my »— Enid . . 444 

n . . 473 
488 

" • • 55 1 

11 

Tth Elaine . 536 

.... , 649 

. Guinevere . 1 1 

■tin n. 

1 



nerz'e. 
His n's were wrong. What ails us 
those, who clench their it's to rush 
life, whereof our n's are scant, 
My n's have dealt with stiffer. 
When thy n's could understand . 
A weight of n's without a mind, . 
and the n's prick And tingle ; 
and the n of sense is numb : 
0, having the n's of motion . 
O iron ;/ to true occasion true 
Were living n's to feel the rent ; . 



LINE 

Walk.totheM.^% 

Lm'e and Duty 75 
Two Voices 397 
Mill Water. 78 
VisionofSin 160 

//; Mem. xii. 7 
11 .\h\. 2 
.. xcii. 7 

Maud, I 1. 61 



Aytmer's E. 5;u 



nerve-dissolving. 
The «-</ melody .... VisionofSin 44 

From my high « of penance . SIS. Stylites \( 4 

deep you might embower the « . Princess, Pro. 147 
Father will come to his babe in the u, 11 ii. 468 

in the North long since my n is made. 11 iv. 92 
builtthe»,'shesaid, Tohatchthecuckoo.u . 346 

We seem a u of traitors — . . ir v. 416 

the bird's song you may learn the it.' Enid > 

live like two birds in one n, . . 11 1475 

yellow-throated nestling 111 the n. Elaine 1 j 

each a « in bloom. . . Aytmer's 1 1 - . 

moving moves the n and nestling, Sea Dream, 
In her « at peep of day? . 1. . 2S2 

And we'll have a u together. . The Window S5 

nestlike, 

a home For Annie, neat and n, . En Arden. . 59 

nestling. 
yellow-throated « in the nest. . Elaine . 12 

Moving moves the nest and n, . Sea Dreams 27 j 

nel(s.) 
Love that hath us in the «, . . Miller's D. . 203 
catch a dragon in a cherry n, . Princess, v. 162 
have her lion roll in a silken « . Maud, I. \ i 
// made pleasant by the baits Of gold Aytmer's E. 4S6 

net (verb.) 
fibres n the dreamless head. . . In Mem. ii. 3 

nettled. 
tho' it that he seem'd to slur 



Princess, 1. . 161 

never. 

Thou shalt hear the ' A', «' . . Locksley 11. 83 

never-lighted. 
Beside the «-/ fire,; . . InMem lxxxiii.20 

new. 

green, A 7, from its silken sheath. . D.ofF.Wo 

sing for want, ere leaves are n, Tkt Blackbird . ( 

1 comes to thee n or strange To J. S. . 7; 
-V :ui<l Old, disastrous feud, ' 'Love thou thy land' 77 
order changeth, yielding place tow, M.d'Arthu 
I knit a hundred others «: . . Two Voices 234 
I there are >: ; . . WtU •■ 

No, I love not what is n ; . . VisionofSin 1 1 
old friend and tried, she it in all?. Princess, 1 
Whose fancy fuses old and «, . In Mem. >. 
King out the old, ring in the n, . 11 cv. 5 

lilts that look like « : . . .. exxvii. n 
A 7 as his title, built last year, . Maud, 1. x. 11 
splendour deal Enid . 808 

if not sow, Vet therefore tenfold 11 809 

new-bai 

n-l> in I'aphian wells . . CEiione . 171 

■ born, 
here he glances on an eye n-b, . Lucretius . 137 

tdded. 

music, O bird, in the n-b bowers I W.toAlexan. 11 

new-caged 
iillen as a beast n-c, , . Enid . 1047 

titer. 

n-e's in an ancient hold, rris 9 

, millionaire , •■ . 

'1' 



290 



CONCORDANCE TO 



new-fallen. poem. line. 
like a n-f meteor on the grass, . Princess, vi. 119 

Newfo un dland. 
Than for his old N's . . . Aylmer's F. 125 

newly-caged. 
Like some wild creature n-c, . Princess, ii. 281 

newly -fa lien. 
o'er a mount of «y"stones, . . Enid . . 361 

nezu-made. 
one of the two at her side This n-m lord Maud, I. x. 3 

new-mown. 

rarely smells the 71-771 hay . . TJie Owl, i. 9 

newness. 
the discovery And n of thine art . Ode to Mem. 88 

new-risen. 
on the roof Of night n-r, . . Arabia?iN*s. 130 



news. 
N from the humming city comes . 
in the distance pealing n Of better 
Pass and blush the n 
Pass the happy n . 
Ill n, my Queen, for all who love . 
Yet good 71 too ; for goodly hopes 
' What n from Camelot, lord ? 
on the Queen with the sharp ;z. . 
Expectant of that 71 which never . 
and no n of Enoch came, 
breaker of the bitter n from home, 
She brought strange 71. 



Gardene-r'sD. 35 

Princess, iv. 63 

Maud,I.xvii. 11 

■ 15 

Elaine . 596 

" • 599 

if . 617 

i» . 726 

En. Arde7i . 257 

. 358 

Aylmer's F. 594 

Sea Drea77is 258 



neiv-world. 
clamour grew As of a n-w Babel, Pri?icess, iv. 466 

New-Year. 
of all the glad N-y, (rep.) . . MayQueen,]. 2 
sun rise upon the glad N-y. . . ip ii. 2 

ast N-y that I shali ever see, h .3 

And the N-y's coming up. mother, ir .7 

And the N-y will take' em away. D. of the O. Year 14 
And the N-y blithe and bold, . 11 • 35 

O Sweet 71-y delaying long ; I?i Mem. Ixxxii. 2-13 
N Kand Old Year met . . 1865-1866 . 2 

N-Y blowing and roaring. . . 11 . 13 

niece. 

William was his son And she his «. Dora . . 3 
Allan call'd His « and said: .11 . .40 

by the bright head of my little n . Princess,, ii. 257 

ntgh. 

Far off thou art, but ever 71 . hi Mem. cxxix.13 

nigh-7iaked. 
On the 71-71 tree the Robin piped . E71. Arde7i . 677 



POEM. LINK. 

Marsraret . 21 



Garde7ier'sD. 12^ 
11 . 186 

262 



-/:/. 



Mariana 21-57 

11 . 25 

ArabiatiNs. 37 



Ode to Me77z. 28 

Deserted H. 5 

Oriana . 19 

— The Merman 23 

L.ofShalott,\\. 30 

h iii. 24 



only said. 'The 71 is dreary, 

Upon the middle of the 71 

another ?/ in n I enter'd 

The living airs of middle 71 . 

on the roof Of n new-risen, . 

Nor was the 71 thy shroud. . 

All within is dark as 71 : 

In the yew-wood black as 71, 

thunder and light in the magic 11 

often thro* the silent 71 s 

often thro' the purple n 

Thro' the noises of the « 

' Madonna, sad is 7t and morn ;' Maria7iai7ttJieS. 22 

1 The day to ?*,' she made her moan ir . 81 

Heaven over Heaven rose the 71. . n -92 

71 comes on that knows not morn, 

When April 71 s began to blow, 

Flitted across into the 71, 

may seem, As in the 71 s of old, 

1 rose up in the silent « : 

young 71 divine Crown'd dying day Pal. of Art 183 

token when the?; and morning meet :MayQueen,m.ziz 

Drops in a silent autumn n, . Lotos-E's. . 79 

Saw God divide the 71 . D. ofE. Wom.zz^ 



Millers D. 



The Sisters 



166 



Moving thro* a fleecy 71. 

Float by you on the verge of n. 

the last 71's gale had caught, 

heir to all, Made this n thus. 

A?" slid down one long stream . " 

ere the 71 we rose And saunter'd home Audley C. 78 

in the n, after a little sleep, I wake : StS.Stylites iit 

brought the?; In which we sat _ Love and Ditty 58 

and of sunrise mix'd In that brief 71; it . 71 

summer «, that paused Among her stars " . 71 

Many a ?* from yonder ivied casement Locksley H. 7 

Many a h I saw the Pleiads, . 11 . g 

flushing in the northern 11. .. i» . 26 

In the dead unhappy 71, . " . ■ 7^ 

Look up thro' 71 : the world is wide. Two Voices 24 

yearning toward the lamps of 71. . " . 363 

Beyond the 71, across the day, . Day-Din. . 195 

a vision when the ji was late : . Vision of Sin 1 

Thou art mazed, the 71 is long, . 11 

And the longer 71 is near : u 

round again to happy 71. ' Move eastward,' etc. 

from some bay-window shake the 71; Princess, i. 105 

To float about a glimmering 71, 

circled Iris of a 71 of tears ; . 

My mother, 'tis her wont from 71 to n 
in one n and due to sudden sun : . 

the long 71 ot her deep hair, 

long fantastic ti With all its doings 

As 71 to him that sitting on a hill . 

later in the 71 Had come on Psyche 

Come as goblins in the 71 

dews Gathered by 7/ and peace, . 

A 71 of Summer from the heat, 

like 71 and evening mixt 

whole 71 s long, up in the tower, . 

from the deeps, a wall of ?/, 

Drew the great 71 into themselves, 

after that dark 71 among the fields, 

Deep in the 71 I woke : 

shares with man His 71 s, his days, 

the light Dearer for 71, 

gradually the powers of the ?i, 

I hear the bell struck in the n ; 

dash'd with wandering isles of n. 1 

The moon is hid ; the ?i is still ; (ciii. 2) 1 

To enrich the threshold of the 71 . \ 

Draw forth the cheerful day from n ; 1 

An infant crying in the 71: . . 1 

How dwarf'd a growth of cold and 71, 1 

His n of loss is always there. . 1 

I found an angel of the 71 ; . . 1 

mix with hollow masks of 72 ; . 1 

howlest, issuing out of 71, . . 1 

not in watches of the 71, . - 

Withdraw themselves from me and ?/, 

Power was with him in the 71, . 1 

On that last n before we went 

A little spare the 71 I loved, . 

The year is dying in the n ; 

bank Of vapour, leaving 7/ forlorn. 

Bright Phosphor, fresher for the n, 1 

In the deep 71, that all is well. 

Be sunder'd in the ji of fear ; 



TI Co 71. 

I71 Me7n. x. 

xxiv. 

xxviii. 

xxix. 

xxx. 

liii. 

lx. 

bey. 

lxviii. 

lxix. 

lxxi. 

xc. 

xciv. 

V xcv. 

11 cii. 

n civ. 

I f cv. 
ir cvi. 
u cxx. 
!' cxx v. 

II exxvi. 
Maud, I. i. 



195 
196 



■ 243 
u. 11 

. 16 

v. 293 

. 47c 

■ 543 
- S5i 

v. 47 
. 211 
• 234 



34 
58 

247 
326 



IS 
3 
4 
9 



divide the shudderin^ 
in the hush of the moonless 71 s, . 

ghostlike, deathlike, half the 71 long ir iii. 8 

nodding together In some Arabian n?n yii. 12 

spark struck vainly in the 71, . 11 ix. 14 

Beat to the noiseless music of the ».' 11 xviii. 77 

The black bat, 71, has flown, . if xxii. 2 

The brief 11 goes In babble . " _ . 27 

Half the n I waste in sighs, . " II. iv. 23 

face of?; is fair on the dewy downs tf ^ III. vi. 5 
by 71 With moon and trembling stars, Enid . . 7 

ere they settle for the 71. . it . 250 

get me harbourage for the n ? " ■ 281-99 

71 Before my Enid's birthday, . n . 457-632 

draw The quiet 71 into her blood 11 532 

71 of fire, when Edyrn sack'd if 634 

i sadly lost on that unhappy n ; . n . . 689 

hire us some fair chamber for the 7/ 11 . 1087 



TEX.VYSO.VS WORK'S. 



291 



POEM. LINE. 

sleepless n's Of my long life . Vivien . 529 

tended him, And likewise many a « : Elaine . 847 
like a star in blackest u. . . 11 1236 

In the dead «, grim faces came . Guinevere . 70 
then they were agreed upon a « . » .96 

dark the « and chill ! irep.j . . >• . 16c 

Thro' the thick « I hear the trumpet 11 . 565 

making all the n a steam of tire. . 11 . 593 

seem'd, as in a nightmare of the «, En. Arden . 114 
After a « of feverous wakefulness 11 . 230 

fearing « and chill for Annie . 11 . 440 

»'d round by the blind wall of « if . 488 

Hurt in that « of sudden ruin . n . 565 

third « after this, While Enoch slumber'd.i . 906 

lith that same n ; . . Aylmer's F. 279 
Mice again by n the lovers met, • " ■ 4'3 

one «, except for greenish glimmering 11 . 621 

sea roars Kuin : a fearful k. 1 ' . Sea Dreams 81 
reaching thro' the n Her other, . 11 . 273 

r this one n be sound : . 11 . 302 

burn the threshold of the «, . Tlte Voyage »8 

Overboard one stormy n " -79 

thy voice with the deepening of the « V.ofCauteretz 2 
1 1 the long frost and longest u A Dedication 11 

once at dead of M did greet . . On a Mourner 32 

Taken the stars from the n, . . The Window 39 

night-dew. 

u-d's on still waters . . . Lotos-Es. . 48 

nighty 

Ig she heard the n-f crow . Mariana . 26 

nightingale. 

lelighteth to prolong . . Pal. of Art 173 

n Sang loud, as tho' he were the bird Gardener 's D '.94 

That tremble round a « — . . 11 . 249 

re a hundred-throated n, Vision of Sin 27 

many songs, Poet's Song 13 

lut us peal'd the », . . Princess, i. 217 

at mine ear Bubbled the n . . » iv. 247 

thick r saj -Then istbt» ; . Enid . 341 

in the plain egg-, of the «. Aylmer's F. 103 

: me chirrupt the n. . . Grandmother 40 

'amp. 
: the dying «-/ flickers, . LocksleyH. £0 

night. 

u-l flickering in my eyes Awoke me.' Sea Dreamsioi 

-long. 
A n-l Present of the Past . . InMemXxx. 3 

mare. 
rrible n's. And hollow shades Pal. of Art 240 
i . . . M. d 'Arthur 177 
■i:tre of himself? Loveand i 
This >: . . . . Pri) 

f the night, . En. Arden . 114 

■find. 
The n-w's come and go, m -. Q:ieen,\. 33 

•r of the Baltic and the -V, Ode on I Veil. 137 

iVilut. 

1 have risen before his time D. ofF. Worn. 143 

: for. 
The n-yffii'i.wm&s: . . . Elaine 1161 

.er, the A' of swine, 

ughtcr, one arm out, . Princess, iv. 352 

;ain, and « mc flat, . . / '.'ri'eu . 200 

n to death by him That was a Cod, Ed. Morris 101 

• ner'edshotun N. Farmer. 33 
;'d for it oop at 'soize— 11 . 36 



nobility. POEM. line. 

pure « of temperament, . . Enid . .212 

noble (adj.) 
As « till the latest day ! . . To the Queen 22 
'Tis only n to be good. . . E.C. I '.de I 'ere 54 
tt> look on « forms Makes n . . Princess, ii. 7 j 
Better not be at all 'Than not be n. m . 80 

more n than three score of men . 11 iii. 93 

hearts in a cause, we are « still . Maud,\\\.\\. 55 
take the charger too, A n one.' . Enid . 1405 

makes you seem less » than yourself, Vivien . 171 
as ;/, cis their Queen was fair? . 11 . 458 

whose name I know not — « it is, . Elaine . 359 

must be a thousand-fold Less n, . Guinevere 337 
for one hour less n than himself . 11 . 344 

Sir Lancelot's, were as « as the King's 1 . 349 

Not keep it «, make it nobler? . Aylmer's F. 3S6 

noble 5.) 
Where the wealthy n's dwell, . L. of Burleigh 24 

nobleman. 
wedded with a « from thence : . Princess, i. . 76 

nobleness. 
And much I praised her n t . . Princess, Pro. 124 
That you trust me in your own «, Elaine 
With such a vantage-ground for n Aylmer's F. 387 

nobler. 
am I not the « thro' thy love? . Loveand Dutyii) 
heart of hearts I did acknowledge n. Elaine 1 -05 

Not keep it noble, make it « i . Aylmer's i 
u from her bath of storm, . . Lucretius . 175 

noblest. 

One of our «, our most valorous . Enid . 1758 

n, when she lifted up her eyes. . Elaine . 256 

noble it is, I well believe, the « — 11 . 360 

of Arthur's u dealt in scorn ; . Guinevere . 41 

would say Sir Lancelot had the n ; " . 318 

which had «, while you moved . 11 , 323 

nobly-mannered. 
Were the most n-m men of all ; . Guinevere . 332 

nod{s.) 
And flooded at our «. . . . P.ofFJVom.m 
Withfrcqucntsmdeandwdcparting Enid . . 515 

nod \ 
Glares at one that n's and winks . Locksley H. 13ft 
move the trees, the copses «, . Sir Galahad 77 

nodded. 

The parson smirk'd and n. . . The Goose . 20 

He n. Init a 111 >ment afterwards . Gardener'sD.lig 

And Walter n at me ; . . . J'riucess,J'ro.i<)6 

Florian « at him, I frowning; . m iv. 141 

after n sleepily in the heat. . . Enid . 1102 

nodding. 
n, as in scorn, He parted, . . Godiva . 30 

Viziers n together .... Man.:'. I. viL 11 
her father u said, 'Ay, ay, the . Elaine . 766 

noise. 

Thro' the n's of the night . L. ofSkalott.W. 22 

milldain rushing down with n, . Miller's 1). 50 
n of some one coming thro' the 1>. ofF. II ,'in.iyS 

all day long the « of battle roll'd . M. d' Arthur 1 

with n's of the northern sea. . 11 . 141 

such a « of life Swarm'd . . D. 174 

a n of tongues and deeds, . -s 206 

■ 0? striking clocks, . . Day-Dm. . 134 

I hear a n of hymns : . . . Sir Galahad 1$ 

Made n with bees and breeze . Princess, Pro. £8 
n Of clocks and chimes, »» i. 212 

two armies and the «"Of arms ; . 11 v. 333 

« of son understand: 11 vi. 24 

The // of life ' . in Mem. vii. 1 . 

I hear thi 1 . . ■■ x. 1 

youth was full of foolish », . if lii. 3 

Autumn, with a » of rooks, . . ff Ixxxiv. 71 

all within was I Ol . . n l.wwi. 18 

« of the mourning of a mighty . Ode on Well. „ 



292 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

far from n and smoke o f town, To F. D. Maurice 1 3 
out of town and valley came a 71 . £nid . . 247 
grateful is the u of noble deeds it 437 

spearmen follow'd him with 11 : . 11 . 1441 

Scared by the u upstarted . . Vivien . 272 

poplars made a/zof falling showers. Elahte 410, 522 
that had heard the n of it before, n . 727 

some doubtful n of creaking doors, Guinevere . 72 
the n about their doors . . . AybnersF. 488 
Made the n of frosty woodlands, . Boddicea . 75 

none. 
There is n like her, ?;, (rep.) . Maud, I. xviii. 2 

nook. 
odd games In some odd n's like . The Epic . 9 
old warrior from his ivied n . . Princess, Pro. 104 

noon . 
from beyond the « a fire . . Fathna . 30 
In those old days, one summer n, M. d* Arthur 29 
the shameless 71 Was clash'd and . Godiva . 74 
took my leave, for it was nearly 71: Prijicess, v. 457 
ere I woke it was the point of «, ' . ti . 471 

tendance in the all-weary n's, . it vii. 87 

Climb thy thick 71, disastrous day ; InMem. lxxi. 26 
stays thee from the clouded 71's . 11 lxxxii. 5 
must be made a wife ere 71 ? . n C071. 26 

now set out : the 71 is near, n . 41 

at the point of n the huge Earl . Enid . 1385 

in the n of mist and driving rain, . Vivien . 486 

noorse (nurse.) 
N? thoort nowt o'a«: . . N. Fari7ier . 2 

7ioose. 
as tight as I could knot the 71; . StS. Stylites 64 

Norland. 
loud the N whirlwinds blow . Oriana . 6 

N winds pipe down the sea, 11 . 91 

Norman. 

simple faith than iVblood. . . L.C,V.deVere$6 
Saxon and iVand Dane are we, W. to Alexan. 3,31 

7iorth. 
a long league back to the N. . Princess, i. 166 

dark and true and tender is the N. u iv. 80 

in the A" long since my nest is made. 11 . 92 

brief the sun of summer in the N t ir 

blown to inmost « ; ti 

Fiercely flies The blast of iV . I71 Mem. cvi. 

Far into the N, and battle, . . Maud, III. vi. 
gray metropolis of the N . . T/ie Daisy . 
knights of utmost iVand West . Elai7ie 
round the N, a light, A belt, . Sea Drea77ts 

Thine the TV and thine the South Boddicea 



Northern Sea. (See Sea.) 

Northern Star. 
on my cradle shone the N s. . Princess, i. . 4 

North-sea. 
as a wild wave in the wide N-s, . Elai7ie . 481 

7W7-thzvard. 
darken'd all the n of her Hall. . AybnersF. 415 

7iorth-ivi7id. 
He will not hear the n-w rave, . Two Voices 259 

Norway. 
N sun Set into sunrise ; . . Pri7icess, iv. 552 



Maud, I. ii. 10 



. Lucretius . 100 



nose. 

aquiline curve in a sensitive n, 

nosing. 

N the mother's udder, . 

nostril. 

anger puff'd Her fairy 71 out ; 

note (notice, etc.) 
a precious thing, one worth}' 71, . M. d ] 'Arthur 8c 
work of noble n, may yet be done, Ulysses . 5; 
Stain or blemish in a name of «, . Vivien . 681 



Vivie7i 



POEM. LINE. 

Elai7ie . 322 
Ay liner's F. 67 



. The Goose ^ 29 
. Gardener's D. 89 
. Princess, iii. 74 
. fnMem.xxi. 25 



took n that when his living smile 
Took joyful 71 of all things joyful 

7iote {of music. 
'A quinsy choke thy cursed »,'* 
scarce get out his n's for joy, 
chords that shiver to one 71 ; 
one is glad ; her 71 is gay, 
one is sad ; her 71 is changed. 
Some bitter 71 s my harp would give, ti cxxiv. 2 
on her pastoral hillock a languid u ; Maud, III. vi. 24 
the liquid 71 beloved of men . . Enid . . 336 
but one plain passage of few 71s . Elaine . 891 

musical 71 Swell' d up and died ; . Sea Dreams 203 
71 Had reach'd a thunderous fullness, 11 . 206 

never out of tune With that sweet 71 ; n . 225 

his compass is but of a single 71, . The Islet . 28 

note (billet.) 
sent a 7t, the seal an Elle vous suit, Ed. Morris 105 

nothing. 

him that utter'd u base ; . . To the Queen 8 
71 here, Which, from the outward Elednore 
in thee Is 71 sudden, 71 single ; 
am as n in its light : 
Beat time to n in my head . 
N comes to thee new or strange. 
He thought that 71 new was said, 
Something so said 'twas 71 — 
There now — that's nl . M. d' 'Arthur, EJ>. 



JLL'tiiiore 


3 


M • 


57 


11 


8« 


Miller's D. 


67 


To J. S. . 


74 


T/te Epic . 


30 



Unto the shores of 11 ! . 



Gardener's D. 17 



71 else For which to praise the heavens 

where nature sickens, 71. . . Lochslcy H. 

A life ofn'sj n worth, . . . Two Voices 

From that first 71 ere his birth . u 

To that last 71 under earth !' . 11 

^V but this ; my very ears were hot Princess, i. 

your chance Almost at naked u.' . v 

there is 71 upon earth More miserable n iii. 

So then were 71 lost to man ; . Di Mem, xlii. 



n walks with aimless feet . . it Hii. 

I care for 71, all shall go. . . if lv. 

n is that errs from law. . . u Ixxii. 

From form to form, and « stands ; 11 exxii. 
71 there her maiden grace affright ! Maud,l. xviii. 
71 can be sweeter Than maiden Maud > 



33i 
332 
333 
J 33 
160 
242 
9 
5 
4 



it II. v. 41 

The Brook . 15 

Ode on Well. 272 

Enid . . 275 

it . . 279 

11 . 1167 

1501 

• 314 

• 363 
. 709 

- 7" 

- 73 2 
. 109 

11 . 962 

E71. Arden . 494 
■ Aylmer*s F. 21 



Vivien 



Elaine 



N but idiot gabble ! 
mist of green, And ii perfect : 
71 can bereave him Of the force . 
wing'd 71 s peck him dead ! . 
pipe of 11 but of sparrow-hawks ! . 
Owe you me u for a life half-lost? 
weariness And sickly n ; 
Fame that follows death is n 
in that star To make fame 71. 
there was 71 wild or strange, 
71 Poor Vivien had not done 
ending in a ruin — n left, 
And every voice is 71 
' Of all this will I n ; ' and so fell, 
a palmtree.' That was 71 to her : 
from his windows 71 save his own- 
Flash into fiery life from « . 
in tune With n but the Devil !* 
O fie, you golden 71, fie, 
71 that she meets with base, . 
N to mar the sober majesties 

nothingness. 

Teach me the 71 of things.' . . A Character 4 
Redeem'd it from the charge of 7c — M. d'A rthur,Ep. 7 
brand His 71 into man. . . Maud. I. xviii.40 

noth ing-worth. 
fiint Homeric echoes, n-w t . - The Epic . 39 
A life of nothings, 71-10, . . Two Voices 331 

notice. 

A n faintly understood, . . Two Voices 431 

n of a change in the dark world . Princess, vii. 234 
11 of a hart Tal'er than all his fellows Enid . 149 
the master took Small n, or austerely, Lucretius 8 



Sea Drea7iis 253 
The Ringlet 43 
On a Mourner 4 
Lucretius . 214 



T£.VJVySOA n S WORKS. 



noticed. poem. line. 

I n one of his many rings . . Maud, II. ii. 68 

notion. 

boy might get a n into him ; . Aylmer's F. 271 

nourish. 

« a blind life within the brain, . M. cT Arthur 251 

nourishing. 

n a youth sublime . . . Locksley H. 11 

novel. 

She left the n half-uncut . . TalkingO. 117 

November. 
N dawns and dewy-glooming downs, En. Arden 611 

A' day Was growing duller twilight, 11 . 723 

novice. 

save a little maid, A « ; . . Guinevere . 4 

san,; the «, while full passionately, 11 . 178 

'he little « prattling to her. . ir . 181 
To whom the little n garrulously. . 11 229-74 

the «. crying with clasp'd hands, . 11 . 309 

saw The «, weeping, suppliant, 11 . 656 

Nudd (sec Edyrn.) 

nu it. 

icily regular, splendidly «, . . Maud, I. ii. 6 

numb (adj.) 
all the nerve of sense is « ; . 



numb (verb.) 
n's the Fairy's ringlet-snake, 

number (s.) 
o'er the n of thy years. 
miis the wonted « of my knights. 
number \xrb.^ 
ny cubits from the soil. 
n live from ten. . 
Whose troubles « with his days : 

numbered. 
n o'er Some thrice three years : . 

numberest. 
tho' thou « with the followers 

numbing. 
Like dull narcotics, n pain. . 



In Mem. xcii. 7 

Lucretius . 258 

. 1 11 Mem. lxvi. 8 
. Guinevere . 494 

. .?/.S\ Stylites 00 

. Talking O. . 80 

7«/0 Voices 330 

/« Mem. Con. 9 

. Aylmer's F. C63 

. In Mem. v. 8 



she spake There to the k'j, . . Guinevere 

:i week, unknown, among then's; 11 
An air the it \r had taught her : . 11 

:>i_-^s and her nV, 11 

good ft '/would check her gadding tongue 11 

sad n's with each a light Stiwd, . » 

ng up beheld the holy «'x . ■■ 

black and white, and be a 11 ; 11 



. 138 

■ I4S 
. 161 

• 3°7 

• 3" 

• S8S 
. 658 
. 668 

. 228 

• 4°7 

. 225 

■ 340 
. 663 



nunnery. 

simple miracles of thy n t" . . Guine-.iere 

.r thro' the 11 ran, . . 1, 

nunnery-walls. 
little maid, shut in by >i-:v, . . Guinevere 

I by narrow ing n-in . „ 
shut me round with narrowing n iu 11 

nur ) 

In there came old Alice the «, . Lady Clare 13 
«, . . . 11 17, etpass. 

f your mind, my it, my n, 11 * . 21 
» . 80 

Princess, iv. 407 
" v. 544 

11 vi. 54 
In Mem. xxix. 14 
11 Con. 46 
Maud, I. xix. 76 
Elaine . 853 



I 

111 n's . 

r like a 11, 

h if, 

' . hers : Aylmer's F. 79 

nurse (verb.) 

blind ideal like a girl . Princess, iii. 201 

pair, 11 iv. 444 

tir sf.ii. to it, . . ,, vi. 279 

Shall 1 11 in my dark heart, . . Maud, II. ii. 55 



I'OEM. 


LINE. 


. Ode to Mem. 


51 


. Eleanore 




11 


. To J. S. 




IO 


. Princess, 


V. 


427 


11 


\:. 


7<J 


"t 


VII. 


38 

224 



nursed. 
wert not n by the waterfall . 
wert « in some delicious land 
in whose laps our limbs are n, 
wrath I n against the world : 
n by those for whom you fought, 
nor the hand That n me, 
n me there from week to week : 

« at ease and brought to understand Maud,\.x\m. 35 
if by mealy-mouth'd philanthropies, Tlie Brook . 94 

nurseling. 
This « of another sky . . . Tlte Daisy . r,3 

nursery. 
In our young n still unknown, . Princess, iv. 313 
one they knew — Raw from the « — Aylmer's F. 264 

nursing. 
Annie pale, AT the sickly babe, . En. Arden . 150 
A'achild, and turning to the warmth Aylmer's F. 1*5 

nut. 
fancies like the vermin in a n . Princess, vi. 246 
if the n's' he said ' be ripe again : . En. Arden . 456 
mighty n's, and nourishing roots ; 11 . 556 

nutmeg. 
The n rocks and isles of clove. . The Voyage 40 

nutter. 

hazelwood, Ey autumn n 's haunted, En. Arden 8 

nutting. 
Went if to the hazels. . . . En. A rden . ("4 
go with others, « to the wood . * . 360 

Nymph. 

presented Maid Or A*, or Goddess, Princess, i. . 193 

mountain quickens into A'and Faun; Lucretius . icj 



mouthing out his hollow o'es 

oak. 
I turn to yonder o. 
To yonder o within the field . 
Broad of Sumner-chace, . 

Old o, I love thee well ; 
never yet was on lea . 
The gouty o began to move, 
I'.irks with 11 and chesnul shady, 
from the lily as far As o from elm 
F.re half the lifetime of an o. 
a gloom of stubborn-shafted o's, 
an o. so hollow huge and old 
once I heard By this huge •>. 
Call'd her to shelter in the hollow 
struck, Furrowing a giant o, 
in the hollow o he lay as dead 
amulet drew her down to that old o, 
when the winds of winter tear an o 

oakling. 
drew My little o from the cup, 

oak-room. 
Maud's own little o-r . 

oak-tree. 
But the solemn o-t sigheth, . 



The Epic . j 5 

Talking O. . S 
11 . 13 

11 . 30 

II . 202 

II . 243 

A in pit wn . 23 

■ leigh .-) 

• v - *75 

InMem.ixxv. 12 

Enid . . 969 

/ 'tvien . 3 

11 . 256 

, » • 743 

. 78s 

H . 818 

Aylmer's F. 507 

Boadicca . 77 

Talking O. . 23 

Maud, I.xiv. 9 

C la rile I . e. 



weary scem'd the sea, weary the o, Lotos-Els. . 41 
wind and wave and 01 ..." . 172 

barge with i> mv\ -..iii Moved . M.dArth 

stirr'd with languid pulsus of the o. Gar, 
The measured pulse of racing o's InMcmAxxxvi.io 

oar^d. 
Naiads o A glimmering shoulder . To E. I.. . 16 
Some to a low song o a shallop . Princeis, ii 4 j 

oaring. 
O one arm, and bearing in my left Princess, iv. 165 

oarsman. 
0.J haggard face As hard and still . Elaine 1243 



294 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Oasis. POEM. LINE. 

My one O in the dust and drouth Ed Morris . 3 
grow To use and power on this O Princess, ii. 151 

oat. 
had the wild o not been sown. . In Mem. Iii. 6 

oat-grass. 

On the o-g and the sword-grass, . May Queen, ii. 28 

oath. 
Let us swear an o, and keep it . Lotos-E's. . 153 
count of crimes With that wild o.' D. of F. Wom.101 
hear me swear a solemn o, . . Talking O. 281 

Cophetua sware a royal : . . Beggar Alaid 15 
my o was ta'en for public use, . Princess, iv. 318 
Your o is broken : we dismiss you : tr . 341 

But keep that you swore, . . Vivien . 538 

fearing heaven had heard her 0, . u . 789 

obedience. 

Seeing o is the bond of rule. . M.d' Arthur 94 

silently, in all o, . . . Enid . . 767 

in mild o Driving them on : . tr » . 953 

is the courtesy due to kings.* . Elaine . 714 

obedient. 

most valorous, Sanest and mostly Enid . *759 

obeisance. 
curtseying her o, let us know, . Princess, ii. 6 

obelisk. 

o's Graven with emblems of the time Arabian ISPs. 107 

obey. 
A courage to endure and to o ; . Isabel . . 25 
well to o then, if a king demand . M. d' 'Arthur 95 
Will he o when one commands ? . Two Voices 244 
Man to command and woman to o ; Princess, v. 440 
' 1 charge you, ask not but 0.' . Enid . . 133 
dare o him to his harm ? . m . . 985 

As you that not o me. . \\ 1000 

that you speak not but 0* ?r 1266 

1 know Your wish and would o; . 11 . 1268 
Almost beyond me : yet I would o.' 11 . 1272 
iobe yourself in this : 0.' . .11 . 1533 
knowing nothing knows but to o, . Gttiuevere . 184 

obey'd. 
I have my uncle until now, . Dora . . 57 

object. 
burn'd upon its o thro' such tears Love and Duty 62 
beyond his o Love can last : His o lives : Coquette, iii. 5 

oblique. 
If straight thy track or if o, . . Two Voices 193 

oblivion. 
With all forgiveness, all o, . . Princess, vi. 277 

obscurity. 
I faint in this 0, . . Ode to Mem. 6, 44, 123 

obsequies. 
Nor meanly, but with gorgeous 0, Elaine 1325 

observance. 
with a mute o hung. . . . Locksley H. 22 
compass'd her with sweet o's . Enid 48, 888 

obstinacy. 
At which the warrior in his o, . Enid . 1303 

obtain. 
my heart had destined did o, . Guinevere . 488 

obtained. 
second suit o At first with Psyche. Princess, vii. $6 



occasion. 
when to take by the hand, 
Wiser to weep a true o lost, . 
iron nerve to true o true 
A little at the vile o, 
written as she found Or made o, . 

ocean. 
Under the hollow-hung green ! , 
On one side lay the 0, 
By which they rest, and sounds, 



To the Quee?i 31 
Princess, iv. 50 
Ode on Well. 37 
Enid . . 235 
Aylmer's F. 478 

The Merman 38 
M.d' Arthur 11 
InMem. Con. 121 



POEM. LINE. 

pacing mute by o's rim . . T/ie Daisy . 21 

Or olive-hoary cape in ; . 11 • 31 

In middle o meets the surging shock, Will . 8 

on a dull day in an O cave . . Vivien . 80 

The hollower-bellowing o, . . En. Arden . 599 

The houseless o's heaving field, . The Voyage 30 

Cataract brooks to the run, . The Islet . 17 

Thine the myriad-rolling o, . . Boddicea . 42 

Charm, as a wanderer out in o, . Milton . 12 

There the sunlit o tosses . . The Captain 69 

ocean-foam. 
as white As of in the moon, . . Maud,\. xiv. 18 

oceanfowl. 
The myriad shriek of wheeling of En. Arden . 584 

Ocean-lane. 
Fall from his O-l of fire ; . . The Voyage 19 

ocea 7i-m irro r. 
O'er o-?n's rounded large, . . In Mem. xii. 9 

ocean-J>lain. 
Sailest the placid o-fis . . .In Mem. ix. 2 

ocean-ridge. 
hollow o-rs roaring into cataracts. Locksley H. 6 

ocean-smelling. 
ocean-spoil In o-s osier, . . En. Arden . 94 

ocean-spoil, 
o-s In ocean-smelling osier, . . En. Arden . 93 

o'clock. 
'Tis nearly twelve . . D. of the O. Year 41 
The mail? At one 0. . . . Walk, to the M. 6 
How goes the time ? 'Tis five o. . Will Water. 3 

' Odalisques. 
Sleek O's, or oracles of mode, . Princess, ii. 63 

ode. 

then, Sir, awful o's she wrote, . Princess, i. . 137 

o's About this losing of the child ; m . 139 

quoted o's, and jewels five-words-long n ii. 355 

Odin. 

To Thor and lifted a hand. . The Victim 8 
' 0, Father O, We give you a life. 11 . 79 

odour. 

fed the time With o . . . Arabian ISPs. 65 

cloud of incense of all steam'd . Pal. of Art 39 

Distilling o's on me as they went . Gardener' sD.iS^ 

Whose o's haunt my dreams ; . Sir Galahad 68 

On leagues of 1? streaming far, . InMemAxxxv. 14 

Saying in o and colour . . . Maud, I. xxi. 12 

(Eno?ie. 

Mournful CE wandering forlorn . CEnone . 15 

My own CE, Beautiful-brow'd CE . w .68 

never more Shall lone CE see . v . 212 

o'er-dnven. 
pity for a horse o-d . . . InMem.lxu.. 1 

derflow. 
O's thy calmer glances, . . Madeline . 33 

derthwarted. 
O with the brazen-headed spear . CE7ione . 137 

d erflourisli d. 
O with the hoary clematis : . . Golden Year 63 

derlook'st. 
O the tumult from afar, . . IuMe7n, cxxvi. 19 

o'ershadow. 
His love, unseen but felt, o Thee, Dcd. of Idylls 49 

offence. 
like a pedant's wand To lash 0, . Princess, t. . 28 
without!?, Has link'd our names . Elaine 112 

To save the o of charitable . . En. Arden . 339 

offend. 
Your finer female sense o's. . . Day-Din. . 214 

offender. 
pick'd<?\s from the mass For judgment Princess, i. 3 



TEiWVYSON'S WORKS. 



295 



InMem. xvii. 
11 xxxix. 

11 ex. 

ti exxvii. 

Maud, 1 1 . v. 

Guinevere . 



17 

13 
19 
14 
10 

27 
£74 

54 
1786 
663 



S> 



offer {%.) POEM. LINE. 

I trample on your o's and on you : Princess, iv. 525 

offer (verb.) 

\o boldly: we will seat you highest: Princess, iii. 143 

offered. 

thenandtherehadosomethmgmore, Tlie Brook 147 

And you it kneeling : . . . Vivien . J25 

N ot ev'n a rose, were o to thee i . Lucretius . 69 

offering. 
bring me o's of fruit and flowers : . StS. Stylites 126 
dresa the victuu to the o up . . Princess, iv. 112 

office. 
A nobler upon earth . . .To the Queen 2 
joint of state, that plies Its o, ' 'Love tltou thy land '48 
should meet the o's of all, . . M '.d' Arthur 125 

not to fail In o's of tenderness, . Ulysses . 41 
Two in the liberal oVoflife, . . Princess, li. 158 

With books, with flowers, with Angel o's, 
So kind an o hath been done, 
Her o there to rear, to teach, 
such great o's as suit 
joined Each o of the social hour 
if all your o had to do . 
touch of thciromighthave sufficed 
each low o of your holy house ; 

officer. 

an o Rose up, and read the statutes, Princess, ii. 

He rooted out the slothful o . . Enid . 

o's and men Levied a kindly tax . En. Arden 

offing. 
isles a light in the '. . . En. Arden 

offset. 
man-minded rose To chxse the . Talking O. 

often-ransacked. 
To think that in our o-r world . Sea-Dreams 125 

Ogress. 
' petty O,' and 'ungrateful Puss,' Princess, /V0. 156 

oil. 
realms of upland, prodigal in o, . Pal. 0/ Art . 79 
pure quintessences of precious o's 11 . 187 

dues of wheat, and wine and o; . Lotos-Es. . 167 
burn'd in fire, or boil'd in 0, . . StS. Stylites 51 

old. 
New and O, disastrous feud, ' Love thou thy land' 77 
So blunt in memory, so o at heart, Cardener*sD, 52 
shame and pride, New things undo, H'nlk.tothcM. 53 
love for Nature is as pas 1 : . Ed. Morns 28 

we grow o. Ah! when shall all men's Golden Year 47 
o, but full Of force and choler, . 11 .60 

you and I are o; O age hath yet . Ulysses . 49 
O, I see thee o and formal, . . LocksleyH. 93 
that new world which is the 0. : . Day- Dm. . 16H 
I am o, but let me drink ; . . Vision of Sin 75 
fancy fuses o and new, . . . /n Mem. xvi. 10 
count new things as dear as o: . u xxxix. 28 
King out the o, ring in the new, . 11 cv. 5 

being vicious, o and irritable, . Enid . . 194 

'Arms, indeed, buto And rusty, (rep. J i» . . 477 
fairer in new clothes than . .11 . . 722 
o am I, and rough the ways . 11 . 750 

an oak, so hollow huge and o . Vivien . 3 
Less o than I, yet older . 11 . . 406 

omitting gayer youth for one so 0,11 . 777 

propt, worm-eaten, ruinously o, . En. Arden 

I a mine of memories— . Aylmer s F. 10 
So o, that twenty years before, . 11 . 508 

have gone before me. I am so o: . Grandmotlter i3 
Ah, there's no fool like the o one — 11 . 44 

older, 
o, for my blood Hath earnest in it Vivien . 406 

old-recurring, 
o-r waves of prejudice Kcsmooth . Princess, iii. 234 

old-world. 

o-w trains, upheld at court . . Day-Dm. . 277 
0<u maunnoth bulk'd in ice, . . Primess, v. 142 



old year. 
And the y is dead. 
For the oy lies a-dying 
O y, you must not die ; 
New Year and O Y met, 
Y roaring and blowing, 

oleander. 
Where o's flush'd the bed 

olive. 
the year in which our o's fail'd. 
Peace sitting under her o. 
Of 0, aloe, and maize and vine, 
A light amid its o's green ; . 

Olive. 
W'Ul I to O plight my troth, 

ohve-ga rdens. 
Leaving the o-g far below, 

olive-hoary. 
Or o-h cape in ocean ; . 

Olive/. 
crown' d The purple brows of O. . 

Olivia. 
maid or spouse, As fair as my O, . 
saw Your own O blow, . 
Declare when last O came . 

Omega. 
' ! thou art Lord,' they said, 

omen. 
from which their o's all men drew. 

omitting. 
gayer youth For one so old, 

one-day-seen. 
The o-d-s Sir Lancelot in her heart 

one-sided. 
'O dull, o-s voice,' said I, . ■ 

onset. 
dash'd with drops Of ; 
A day of o's of despair ! 
Rings to the roar of an angel 1 

onslaught. 
make an o single on a realm . 

on w ar d -sloping. 

'Mid o-s motions infinite 

ooze (s.) 
For I was drench'd with o, . 

ooze verb.) 
bloat himself, and All over . 

oozed. 
All o'er with honey'd answer 

opal. 
gayer colours, like an warm'd. . 

open (adj.) 
Wide, wild, and to the air, 
in her lion's mood Tore 0, 
all thy heart lies o unto me. . 
Were to each other ; . 
heavens Ureal: to their highest . 

open (verb.) 
horse That hears the corn-bin 0, . 
o's but to golden keys. . 
Heaven o's inward, chasms yawn, 
to me. And lay my little blossom 
0, find and read the charm : . 

ofrti-door'd. 
Once rich, now poor, but always o-d. 

opened. 
Thy dark eyes not, . 
yest er day you never o lip, 

O a larger haven : . 

Where cither haven on the deeps, 



LINE. 

- .Worn. 24S 
D.qftheO.Year S 

>• 6, etpass. 

. i865-i££6 . 2 



The Daisy . 


3} 


Princess, 1. 
Maud, 1 i. 
The Daisy . 


124 
33 

4 


• 1 


SO 


Talking 0. 


2S3 


D.o/F. Wont 


217 


Tlie Daisy . 


3' 


InMem. xxxL 12 


Talking 0. . 


35 
76 


n 


99 



Two Voices 27S 
Ode on Well. 36 

• 77° 

Elaine . 743 

Ttuo Voices 202 

M.d Arthur 2:6 
Odeonllell. 124 
Milton . 8 

Enid . 1765 

Pal. of Art 247 

Princess, v. 27 

Sea Dreams 150 

Princess, v. 231 

Vivien . 759 

Vying Swan 2 

. iv. 362 

,1 

Aylmer's P. 40 

Spec. 0/ Iliad 1 5 

The Epic . 45 

Locks ley 11. 100 

. . es 304 

Princess, v. 96 

. 510 



' Enid 



. 302 



• . r 

Vivitn . 120 

En, Arden . 103 
11 



296 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

small gate that o on the waste, . En. Arden 734 
Crept to the gate, and it, . . 11 . 776 

counter door to that Which Leolin o Aylmer's F. 283 
Books (see Daniel seven and ten) 

Were o, Sea Dreams 149 

open-Jiearted. 
An o-h maiden, true and pure. 



Princess, iii. 82 

opening (part.) 

g upon level plots Of crowned lilies, Ode to Mem. 108 

The gorges, o wide apart, . . CEnone . 12 

o out his milk-white palm n .64 

cloudy porch oft o on the Sun? . LoveandDuty 9 

o this I read Of old Sir Ralph . Pri?icess, Pro. 120 

thrice, and, no one o, Enter'd ; . En. Arde?t . 278 

opening (s. ) 
About the o of the flower, . , Two Voices 161 

open - mouth* d. 
A!l o-vz, all gazing to the light, . Princess } iv. 462 
stood the unhappy mother 0-711, . tr vi. 127 

openness. 
taken with her seeming o . . Princess, iv. 281 

open-work, 
o-w in which the hunter rued . Princess, iv. 185 

opiate, 
bring an o trebly strong, . . InMem.lxx. 6 

opinion. 
banded unions persecute O, 'You ask me why,' etc. 18 

Oppian. 
and storm'd At the O law. . 3 Princess, vii, 109 

opposed. 
and o Free hearts, free foreheads 
fifty there O to fifty, 

opposite. 
loathsome o Of all my heart . 



- Ulysses 
Princess, \ 

Guinevere 



opposition. 
Thro' solid crabb'd and gnarl'd 
some plan Foursquare to o. ' . 
Yet not with brawling o she, 

oppression. 
But they hated his o, . 

opulence. 
barbarous jewel-thick 



. Princess, iii. no 

M v. 222 

. En. Arden . 159 

. The Captain 9 

. Maud, I. xiii. 12 

, Vivien . 325 

63 



arms, Azure, an Eagle rising*??*, 

oracle. 
Sleek Odalisques, or o's of mode, Princess, ii. 

orange. 
past Into deep o o'er the sea, Mariana in the S. 26 
A scarf of c round the stony helm, Princess, Pro. 102 

range-blossom. 
In lands of palm, ofo-b, 

orange-flower. 
when first she wears her o-fl 
Made cypress of her o-f, 

orange- th icket. 
some hid and sought in the t's : . 

oration. 

hung to hear The rapt o 

oratio?i-like. 
rolling words O-l. . 

orator. 
Stood up and spake, an affluent 0. Princess, iv. 272 
Glory of warrior, glory of o, . Wages . 1 

oratory. 
in praise of her Grew o. . . Gardener's D. 56 

with mild heat of holy 0, . . Enid . 1714 

orb (s.) 
ambrosial o's Of rich fruit-bunches Isabel . . 36 
did gird their o's with beams, . The Poet . 29 



The Daisy . 3 

In Mem.xxx'ix. 4 
u lxxxhi. 15 

Princess, ii. 436 

In Mem.lxxxvi. 32 

Princess, v. 363 



POEM. LINE. 

should slowly round his 0, . . Elednore . 91 
hollow o of moving Circumstance Pal. of Art. 255 
She raised her piercing o's, . . D.o/F. Worn. 171 
Storm'd in o's of song, . . . Vision of Sin 25 
Thine are these o's of light and . In Mem. Pro. 5 
From o to o, from veil to veil.' . ir xxx. 28 

This round of green, this of flame, ir xxxiv. 5 
here he stays upon a freezing o . Lucretius . 139 

orb (verb.) 
the whole mind might o about . Two Voices 138 
os Between the Northern and the Princess, v. 412 
o into the perfect star . . .In Mem. xxiv. 15 

orbed. 
remain O in your isolation : . . Pri?icess, vi. 153 

orbit. 

this o of the memory folds . . Gardener's D. 73 

The Sun will run his o, . . Love a?id Duty 22 

Sway'd to her from their o's, . Princess, vii. 307 

circuits of thine o round . . InJlIem.lxn. 11 

In azure o's heavenly-wise : . 11 lxxxvi. 38 

orchard. 
There, on a slope of o, Francis laid A udley CI. . 19 

orchard-lawns. 
happy, fair with o-l . . . M. d' Arthur 262 

orchis. 
Brings, bring the foxglove spire, . InMemAxxxW. 9 

ordained. 
diamond jousts, Which Arthur had o, Elaine . 32 

ordeal. 
faded love, Or o by kindness ; . Aylmer's F. 561 

order (arrangement, etc.) 
fluted vase, and brazen urn In 0, Arabian JV's 60 
all things in o stored, . . . Pal. of Art 87 
"Tis hard to settle o once again. . Lotos-E's. . 127 
old o changeth, yielding place to . M.d' Arthur 240 
keeps us all in o more or less — ■ Walk, to the M. 17 
sitting well in o smite . . . Ulysses . 58 
Eye, to which all o festers, . . Locksley H. 133 
The poplars, in long o due, . . Amphio?i . 37 
What for o or degree? . . . Vision of Sin 86 
sweet o lived again with other laws : Princess, vii. 4 
Large elements in o brought, . In Mem. cxi. 13 
that great o of the Table Round, . Enid . . 3 
marshall'd o of their Table Round, Elaine 1322 

that fair o of my Table Round, . Guinevere . 460 
till this cosmic everywhere . Lucretius . 246 

order (command.) 
good king gave o to let blow . Enid . . 152 

order (verb.) 
She will all things duly, . . L. of Burleigh 39 

ordered. 
As all were o, ages since. . . Day-Dm. . 74 
Days o in a wealthy peace. . . In Mem. xlv. n 
having o all Almost as neat and close En. Arden 177 

ordi?iance. 
' God's Of Death is blown . . To J. S. _. 45 
voice Of Ida sounded, issuing o : Princess, vi. 352 
pass beyond the goal of . Tithonus . 30 

ore. 
a rich Throne of the massive o, . Arabian IPs. 146 
Jewel or shell, or starry o, . . Eleanore . 20 
labour'd mines undrainable of o. . CEnone . 113 
to lift the hidden o That glimpses D. ofF. Worn. 274 
life is not as idle o, I?iMe7?i. cxvii. 20 

Oread. 
whatever O haunt The knolls of Ida (Ejione . 72 
I see my O coming down, . . Maud, I. xvi, 8 
here an 0, and this way she runs Lucretius . 188 

organ. 
holy o rolling waves Of sound . D.ofF. Wom.iq-z 
With this old soul in o's new? . Two Voices 393 
great o almost burst his pipes . Princess, ii. 450 
storm their high-built o's make, In Mem. lxxxvi. 6 



TE.WVYSON'S WORKS. 



297 



organ-harmony . 


POEM. LINE. 


outredtien. 


POEM. LINE. 


A rolling o-h Swells up, 


Sir Galahad 


75 


All voluptuous garden-roses. 


Ode on Well. 


208 


organism. 






outstript. 






Makes noble thro' the sensuous 


Princess, a. 


73 


He still me in the race ; 


In Mem. xli. 


2 


organ-pipes. 






outwelleth. 






Near gilded o-p, . 


Pal. 0/ Art. 


98 


The slumbrous wave 0, 


Claribcl 


18 


organ-voice. 






outworks. 






God-gifted o-v of England, . 


Milton 


3 


Thro' all the of suspicious pride 


Isabel 


24 


orgies. 






ouzel. 






hold their at your tomb. ' You might 'have won 


12 


mellow fluted in the elm ; . 


Gardener's D. 93 


mulberry-faced Dictator's . 


Lucretius . 


54 


ovation. 






Oriana. 






rain an April of . 


Princess, vi. 


50 


heart is wasted with my woe, O. . 


Oriana 2, elp 


zss. 


overawe. 






oriel. 






that new fort to my friends, 


Enid . 


460 


She sat betwixt the shining O's, . 


Pal. 0/ Art 


'59 


overawed. 
to be By what I cannot but know 






imost t>Y coloured flame. . 

. that thro' the O shine, 


Day-lhn. '. 


161 
54 


Maud, II. ii. 


40 


All 111 an on the summer side, . 


Elaine 11 71 


overbear. 






ortel-embowerini ' 




o'ithc bark And him thathelms it, 


Elaine 


484 


Brake from the vast o-e vine 


Elaine j 


192 


overblown. 






Orient. 






with murmurs harsh, 


Ode to Mem. 


99 


Ooth the low-tongued O Wander 


Adeline 


St 


overboard. 






Deep in yonder shining 0, . 


Locksley It. 


154 


one stormy night He cast his body The I 'oyagt 


79 


furrowing all the into gold. 


Princess, iii. 


2 


over-bold. 






Orion. 






the island princes o-b . 


Lotos- Es. . 


120 


great O sloping slowly to the West Locksley H. 


8 


And again scem'd . • 


Maud, I. xi\ 


. 24 


and O low in his grave. 

O's grave low down in the west. 


Maud, 1. 111. 
I, 111. vi. 


>4 
8 


overbore. 

contrasting brightness, Her fancy Enid . 


801 


ornament. 






charm Of nature in her their owi 


/; 


446 


darkling felt the sculptured 


Vivien 


584 


Sir Lancelot and his charger, 


Elaine 


485 


In hanging robe or vacant 0, 


Guinevere . 


502 


overborne. 
by all his bearded lords 






lying with his urns and o's, . 


Ay Inter's /■. 


4 


Princess, v. 


346 


orphan. 






deeming Merlin By instance, 


'.• 


649 


Late-left an of the squire, . 


Milters D. 


34 


over-bright. 

Eyes not downdropt nor o-b 






fur ihis 0, I am come to you : 
I wa . left a trampled ", 


Dora 

ley II . 


62 
156 


Isabel . 


1 


Made by a winter shipwreck 


En. Arden . 


15 


overcame. 






lull yourself And make them o"i quite?' •. 


392 


Did more, and underwent, and 0, 


Godiva 


10 


an unknown artist's child — 


Sea Dreams 


2 


overcome. 






orphan-bey. 






llrcl will in me to it or fall. 


Princess, v. 


34' 


Oh ! teach the o-b to read, . L 


C. V.deVere 


69 


come to all I am And it ; . 


Elaine 


♦48 


orphan-girl. 






rdo. 






teach the o-g to sew . . L 


C. V. del ere 


70 


almost the deeds Of Lancelot ; . 


Elaine 


468 








over-fineness. 






ocean-spoil In ocean-smelling 0, 


En. Arden . 


94 


From o-f not intelligible 


Vivien 


645 


ostler. 






overflow (s.) 






Wrinkled 0, grim and thin ! . 


Vision 0/ Sin 


63 


Rain'd thro' my sight its 0. . 


Two Voices . 


45 


ostleress. 






over/Ioiv (verb. ] 






A plump-arm'd O and a stable wench Princess, i. 


223 


all the markets 0. . 


Locksley II. 


101 


Ottoman, 






Hears and not hears, and lets \\o. 


En. Anien . 


209 


Emperor, O, which shall win : To F. D. Maurict 


• 32 


over/.' 






ought. 






dissolving sand To watch them 0, 


En. A rden . 


20 


Sweet is it to have done the thing one 0, Princess, v.64 


overlaid. 






1 cannot love thee as I a, 


In Mem. li. 


1 


With narrow moonlit slips 


Q2none 


213 


ousted. 






overlook. 






From mine own earldom foully me ; F.nid 


459 


O a space of flowers, 


I.. o/Shalott, 


i. 16 


outburned. 






And " the chacc ; . 


Tali.. 


94 


lit Lamps whieh Canopuc 

outlast. 


D.oJI 


146 


o's the sandy tracts, 


Locksley II. 


198 
5 


hat will thy Deity? . 
outlet. 


. Lucretius . 


72 


overlive. 
it — lower yet— be happy ! 


Locksley It. 


97 


elear-stemm'd platans guard The t 


, Aral inn X's 


24 


over-mell'nu. 






outline. 






The full-juiced apple, waxing 0-m 


Lotos-E's. . 


78 


n in oand no more. . 


hi Mem. v. 


12 


overmuch. 






The lucid forming round thee : 


7 itiumus 


53 


Nor asking and taking less 


En. Arden . 


251 


outliving. 






oz'crpay. 
' My lord, you me fifty-fold.' 






For life heats of youth. 


In Mem. Iii. 


10 


Enid . 


IC4 1 


outran. 






overpower' d. 






The hearer in its fiery course ; 


In Mem. cvii 


■ 7 


quite, I cannot veil, or droop 


EleSnore 


87 



298 



CONCORDANCE TO 



overquick. poem. line. 

o To crop his own sweet rose . Vivien . 574 
l O are you To catch a lothly plume n . 577 

overseas. 
sick of home went o for change. Walk, to the M. 18 
fly to my strong castle o : . . Guinevere . 112 

overset. 
But thou, while kingdoms o, . Talking O. 257 

overshadowed. 
All by the foolish dream, . . Enid . . 675 

over-smoothness. 
some self-conceit, Or o-s: . . Ed. Morris 75 

overstrai?ied. 
or a mood Of o affection, . . Vivien . 372 
merit will Your term of o. . n . 385 

oversireani d. 
o and silvery-streak'd . . . The Islet . 20 

overtake, 
o's Far thought with music . . Two Voices 437 

overtaken. 
Flying, but, o, died the death . Enid . 1026 

overtalked. 
Merlin, o and overworn Had yielded, Vivien . 814 

overtaxed. 
loathed to see them ; . . . Godiva. „ 9 

overthrew. 

down we swept and charged and 0. Ode on Well. 130 
o the next that follow' d him, . Enid . 1314 

whom he smote, he o. . . . Elaine . 464 

overthrow (s.) 
quick ! by o Of these or those, . Princess, v. 306 

overthrow (verb.) 

My pioud self, and my purpose Enid . 1696 

overthrowing (part.) 
By me you threw me higher. . Enid . 1640 

overthrowing (s.) 
With ds y and with cries, . . In Mem. cxii. 19 

overthrown. 
And like a warrior o ; . . . Two Voices 150 

1 have never yet been o, But thou 

hast o me, Enid . . 588 

In twelve great battles ruining 0. Guinevere . 429 

overtoiled. 

By that day's grief and travel „ Enid . 1225 

over true, 
' O ay,' said Vivien, * a tale. . Vivien . 570 

overirust. 
wink no more in slothful 0. . . Ode on Well. 170 

overturn. 
Behold me o and trample on him, Enid . 1691 

overturned. 

schemed and wrought Until I o him ; Enid 167S 

over-vaulted, 
o-v grateful gloom, . . . Pal. of Art 54 

overwhelm* d. 
shook And almost o her, . . En. Arden . 526 

overwise. 
has written : she never was o t Grandmother 3, 105 

overworn. 
But all he was iso.' . . . In Mem. i. , 16 
overtalk'd and o Had yielded, . Vivien . 814 

overwrought. 
that his brain is o t . . . Locksley FT. 53 
by being so o Suddenly strike . Maud, II. ii. 62 

owe. 

wq owe you bitter thanks : . . Princess, iv. 510 

1 feel I shall o you a debt . . Maud, I. xix.87 
forget That I this debt to you .11 .90 



POEM. LINE. 

O you me nothing for a life half-lost ? Enid 1167 
boon I o you thrice, . . . Vivie7i . 155 

owed. 
Whole in ourselves and o to none Princess, iv. 130 

owl. 
The white o in the belfry sits. . The Owl, i. 7,14 
drown'd the whoopings of the . StS.Slylites 32 
bats wheel'd, and o's whoop' d, . Princess, Con. no 
the o's Wailing had power upon her, Elaine . 99* 

own. 
better than to A crown, a sceptre, Ode to Mem. 120 
He o's the fatal gift of eyes, . . Two Voices 286 
one part of sense not flint . . Princess, vi. 166 

owned. 

Yourself have o you did me wrong. Vivien . 165 

tasted flesh, Nor o a sensual wish, 11 . 478 

ownest. 
My own heart's heart and o own . Maud,l.xwu\. 74 

owning, 
o but a little more Than beasts . Two Voices 196 
earthly Muse, And o but a little art InMem.xxxvn.x^ 

ox. 
From the dark fen the oxen's low Mariana r 28 
The passive oxen gaping. . . Amphion . 72 
as a footsore o in crowded ways . Ay liner's E. 819 
oxen from the city, and goodly sheep Spec, of Iliad 4 
roasting o Moan round the spit — Lucretius . 131 



As cowslip unto is, 



oxlip. 



Talking O. . 107 



pace fs.) 
She made three p's thro' the room, L.rfShalott,\\\.-^ 
Wheeling with precipitate/'.? . Vision of Sin 37 
three p's measured from the mound Princess, v. 1 
forth they rode, but scarce three/V Enid . . 868 
Round was their P at first ri S82 

went back some p's of return, . 11 . . 919 
woven /V and with waving arms, Vivien 56,179,817 

pace (verb. ) 
Would/ the troubled land, Love thou thy land* 84 
till noon no foot should/ the street, Godiva . 39 

To p the gritted floor, . . . Will Water. 242 
our ears with wool And so p by ; . Princess, iv. 48 
P the sacred old familiar fields, . En. A rden . 626 

paced, 
p the thymy plots of Paradise, . Love and Deaths 
p for ever in a glimmering land, . Pal. of Art 67 
p beside the mere, . . . M.d' Arthur 83 

I wonder'd, while I /along: . Two Voices 454 
out we/, I first, . . . Princess, ii. 7 

So saying from the court we/, . tt iii. 101 

Where / the Demigods of old, . 11 . 325 

/the terrace, till the Bear had wheel'd 11 iv. 194 

/ the shores And many a bridge, InMemAxxxvi.iz 
turn'd all red and/ his hall, . Enid . 1516 

ankle-bones Who p it, ages back . Vivien . 402 

/ for coolness in the chapel-yard ; 11 . 607 

/ Back toward his solitary home . En. Arden . 794 
forth they came and/ the shore, . Sea Dreams 32 

pacing (part.) 
some one/ there alone, . . Pal. of Art 66 

P with downward eyelids pure. . Two Voices 420 
Walking up and / down, . . L. of Burleigh 00 
so p till she paused By Florian ; . Princess, ii. 282 
/ staid and still By twos and threes, ti . 412 

Now/ mute by ocean's rim . . The Daisy . 2.1 
bare me, / on the dusky mere. . Elaine 1401 

pacing (s.) 
long mechanic p's to and fro, . Love and Dntyjj 

his foot Return {romp's in the field Lucretius . 6 

pack (s.) 
\volf within the fold! A/ of wolves ! Princess^ ii. 174 



TEX.VYSO.V'S WORKS. 



299 



pack (verb.) poem. line. 
by the Lord that made me, you shall/. Dora . .29 
/ i up his beds and chairs, . . Walk. lotlte.U. 31 
Let the canting liar/.' . . . VitwnqfSia 108 
close as Nature p's Her blossom . En. Arden . 178 

pack'd. 
had / the thing among the beds,) Walk, to the 31. 36 
were p to make your ciown, . . Princess, iv. 522 

/«<* 
An abbot on an ambling A . . L.o/Shalott,\\. 20 

padded. 
P round with flesh and fat, . . Vision of Sin 177 



paddling. 
clockwork steamer / plied 



Princess, Pro. 71 



padlock'd. 
each chest lock'd and / thirty-fold, Fnuim 



7w Voices 127 



. 280 



Paan. 

1 sung the joyful ^ clear, 

Pagan. 

our good Arthur broke The P . Elaine 

page boy.) 
long-haired/ in crimson cla J, . I..o/Shalott,\i.22 
Sis caught her hand in his : Day-Din. . 49 
maid and / renew'd their strife, . 11 . 145 

And p, and maid, and squire, . Lnid . . 710 
with no attendance, / or maid, . m . 117 1 

page (of a book.) 
I will turn that earlier/. . . Locksley H. 107 
trust me while 1 turn'd the/, . To E. L. . 9 
/ or two that rang With tilt . . I'rincess,Pro. 121 
I heard her turn the/; . " vii. 175 

passing, turn the / that tells A grief /« .l/<-»n.lxxvi. to 
t is but twenty p/t long, . Vivien . 518 
eicy l< having ; nn ample marge, . •• • 5'9 

:tyour/f.' . . Spite/ul Let. 6 

pageant. 
masque or fi at my father's court. Princes*. i 

Lead out the/: sad and slow . Ode on Weil. 1 3 

paid. 

law for ns; We/ in person. . . Wall;. to the 31.-" 

I would have / her loss for kiss, . TalkingO. 195 

respect, however slight, was/ .Princess, ii. iao 

tl are . Maud, 11. v. 23 

/with with arms: . /.'«/</ . 1335 

. a voice (lying by . . Wages . 2 

pail. 
The milk that bubbled in the /, /«.VW«.lxxxviii.5i 

pain. 

should breathe a thought of/. . 31 tiler's D. . 26 

the loss I In u-./, . . •■ . 229 

/on/, • • Lotos- E"s. . 129 

or scem'd to start in /, . . . D.o/F.Wom. 41 

With what dull / Compass'd, . •• . 277 

ng dulls the inward /.' . ToJ.S. . 40 

with /, reclining on his arm, . M. a 'Arthur 168 

red-fold to this, StS. .styhtes 23 

May match his / * with mine ; . » ■ ' / 

and much exceeding / 11 . 180 

: p Ran shrivelling 11 

tad of/, . Loi'e and DutyjZ 
I .'in thy/. Locksley II. 85 

worn m's /— . » . 149 

like a !>east with lower /^J .' . » . 176 

/• to ilic. . . Two Voices 105 
/ pall . ii . 164 

1 '»gA • » -i' '• 

will I . . !e? 11 .243 

Thy / is a reality.' ■■ . 387 

' . Hopeand /', . Day-Din. 75 

|oy and/, Sir L. andQ G. 1 
MAN I i?' Princess, ii. 173 

your/ make that . 11 

|i with/, . 11 iv. 100 

! irtured her mouth, . " vi 69 

and draw Pile sting fium/; . 11 vu. 49 



POEM. LINE. 

Like dull narcotics, numbing/. . In 31em. v. 8 
And 1 should tell him all my/, . 11 xiv. 13 
dies not, but endures with/, . 11 xviii. 17 

He loves to make parade of/, . " xxi. 10 
The hiding of a single/, . . " Jtxv. it 
I slept and woke with/, . . 11 x.wui. 13 
I would set their p's at ease. . 11 Ixii. S 

ploughs with /his native lea . " briiL 23 
These mortal lullabies of/ . . » lxxvi. 5 
No single tear, no mark of/; . 11 lx.wii. 14 
Some painless sympathy with/?' " lxxxiv. ii 

of motion as well as the nerves of/, Aland, I. i. 63 
possible After long grief and/ . 11 II. iv. 2 
Pass, thou deathlike type of/ .11 .58 

my bones are shaken with/, . " v. 5 

A band of/ across mv brow ; . The Letters 6 
Peace, it is a day of/ . . Odeon Well. 235-8 
Ours the/, be his the gain I . . " . 241 

to lull the throbs of/, . . . The Daisy . 105 
all my p's, poor man, forall my/V, Enid . .116 
/ she had To keep them in the . . . 1035 

sharpness of that / about her heart : . . 1039 
down he sank For the pure/ .Elaine .517 
death who puts an end to/: . » >oo2 

to have it, none ; to lose it,/; . 11 i4°5 

groan'd Sir Lancelot in remorseful/ 11 1418 

I, as if with anger or / : . Grandmotlier 65 
-j it be free from f, . . " -97 

gets for greeting but a wail of / . Lucretius . 138 
one pleasure and without one /, . 11 . 265 

pain (verb. I 
p's him that he sickens nigh to death ; Enid 1348 

pained. 
P. and, as bearing in myself the shame A} liner'. 
Her crampt-up sorrow / her . 11 . 800 

paint. 
' When will yon / like this ? ' . Gardener's D. 22 

/ the gates of Hell with Paradise, Princess, iv. 113 
strive to /The face I know, . In Mem. lax. 2 

every dew-drop /'* a bow, . . " exxi. 18 

harlots / their talk as well as face 1 'rien . 670 

so p's him that his face . . Elaine . 333 

painted. 
Eustace/ her, And said to me, 
supporters of a shield, P, 
fair As ever painter/. . 

painter. 
Musician, /, sculptor, critic, . Princess, ii. if 1 

As when a/, poring on a face, . Elaine . 331 

fair As ever/ painted. . . A \ liner's F. 106 

Sorrowest thou, pale P, for the past, Coquette, lii. 3 

painting [part.) 
was /on it fancied arms, . . Vivien . 324 
/ some dead friend from memory ? Coquette, iii. 4 

paintii 

with choice p's of wise men I hung Pal. of Art 131 
Drew from my neck the/ . . Princess, \ 

pair. 
we went along, A pensive/, . Miller's D. 164 

in one love Than/'j of wedlock . Princess, ^ 
His cra\ en / Of comrades . . Enid . 1015 

false / who turn'd Flying, . . " . 1025 

With a low whinny toward the/; 11 . 1604 

palace. 
in the lighted/ near . . /-. ofSkalctt, iv. 47 
unto herself In her high/ there. . Pal. 0/ Art 12 
upon My / with unblindcd eyes, . 11 . 42 

of great rooms and small the/ stood, 11 . 57 

in dark corners of her/ stood . " . 237 

on roofs Of marble ps ; . .D.o/F.V. 

The/ bang'd, and buzz'd and clackt. Day-Pin. 146 
from the / came a child of sin, . Vision o/Sin 5 
in the imperial / found the king. . Princess, 1 lla 
you Some/ in our land, . 11 [ii. 14'' 

took this/: hut even from the first n iv. 294 
i_;ht should pluck your/down ; n ■ 3'/S 



Gardener's D. 20 
Enid . 1117 
Ay Inter's J 



3°o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

'Two from the/' I. Princess, v. 3 

on this side the/ ran the field . ■■ . 351 

high upon the p Ida stood . . ir vi. 14 

with my brethren here In our own / : ■■ „ 108 

for this we gave our/ up . . ir 227 
Or/, how the city glitter'd, . . The Daisy , 47 

he will have you to his/ here, . Enid . 1079 

into no Earl's/ will I go. . .j 1084 

God knows, too much of p's. . n . 1085 

miles of coast, A/, and a princess Vivien 439-98 

complexities Of Arthur's/: n . 583 

moved about her /, proud and pale Elaine . 6ir 

Until we found the p of the king. w 103S-45 

he Will guide me to that/, . . u 2123 

Sir Lancelot at the/ craved Audience 11 1156 

of Arthur's p toward the stream, . ti 1.172 

rolling o'er the p's of the proud . Aylmer's F. 636 

Fairily-delicate/'s shine . . The Islet . 18 

lo the p's and the temple, . . Boadicea . 53 

Burst the gates, and burn the/V, •• . 64 

pa lace- doorway . 
Op to the p-d sliding, paused. . Elaine 1239 

pa lace- front. 
/-/Alive with fluttering scarfs . Princess, v. 497 

Palace-gate. 
vouth came riding toward a p-g. . Vision of Sin 2 
that cold vapour touch'd the p-g, . if .58 

palace-spire. 
High up, the topmost p-s. . . Day-Dm . 68 

palace-walls. 
Where all about your p-w . . To the Queen 15 

Palate. 

Wither beneath the/," . . . D.ofF. Worn. 287 

Pale (adj.) 
Then her cheek was p and thinner Locksley H. 21 
P again as death did prove : . L. of Burleigh 66 

P one, blush again : . . . Princess, iii. 51 
some red, some/, All open-mouth' d, tr iv. 461 
raised the cloak from brows as/ . 11 v. 70 

Dishelm d and mute, and motionlessly/,u vi. 85 
P was the perfect face, ... " vii. 209 

Come; letusgo: your cheeks are/; In Mem. Ivi. 5 
/'with the golden beam of an eyelash Maud, 1. iii. 3 
ever as fi as before n .6 

Morning arises stormy and/, . 11 vi. 1 

red and / Across the face of Enid Enid . , 523 
rode so slowly and they look 'd so f, 11 . . 884 
Femininely fair and dissolutely /, m . 3124 

af his side all p Dismounting, . 11 . T360 

never yet beheld a thing so p. . 11 . 1463 

beholding het Tho'/, yet happy, it . 1728 

graver fits, Turn red or/, . . Vivien . 37 

movedaboutherpalace.proudand/. Elaine . 611 
how/ ' what are they ? flesh and blood? 11 1249 

and/ he turn'd, and reel'd, . . Guinevere . 302 
Enoch slumber'd motionless and/ En. Arden . 907 
P, for on her the thunders . . Aylmers F. 278 
P as the Jeptha's daughter, n . 280 

how p she had look'd Darling, to-night u . 379 

P he turn'd and red, . . . The Captain 62 

pale (s.) 
By bridge and ford, by park and/. Sfr Galahad 82 
Jeap the rotten p's of prejudice, . Princess, ii. 126 
break At seasons thro' the gilded/; In Mem. ex. 8 

paled. 
P at a sudden twitch , t . Aylmer's F. 732 

Pale-green, 
p-g sea-groves straight and high . The Merman 19 

paleness. 
<• /, an hour's defect of the rose, . Maud, I. ii. 8 

Pater. 
make her/ with a poison'd rose ? . Vivien . 461 

But left her all the/, . . Elaine . 377 

made Still/ the pale head of him, Aylmer's F. 623 



palfrey. poem. line. 

there she found her/ trapt . . Godiva . 51 

her p's footfall shot Light horrors. 11 . 58 

cried ' My charger and her/,' . Enid . . 126 

bid him bring Charger and/ . n . 1250 

/ heart enough To bear his armour? n . 1338 

her/ whinnying lifted heel, . . n . 1382 

charger is without, My/ lost.' . u . 1598 

pall (5.) 
truth came borne with bier and/, InMemAxxxiv. 1 
Warriors carry the warrior's/, . Ode on Well. d 
pass the gate, Save under/ . Aylmer's F. 827 

Pall (verb. ) 
Pain rises up, old pleasures/. . Two Voices 164 

Pallas. 
charm P and Juno sitting by : . A Character 15 
Her&comesto-day,.Pand Aphrodite, (Euone . 84 
P where she stood, Somewhat apart, ti . 135 

' O Paris, Give it to P I \ . . u .166 

stood a bust of P for a sign . . Princess. 1. . 219 
fired an angry P on the helm, . if vi. 347 

wild P from the brain Of Demons? In Mem cxiii. 12 

paird (cloaked. ) 
P all its length in blackest samite, Elaine 1136 

Palled (surfeited. ) 
well I know it— / — For Iknowmen:£«^ , 1180 

Palm (of the hand.) 

Fold thy p's across thy breast, . A Dirge . 2 

opening out his milk-white/ . (F.none . 64 
Caughtin the frozen p's of Spring. The Blackbird 24 

smote His/V together, and he cried M. d 'Arthur 87 

press The maiden's tender/. . Talking O. . 180 

His p's are folded on his breast : . Two Voices 247 

Bow'd on her/'^ and folded up . Princess, iv. 269 

beneath his vaulted/ A whisper'd 11 v. 30 

clash'd His iron p's together. . ir . 344 

nor more Sweet Ida :/ to /she sat: 11 vii. 120 

In mine own lady/\s I cull'd . Vivien . 122 

clench'd her fingers till they bit the/. Elaine . 608 

Between his/'j a moment up and Aylmer's F. 259 

Palm- (tree.) 
Imbower'd vaults of pillar'd/. . ArabianN's. 39 
the solemn/'^ were ranged Above, u . 79 

many a tract of/ and rice, . . Pal. of Art 114 
the yellow down Border'd with/, Eotos-E's. . 22 
The/Vand temples ofthe South. ' You ask me why,' 28 
the white robe and the/. . . StS.Stylites 20 
Breadths of tropic shade and p's . Locksley H. 160 
battle-clubs From the isles of/; . Princess, Pro. 22 
at Shusan underneath the p's' . it iii. 214 

Betwixt the p's of paradise . . In Mem. Co?t. 32 
lands of /andsouthern pine ; (rep.J The Daisy . 2 
The dipt/ of which they boast ; . 1- .26 

these be the /'.s Whereof the happy En. Arden . 500 
thatch'd with leaves of/, a hut, . 11 . 560 

the p's and ferns and precipices ; . u . 594 

dells of cowslip, fairy p's, . . Aylmer's F. 91 
Above the valleys of/ and pine.* . The Islet . 23 

Palm { sallow-bloom.) 
In colour like the satin-shining/ . Vivien . 73 

palmtree. 
1 Under a// That was nothing to En. Arden . 494 
Under a/, o\er him the Sun : . m . 497 

pahnwood. 
Crimson-hued the stately p's, 

Palmyrene. 
with the P That fought Aurelian, 

Palpitated. 
tempestuous treble throbbed and/,* 
P, her hand shook, 

palpitations. 
blissful p's in the blood 

Palsy. 
Cured lameness, palsies, cancers. 
A wither'd/ cease to shake?' 



Milton . 15 

Princess, ii. 69 

Vision of Sin 28 

Princess, iv. 370 

Princess, iv. 10 

StS.Stylites 81 

Two Voices . 57 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



301 



POEM LINE. 

infancy Or old bedridden/,— . Aylmer's F. 178 
/, death-in-life, And wretched age — Lucretius . 154 

palter d. 
Nor/ with eternal God for power ; Ode on Well. 1S0 

pamper, 
p not a hasty time, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 9 

pamphleteer. 
A p on guano and on grain, . . Princess.Con. 89 

pan (a vessel. ) 
hurl'd the / and kettle. . . The Goose . 28 

Pan. 
The murmur of a happy P : . . In Mem. xxiii. 12 

pane. 
The blue fly sung in the/; . . Mariana . 63 
the frost is on the/: . . . May Queen, ii. 13 
lash with storm the streaming />? . In Mem. Ixxi. 4 
The prophets blazon'd on the p's ; n lxxxvi. 8 

d athwart the chancel/ . The Letters 3 
ice-ferns on January p's . . Aylmer's /•'. 222 

pang. 

Struck thro' with p's of hell! . Pal.ofArt . 220 

multiplied by superhuman p's, . StS.Stytites 11 
1 felt a /within .... TalkingO. . 234 
Whence follows many a vacant/; Princess, ii. 3S1 
brother, you have known the p's we " v. 364 
rack'd with p's that conquer trust ; In Mem. xlix. 6 
ft of nature, sins of will, . . " liii. 3 

thro' his manful breast darted the p Enid . . 121 
The p— which while 1 weigh'dthy Guinevere . 536 

panic-stricken. 

/•s, like a shoal Of darting fish . Enid . 1317 

pansy. 

! larkcr than darkest panties, Gardener's D. 27 

pant. 
life, not death, for which we/; . Two Voices 398 

panted. 

as he walk'd, King Arthur/ hard, M, d'Arthurvjt 

P hand in hand with faces pale, . Vision of Sin 19 

' K1114 yi.ii.ire Princess, v. 23 

English Neilgherry air I / . The Brook . 18 

panther. 

The p's roar came mufiled . . CEnone . 210 

panting. 

/, burst The laces toward her babe ; Princess,\\. 132 

paper. 
at a board by tome and/ sat . Princess, ii. 18 
the /** that she held Rustle : . ,. j v . 371 

Paphian. 
new-bathed in /' wells . 



171 
papist. 
Than/ unto Saint. . . . Talking O. 16 
parachute. 
a fairy / and pa It : . . Princess, Pro. 76 



pa radc. 

* of pain, 



He loves to make/ of pain, , Xn Mem. xxi. 10 

Paradise. 

the thymy plots of Z 7 , . LoveandDiathi 

tP . Pat. o/A . 

■■ -of /', . . St S. Sty/ites aoj 

Like long-taii'd birds of P, . . Day-Dtn. . 275 
Hell with P, . Princess, iv. 113 

vii. 30a 
n the /' . . In Mem. 
of/. . 
P Wand, I.xxii. 44 

•mri . 386 

many ■ '>,.. -43 

/,rr I 

11 a kind of/; Princest.l 154 



paramour. roEM. line. 

haughty jousts, and took a/; . Enid . 1680 

parapet. 

Dislodging pinnacle and / . . D. o/F. Worn. 26 

Set every gilded/ shuddering ; . Elaine 

isle of silvery p's ! ... Boddicca 

parasite. 
A leaning and upbearing /, . . Isabel . . 34 

parcel. 
Portions and/'i of the dreadful Past. Lotos-Es. 92 

pa reel -lea rded. 
/-iwith the traveller's-joy lnAutumn,./J.v/»;<rr'j.F.i53 

parcelled. 
the broad woodland / into farms ; Aylmer's F. 847 

parch' d. 
p and withcr'd, deaf and blind, . I'atima . 6 
/ with dust ; Or, clotted into points .)/. d Arthur 2\6 

parish. 
that year in twenty p'es round. . Grandmother 12 

pard. 
a wild and wanton /, . . . (liuone . 195 

pardon (s. ) 
heal me with your/ ere yon go.' Princess, iii. 49 
/, sweet Melissa, for a blush:' . „ .50 

in grosser lips Beyond all/— . 1, iv. 233 

with mutual / ask d and given . 11 v. 44 

I crave your/, O my friend ; In Mem. Ixxxiv. 100 
with the Sultan's/, 1 am all as well Maud, 1. xx. 39 
Crave/ for that insult . . . Enid . . 563 

Grant me / for my thoughts : . 11 . .816 

Your/, child Vivien . 153 

your/, lo, you know it ! . . Elaine 

pardon .'verb. 1 

I (P me saying it) were much loth Princess, i. 155 

needful seeming harshness, / it . n ii. 289 

'O/mel [heard, I could not help ir . 3U 

mine in part. ( ) hear me. / inc. . 1, iii. 15 

shamed That I must needs » 
We/ it; and for your ingress . n 
' Pray stay a little :/ me ; . . The Brook 
' P me, O stranger knight . . Enid . . 286 
0/ me I the madness of that hour, ■■ 
sin in word-, Perchance, we both can / : Elain 
I cared not for it. (J /me, . Ayi. 

pardoned. 
I have/ little Letty ; . . Pd. Morris 140 

pare. 
would/ the mountain to the plain Vivien .678 

parent. 
and thcir/V underground! . . Aylmer's F. 83 
after our good jfs past away . .. . 3^8 

you are happy: let her p's be.' . 11 

self her, thuse good /■ 
fi harshness and the napless loves u 

Paris. 
CEnone, wandering forlom Of P, . CEnone . 16 

Beautiful /', evil-hearted /', 

see thy /'jud. . . „ 

to P made Proffer of royal power, ■■ 
From me, Heaven's Queen, P, to thee 11 
/' held the costly fruit < hit . 

i'd. and 1 cried, 'OP, , .. 

when I louk'd, P had raU'd hi . 1 

park. 
the range of lawn and / ; 
wild wind ran.; from/ and plain 

ind the/, . 
My father left a / to me, 



I ford, by / and pale 

'I hey by /•'.. 

Pi with o.lk and c hi 
l"s ami ordei 

Down thro'tne/; iti 



43 
Talkin < '. 1. 1 

L. 0/ Burleigh 17 

n . . , 

o . 30 

Princess, Pro. 14 

sight 11 . j4 



302 



CONCORDANCE 70 



POEM. LINE. 

gave The/, the crowd, the house ; Princess, Pro. 94 
hundred maids in train across the P ir vi. 60 

their p's some dozen times a year » Con. 103 

chariots flow By p and suburb In Mem. xcvii. 24 
To range the woods, to roam the/, u Con. 96 

parlance, 
A hate of gossip p, Isabel . . 26 

parliament. 
In the P of man, .... Locksley H.^ 128 
A potent voice of P, . . . In Mem, cxii. 11 

/« Wi? zc r-iuin doiv. 
rose-bush that I set About the p-w MayQueen, i\. 48 

Parma. 
rain at Reggio, rain at P; . . 77** Daisy , 51 

Parnassus. 

On thy P set thy feet, . In Mem. xxxvii. 6 

parrot. 
Whistle back the p's call, . . Locksley 77 171 
The p in his gilded wires . . Day-Dm, . 36 
The p scream'd, the peacock squall' d :< . 144 

p turns Up thro' gilt wires . J Princess, Pro. 169 

parson. 
The / smirked and nodded . .7 he Goose . 20 
The/ Holmes, the poet Everard Hall, The Epic 4 
The/ taking wide and wider sweeps, u . 14 

the 7\ sent to sleep with sound, 717. a" Arthur, Ep. 3 
'7" said I 'you pitch the pipe . Ed. Morris 52 
the p made it his text that week . Grandmother 29 
P's abean loikewoise . . . IV. Parmer 9 
But P a comes an' a goos, . n . 25 

p 'ud nobbut let ma aloan, . it -43 

part (s. ) 
they had their/ Of sorrow : . Miller's D. 223 

seems a/ of those fresh daysto me Ed. Morris 142 
Love himself took/ against himself Love and Butyls 
I am a/ of all that I have met ; . Ulysses . 18 
fitted to thy petty/, . . . Locksley H. 93 
She seem'd a p of joyous Spring : Sir L.andQ.G. 23 
p were drown'd within the whirling Princess, Pro. 47 



As p's, can see but p' s, 

p made long since, and/ Now 

P sat like rocks : / reel'd 

P roll'd on the earth and rose again 

P stumbled mixt with floundering horses 

one/ of sense not flint to prayer, 

took no p In our dispute : 

Jove in which my hound has/, 

Ap of mine may live in thee 

Can take no / away from this : 

A/ of stillness, yearns to speak: 

The freezing reason's colder/, 

Now grown a / of me : 

of this remnant will I leave a/, 

tell him tales of foreign p's . 

those uttermost P's of the morning? u 

been himself a/ of what he told. Aylmer's F, 

a p Falling had let appear . . 11 

God help me I save I take my/ . Sailor Boy . 

part (to divide.) 
an intellect to / Error from crime ; Isabel . 
Just ere the falling axe did/ . Margaret . 

Can 1/ her from herself . . Locksley H. 70 
To put together,/ and prove, . Two Voices 134 
/ it, giving half to him. . . InMem.xxv. 12 

Her care is not to / and prove ; . u xlvii. 5 

star of morn P's from a bank of . Enid . . 735 
to / The lists of such a beard . Vivien . 93 

And loving hands must/, — . 77^ Window 139 

part (to bid farewell.) 

The crown of all, we met to/ no . Ed. Morris 70 
Could Love/ thus? . . . Love and Ditty -54 

1 too must/: 1 hold thee dear . Will Water. 211 

I trow they did not/ in scorn : . Lady Clare 5 

We too must/; and yet how fain Princess, vi. 182 

one soft word and let me/ forgiven. v . 202 



310 

iv. 72 
v. 4S5 

. 486 
.. 487 

vi. 166 
n Con. 29 

In Mem. Ixii. 2 
ir lxiv. 11 

ti Ixxxiv. 68 
if . 78 

m exxiii. 14 
Elaine 1406 

Guinevere . 441 
En. A r den . 198 
224 
12 
508 



14 



TOEM. LINE. 

At last must/ with her to thee . In Mem. Con. 48 

1 must tell her before we p, . . Maud, I. xvi. 33 

For years, for ever, to /— . II. h. 50 

We met, but only meant to/. . The Letters 12 

to meet And p for ever . . Guinevere . g3 

' Let us/: in a hundred years . Grandmother 47 

Partake. 
Then Yniol, 'Enter therefore and/ Enid . 300 

partaker. 
No more / of thy change . . In Mem. xl. 8 

parted (divided, etc.) 
'my friend — P from her— . . Princess, v. 73 
friend from friend Is oftener/, . In Mem. xcvii- 15 
one at other, /by the shield. . Enid . itt8 

wrist is / from the hand that waved, Vivien . 40 1 

parted (departed, etc.) 
ere he/ said 'This hour is thine Love and Death 9 
Had once hard words, and/, . Dora . . 16 

/, with greatstndes among his dogs. Godiva . 31 

beckon'd us : the rest P . . Princess, 11. 166 
' Here, by this brook, we p ; . The Brook . \ 

week Before 1/ with poor Edmund ; ir . 78 

we/; sweetly gleam'd the stars, t The Letters 41 
hour, When first 1/ from you . Enid . 1196 

without a word and/ from her : . Vivien . 592 

/ with his own to fair Elaine : . Elaine . 380 
no sooner had you/ from us, . it , 575 

/ from the iousts Hurt in the side,' ir . 619 

He spake and/. Wroth but all in awe, u . 715 

' Farewell, sweet sister,' p allin tears, " 1146 

/, laughing in his courtly heart, . 11 1170 

There kiss'd, and/ weeping: , Guinevere . 124 
Enoch p with his old sea-friend . En. Arden . 168 
They/, and Sir Aylmer Aylmer . Aylmer's P. 277 
A little after you had/ with him, Sea Dreams 263 

parting (part. ) 
p with a long embrace . . . 2nMem.xxx\x. it 

parting (s. ) 
Their every/ was to die. „ 3 In Mem. xcvi. 12 

partner. 
The prudent/ of his blood . . Two Voices 415 
Thy / in the flowery walk „ IuMem.\xxxiX\.?2 

Two p's of a married life . . 11 xcvi. 5 

Pa rtridge-breeder. 
These P-b's of a thousand years, . Aylmer's F. 382 

party, 
two parties still divide the world — Walk, to the M.6g 

All parties work together. . . Will Water. 56 

Drink, and let the parties rave ; . Vision of Sin 123 

holpen by the rest His/, — . . Elaine . 496 

knights His/ cried 'Advance, . n . 502 

His/, knights of utmost North . if » 525 

party-secret. 
betraying H\sp-s, fool, to the press ; Maud, II. v. 35 

pass (s. ) 
shadowy granite, in a gleaming/; Lolos-E's. . 49 
The long divine Peneian/, . . To E. L. 3 

Arthur came, and labouring up the/ Elaine „ 48 

thro the -perilous p' es of his life : . Aylmer's F. 209 

pass (verb.) 
P onward from Shalott. . . L.ofS7ialoft 7 Y\.i8 

heard her native breezes/, . Mariana in the S. 43 
An image seem'd to/ the door, . u 65-74 

Can he p, and we forget ? . . Miller's D. 204 
P by the happy souls, that love to live : (Enoue 236 
/ before my light of life, . 11 237 

the livelong day my soul did/, . Pal. of Art . 55 
seem to brighten as they/: . . May Queen, 1. 34 
1 shall hear you when you/ . ri ii. 31 

I thought to/ away before, . ir iii, 1 

/ to Him that died for me. . ir .20 

'/'freely thro' : the wood is all thine 73. o/F. Worn. 83 
thro' mine own doors Death did/ To J. S. . 19 
Did never creature/ . . , Talking O. 86 
Then a hand shall / before thee, . Locksley H. 81 



TE.vyysows works. 



yi 



POEM. LINE. 

To /, when Life her light withdraws, Two Voices 145 
'Jill all the hundred summers /, . Day-Dm. . 53 
strove in other days to / . . 11 . no 

My lord, and shall we / the bill . 11 . 159 

To / with all our social ties . 11 . 217 

So / 1 hostel, hall, and grange ; . Sir Galahad 81 
I liJil it good, good things should/: Will Water.lo$ 

veak heart, arid leave me 'Come not when,'etc. 1 1 
a compact p Long summers back, Princess, i. 122 
p With all fair theories . . 11 ii. 214 

they wait, ' he said, *p on ; . » v. 4 

she will/ rne by in after-life . 11 .88 

i mingle with your likes. . u vi. 321 

all thy motions gently/ . . In Mem. xv. 10 
1 alt sea-water pes by, . . ,, xiw 6 

I shall/; my work will fail . . 11 hi. 8 

We/*: the path that each man trod 11 Ixxii. 9 
these things/, and I shall prove . rilxxxiv. 98 

leaving these, to/ away, . . 1, xcix. 19 

drifts that / To darken . . ,, cvi. 13 

leave the porch, they/ the grave 11 Con. 71 

sweeps away as out we / . . n -95 

To/ the silent-lighted town, . 11 . 112 

I her/ like a light . . . Maud, I. iv. 11 

Mush the news ... n xvii. 11 

P the happy news ... 11 .15 

1 the sea ; . . . ,1 xxi. 7 

P, thou deathlike type of pain . » II. iv. 5S 

P and cease to move about . . u -59 

let my query/ Unclaim'd, . . The Brook . 104 
a maiden near Waiting to/. . ■■ . 205 

until we /and reach That other . Enid . .855 
when he p'es fall upon him.' . 11 . . 978 

fall upon you while you //.' ,, 994 

till he saw her P into it, 1735 

He must not/ uncared for. . . Elaine . 535 

aid not/ beyond the cape 11 1033 

cried because you would not/ . « 1036 

that I may/ at last Beyond the poplar u 1043 

10 let me/, My father. . . n 1085 

But that he /'« into fairy land.' . n 1252 

/ "ii, in riven.' . 11 1343 

'lid not / but grew ; . Guinevere . 84 

/hisd ■mo 11,' his own. En.Arden . 147 

the ship I sail ill p'es here ,1 . 214 

' barrow overhead .. 

nevermore did cither/ the gate . Aylmer's F. 826 

f ordinance . Tit/ionus . 30 

ly/'« by . Reguiescat . 7 

if left to/ His autumn . . A Dedication 9 

hall/, . Lucretius . 253 

1 and winds will// The Window 127 

.">•, sec bird.) 

Except the/ that he loved her not ; Enid 1241 

• love ,r« , 762 

I one plain / .:,ie . 891 

• / o'er and o'er . ,, . 892 

ve bun and free / home ; . En. Arden . 651 

Should sec thy p's in rank . . In Mem. xiv. 6 
passeth. 
/ When the tree shall fall, Love and Death 14 
pas 
each in/ touch'd with some new Gardener's D. 199 
Mm made thick St S, .Sty.. 
I >wn, she/; . . 1 .40 

«. 410 
murmurM that their May Was/: Princess, ii. 440 
1 heard them/ „ iv. i 55 

11 vi. 359 
1 in / thro' the ford, . . In Mem. vi, 39 
' tells . . ,, [xxvL 10 
' 'lawn . Vivien . 410 
tine 1340 
i I. in. rl'ii / by . Guinevere 
p ihr..' the ummcr world a rain . / n, Arden . 530 
■i/ by. . Aylmer's F. 171 
thro' the fin Bodies, ... 

1 the weather . . . The Window 67 



POEM. LINE. 

In Mem. lvi. 1 1 



passing s.j 
The/ of the sweetest soul . 

passion. 
When my/ seeks Pleasance . Lilian . 8 

By veering/ fann'd . . . Madeline . 
those whom/ hath not blinded . Ode to Mem. 117 
all / becomes passionless, . . Eieauore . 10a 
all the soul and sense Of P » . 116 

She had the p's of her kind. . L.C.I'. del 

lyre of widest range Struck by all/, D.o/F, Wont. 1C6 
/rose thro' circumstantial grades . Gardener 'j.D.235 
of his early life, And his first/ ; . Ed. Morris :\ 
wayward modern mind Dissecting/. 11 . £8 

For when my / first began, . . Talking O. . 9 
hold/ in a leash, . . . . Love and Duty \a 
one blind cry of/ and of pain, . n 

/shall have spent its novel force, . Locksley II . \ , 
triumph'd ere my/ sweeping thro' me 11 .1.1 

my foolish / were a target . . 11 . 146 

all thy p's, match'd with mine, . 11 . 151 

There the p's cramp'd no longer . 11 . 1(7 

alone, the p's of her mind, As winds Godiva . 32 
Wilt thou find/, pain, or pride? . Two Voices 243 
My heart beat thick with/ . . Princess, in. 174 
their welfare is a/ to us. . . 11 . 21 4 

ended with such/ that the tear . 11 iv. 41 

dash'd The/ of the prophetess; . n . 122 

with some great / at her heart . n 

fiery /' from the brinks of death ; . 11 vii. 141 

My centred/ cannot move, . . InMem. lviii. 9 
His other/ wholly dies, . . ,, |xi. 10 

And so my/ hath not swerved . ■■ lxxxiv. 49 
my prime/ in the grave : . . 11 -76 

tell me where the p's meet, . 1. lxxxvii. 4 
Thy/ clasps a secret joy : M .8 
/ pure in snowy bloom . . . 11 cviii. 11 

.My live is vaster/ now : . . ,, exxix. 10 

the p's that make earth Hell ! . Maud, I. x. 46 
when fraught With a/ so intense \i II. ii. 39 
loyal/ for our temperate kings ; . Ode en We, 
strong/ in her made her weep . Enid . .no 
all the/ of a twelve hours' fast.' ■■ 306 

So burnt he was with/, . . 11 . . 560 
break it, when his/ masters him . •• . . 892 
more exceeding/ than of old ; . 11 . 1184 

all in / uttering a dry shriek, . 11 . 1310 
I, that Uniterm ;.; my true/, saw . Vivien . 723 

its burst of / spent . 810 

sweet and sudden/ of youth . Elaine . 282 

A fiery family/ for the name . 11 . 476 

wild/out against the floor . . » . 738 

To blunt or break her/.' . . 11 . 969 

(lie meant to break the/ in her . 11 1073 

1 discourtesy. 11 1 ; 
the maiden/ for a maid, . . Guinevere . 475 
the/ in her moan'd reply . .En.Arden 

/yet unborn perhaps . Aylmer's F. 101 

masters . 11 . 339 

As if the living/ symboll'd there. 11 . 535 

ir/'j far too like f/hedi cords Sea Dreams a+g 

t of/ that no smiles restore Coquette, ii. 11 

flush Of/ and the first embrace . Lucretius . 3 

lead an errant/ home again . . 11 .17 

passionately. 

Then • uddenly and / she spoke : . Elaine . 925 

full/, Her head upon her hands, . Guinevere . 178 

passion -Jlirwcr. 

lasptbya// . . . Maud, I. xiv. 8 

splendid tear From the //at the gate " x\. 

passionless. 
■■.... 
High, self-contained, and /, . . t, ; 

passion-pale. 
P-p they met And greeted : . . Guinevere . 98 

tori. 

no false/ to that easy realm, . Aylmer's F. iZ\ 

/. 1st 
fire From the fountains ol the/, . Ode to Mem, a 



3^4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

P and Present, wound in one, . Millet's D. 197 
From out the storied P, ' Love i'fwuthy land* etc. 2 
all the/ of Time reveals . h -5° 

in the flying of a wheel Cry down the/, Godiva 7 
So mix for ever with the/, . . Will Water. ^ 201 
bird's-eye- view of all the ungracious/; Przucess,i\. 109 
the moulder d lodges of the P . it iv. 45 

let the/ be past .... 11 58 

great heart thro' all the faultful P n vii. 232 

all the/ Melts mist-like n . 333 

sets the/ in this relief? . . In Mem. xxiv. 12 

the/ will always win A glory . 11 . 13 

And silent traces of the/ . . it xlii. 7 

The eternal landscape of the/; . tt xlv. 8 

fading legend of the/; . . 11 Ixi. 4 

A night-long Present of the P . n lxx. 3 

wind Of memory murmuring the/, u xci. 8 

dead man touch'd me from the/, 11 KC }Y.- 34 

meadows breathing of the/, . n xcviii. 7 

hold it solemn to the/. . . tt civ. 16 

Thou, like my present and my/, 11 cxx. 19 

Strange friend, /, present, and to be ; it cxxviii. 9 
all his greatness in the P. . . Ode on Well. 20 
let her fancy flit across the/ . F.?iid . . 645 

made the/ so pleasant to us : . Gitbievere . 373 
moving thro' the/ unconsciously tt . 399 

sorrowest thou, pale Painter, for the/, Coqitette^ii.^ 

past (verb.) 
Of a maiden/ away, . . .Adeline . 19 
P Into deep orange o'er the sea, RlananaintheS. 25 
They/ into the level flood, . . Miller's D. 75 
into stillness/ again, ... n . 227 

When I / by, a wild and wanton pard, CEnone^ 195 
comfort her when I am/ away. May Queen, iii. 44 
'Glory to God,' she sang, and/ afar, D.ofF. Worn. 242 
Beneath the sacred bush and/ away — The Epic 3 
an hour had/, Wereach'dameadow Gardeue7 J sD. 106 
thro' that still garden/ : tt . 196 

he/ his father's gate, Heart-broken, . Dora . 48 
when the farmer/ into the field it . -83 

Then he turn'd His face and / — . tt . . 148 
/ thro' all The pillar' d dust . . Audley Ct. . 14 
heard it was this bill that/, Walk, to the M. 59 
An hour had/ — and, sitting straight Talking O. 109 
trembling, / in music out of sight. Locksley H. 34 
And she, that knew not, / : . . Godiva . 73 

A pleasant hour has/ away . Day-Dm. . 2 

The reflex of a legend/ . it .11 

Shall show thee/ to Heaven: . Will Water. 246 
What ! the flower of life is/: . Vision of Sin 69 
He/ by the town and out c f the street Poet's Song 2 
dropt a fairy parachute and/: . Princess, Pro. 76 
rose and/ Thro* the wild woods . 11 i. 89 

She once had / that way ; it . 183 

/ an arch, Whereon a woman-statue if . 206 

hastily we/, And up a flight . it ii. 16 

/ From all her old companions, . it . 243 

was it chance She/ my way . n vi. 82 

o'er her forehead / A shadow, . 11 .90 

face A little flush'd, and she / on; 11 vii, 66 

He / ; a soul of nobler tone : . In Mem. lix. 1 

I / beside the reverend walls . tt lxxxvi. 1 
Up that long walk of limes I / .11 .15 

if they came who / away, . . it Ixxxix. 13 
their love has never/ away ; . tt xcvi. 13 

as I found whei her carriage/ . Maud, I. ii. 3 
I / him, I was crossing his lands ; it xiii. 6 

while I / he was humming an air, n . 17 

sweet hours that/ in bridal white, it xviii. 65 
else would have been/ by ! . .it II. ii. 65 
/ From Como, when the light was gray, The Daisy 72 
has /and leaves The Crown . Ded. of Idylls 47 

and they/ to their own land ; . Enid . 45, 1803 
like a shadow, / the people's talk ir . .82 
Prince, as Enid/ him, fain To follow, it . . 375 
know not, but he/ to the wild land 11 . . 443 
they / The marches, . . it . S78 

green gloom of the wood they/, . it . 1044 

many/, but none regarded her, . tt . 1369 

/ away But left two brawny spearmen,!! . 1405 



POEM. LINE. 

And/ to Enid's tent ; . . . Enid . 1770 

So/ the days tr . 1778 

/ With Arthur to Caerleon 11 1793 

P inward, as she came from out the Elaine . 345 

the new companions / away . . it . 398 

to the banquet, dark in mood, P, . it . 564 

Thence to the court he / ; it . 702 

P up the still rich city to his kin . 11 . 798 

/ beneath the wildly-sculptured gates it . 840 

/ Down thro' the dim rich city . tt . 842 

/ In either twilight ghost-like . ir . 844 

But ten slow mornings/, . . u 2127 

P like a shadow thro' the field, . tt lx 34 

Diamonds to meet them, and they/ 11 1230 

/the the barge Whereon the lily maid n - 1234 

/, Love-loyal to the least with . Guinevere . 124 
while he/ the dim-lit woods . . 11 . 249 

all is/, the sin is sinn'd, 11 . 539 

/ To where beyond these voices . 11 . 689 

/ Bearing a lifelong hunger . . En. Arden . 78 
the moment and the vessel/. . 11 . 243 

P thro' the solitary room in front, ir . 276 

/ into the litttle garth beyond . it . 326 

o'er his countenance No shadow/, it . 711 

/ the strong heroic soul away. . it . 914 

from the clay it work'd in as she/, Aylmer' s F. 170 
Sir Aylmer/ And neither loved . \\ . 249 

after our good parents/ away . 11 . 358 

Then drank and/ it n . 408 

with her the race of Aylmer, /. . n . 577 

/ In sunshine : right across its track Sea Dreams 121 
/ into the belt and swell' d again . 11 . 215 

/ by the gate of the farm, Willy, — Grandmother 41 
trifle left you, when I shall have/ away 11 . 107 

/ long lines of Northern capes . The Voyage 35 
Glow'd for a moment as we/. . 11 .48 

So they/ by capes and islands, . The Captain 21 
he/ To turn and ponder . . Lucretius . 11 

pastern. 
cream-white mule his/ set : . SirL. andQ. G. 31 

pastime. 

break a country heart For/, . L.C. V.de Vere 4 

Why took ye not your/ ? . . Love and D?ity2S 

playM In his free field, and/ made, Two Voices 320 
At our old/'s in the hall . . InMeju.xxx. 5 
he beats his chair For/, . . n lxv. 14 

And/ both of hawk and hound, . Enid . . 711 
/ now the trustful king is gone ! ' . Elaine . 102 

Pastor. 
being used to find her/ texts, . Aylmer's F. 606 

Pasturage. 
wither'd holt or tilth or/. . . En. Arden . 676 

pasture. 
gray twilight pour'd On dewy/V, Pal. of Art 86 
In tracts of/ sunny-warm, . tt -94 

Thro' crofts and/V wet with dew Two Voices 14 
all the sloping/ murmur'd, . . Princess, Pro. 55 

pasty. 
half-cut-down, a/ costly made, . Audley Ct. . 22 

pat. 
/ The girls upon the cheek, . . Talking O. . 43 

Patch (s.) 
Or while the/ was worn ; . . Talking O. . 64 
Upon my proper/ of soil . . Amphion . 99 

patch (verb.) 
three castles/ my tatter'd coat? . Princess, ii. 394 

PaicJid. 
refuse/ with moss. . . . Vision of Sin 212 
one was/ and blurr'd and lustreless Enid . . 649 

patent. 
Last night, their mask was /, . Princess, iv. 307 

path. 
stepping down By zig-zag /'s, . M.d? Arthur 50 
Till all the fs were dim, . . Talking O. 298 



TEX.VVSO.VS WORKS. 



1 EM. LINE. 

charm did talk About his/, . . Day-Dm. . 122 

! men ; . it . 218 

idy Psyche, . Princess, 

The/ hy which we twain did go, In Man. xxii. 1 

where the / we walk'd began To slope 11 . 9 

My/'* are in the fields I know . n xxxix. 31 

'J'h-; p we came by, thorn and flower, 11 xlv. 2 

all our/ was fresh with dew, . ■■ lxvii. 6 

hat each man trod Is dim, . n lxxii. 9 

ict by/V of grn :rs, ulxxxiii. 31 

d on the / a little as.ide ; . Maud, 1. xiii. 7 

p of duty was the way to glory: Ode on Well. 202-10-24 

.11 His/ upward, and prcvail'd 11 . 214 

. perilous /\f, . . Enid . . 881 

ec before them on the/, . tt . 1621 

green/ that show'd the rarer foot, Elaine . 162 

p seem'd to fall beside her/, En Arden . 510 

le steep hill Trod out a/: . Sea Dreams 117 

pal/ios. 
Shall sharpest / blight us, . Love and Duty 82 

pat!; l 

where the hedge-row cuts the/, . Gardener's D. 85 

a well-worn / courted us . . n lot 

on to where the / leads ; . .In .Item, xxiii. 8 

down a rocky/ from the place , Enid . 1049 

up the rocky / disappcar'd n 1092 

les the sea-cliff / . . Vivien . 731 

beat a/ out to wealth . . Ay liner's F. 439 

patience. 

urselvesare {u\\Princess,Con.y2 

It time To learn its limbs : 11 . 73 

use A little/ ere I die ; . In Mem. xxxiv. xa 

patient adj.) 
P on this tall pillar I ■ . St S. SLylites 15 

ver/, Yniol's heart Danced Enid . 
And howsoever/, Vniol his. ,, 707 

blabbing The case of his / . . Maud, II. v. 37 

pa if 

Institute Of which he was the/. . Princess, Pro. 6 
play'd the/ with her curls. „ . 138 

ime thirty charities . ■■ C 

like a mighty/, satisfied . . Enid . 1492 

half forgot hi» lazy smile Of/ . Aylmer's . 

patter. 
P she goes, my own little Annie, . Grandmother 78 

The chesnut / to the ground : . In Mem. xi. 4 

/' over the boards. . . Grandma:: 

pattern. 

let them take Example, / : . . StS. Stylites 220 



patting. 
Ask'd Walter, / Lilia's head. 



Princess, Pro. 123 



Paul. 
I, and swore by Peter and by P: Godha 24 
iky Ps they bore . Wilt Water. 141 

Like/' with at with . In Men:, cxix. 4 

pane (s.) 
veep Of richest p's, . . Eleanore . 66 
. Miller's P. 122 
I knew not 
ind 

. :i vii. 233 

11 Con. 4 
N' carer . CV 
011 . Ay liner 1 

fans* verb.) 
The brews /and . Claribtl . 2 

1 1 fall did .seem. .. ! 9 

es . 22 

1 / in her cloud. Poet's Song 7 
I: 'for that ii 

1 P ■ ■ •• iii. 1 10 

1, I"s, . . En-id . 



■ 
heard his armed feet P by her : . Guinevere . 410 
goal of ordinance Where all should/. tit/ton us 31 

paused. 
/, And dropt the branch . Gardener's D. 153 

/ About the windings of the marge Ed. Morris 93 
/ Among her sijh to I. car us; Love and Duly 71 
Among the tents I / and sang, . Two I ~o.\ 
pacing till she/ By Florian; .Princess, 

before them/ Hortensia, pleading: 11 vii. 116 
She turn'd ; she/; She stoop'd ; . 11 

We/: the winds were in the beech: InMem.xxx. 9 
c ften when I / Hath ask'd again, Enid . .4-3 

he turn'd away, . . / 'iaien 
P in the gateway, standing . . Elaine 

I 1. ace-doorway sliding,/. . 11 
heard Strange music, and he/ . Guinevere . 237 
He /, and in the pause she crept . 11 . 523 

P for a moment at an inner door, . En. Arden . 277 
At Annie's door he/ . . . 11 . 444 

the golden lizard on him/, n . 602 

/ Sir Aylmer reddening from the . Aylmer's I 
we nor/ for fruit nor flowers. . The Voyage 56 

pausing. 
He/, Arthur answer'd, "O my knight Elaine 1316 

pavement, 

from the / he half rose, 
on the / lay Carved stones . 
heel against the/ echoing, . 
things tliat rang Against the/, 



. M.d' Arthur 167 
. PrincessJ'ro. 13 
. Enid . 1120 

• " • »443 



A rabian N's. 1 14 
Princess, iii. 328 

.. iv. 154 

Guinevere . 391 

11 . 396 



Pavilion. 
trr<\it P of the Caliphat. 
I itch our/ here upon the sward ; 
vext at heart In the/; . 
The silk p's of King Arthur . 
crown'd the state/ of the King, 

paivd. 
/his beard, and muttcr'd 'catalepsy.' Princess, 
roll'd And/ about her sandal. . 11 iii 166 

pay. 
p Meet adoration to my household Ulysses . 41 
clamouring, ' If we/, we starve !' Godtva . 15 

'If they/ this tax, they starve.' . u .20 

half-crown, Which I shall have to/? Will Wat 
debt That I never can hope to/; Maud. I. six. 88 
. with which to/ the debt . Ode on Well. 156 

Or later, / one visit here, . Top. D. Maurice 45 

Nor/ but one, but come for many, >• . 47 

•..ill/ you worship : 
/ the voice who best could tell 

peli. 
'ere a bean an' yonder a / ; . 

God gave her / ; . 

A haunt of ancient P. . 

let the world have/ or wars, 
old time, anil all my / of 1. 

if/- 
Is there any/ In ever climbing 
place of him that slee] 
Sleeo sweetly, tender heart, in/, 
pace the troubled land, like /'; 'Looethou thy la 
he died at/ With all men : . . Dora . 141 

breathing health and/ upon her brcat: . 

idly for their/, 11 

Sir Gal 



I 'ixtien 

En. Arden . 


77 

■ 


X. Farmer. 


46 


To the Queen 
Pal. of Art 


26 


MayQueen.W. 


6 


1.1. 

/:'s. . 

To J. S. . 


13 

04 

69 



universal /' Lie like a shaft 
Pure lilies of eternal/, . 

critic I— . Prim 
1 nt play The Spartan 

[annate in/, . 11 

■e . . . it 

/' be with her. She is dead. . n 

marble Muse* looking/. Not/ helook'd,n 

PI there are tin u to avenge Ul 11 

one The silken priest of/, . 

u 



I III 



II. 



..• 337 

. 480 

V. 41 



;o6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

dews Gather'd by night and /, . Princess, v. 234 



other thoughts than P Burnt in us. 

I that prated/, when first I heard 

at our books, and marr'd our/, 

fair/ once more among the sick. . 

plighted troth, and were at/. 

from the west, a land of/; . 

Calm and deep/ on this high wold hi Me77z. xi. 5,13 

P and goodwill, goodwill and/, (rep.)if xxviii. 11 

As daily vexes household/, . 

'Twere best at once to sink to/, . 

Days order'd in a wealthy/, 

P; come away. : the song of woe (rep 

idly broke the/ Of hearts 

stay'd in/ with God and man. 

A hundred spirits whisper * P.* 

The pillars of domestic/. 

My spirit is at/ with all. 

Ring in the thousand years of/. 



C071. 



xxix. 

xxx iv. 

xlv. 

Ivi. 

Ivii. 

Ixxix. 

lxxxv. 

lxxxix. 

xciii. 



13 



16 



cv. 28 
Why do they prate of the blessings of PI Maud, I. i. 21 

27 
33 
36 
47 
50 
44 
IS 
16 



If Xlll. 

irll.v. 



nllLvi. 

ti . 40 

n . 50 

The Brook . 190 

Ode 071 Well. 232 

235-8 



1056 



Is it/ or war? Civil war, as I think, 

P sitting under her olive, 

P in her vineyard — yes ! — . 

Is it/ or war? better war! . 

let a passionless/ be my lot, 

P, angry spirit, and let him be ! . 

1 thought the dead had/, 

To have no/ in the grave 

P Pipe on her pastoral hillock 

love of a/ that was full of wrongs 

the/, that I deem'd no/, is over 

sleeps in/.' and he, poor Philip 

P, his triumph will be sung . 

P, it is a day of pain 

fruitful strifes and rivalries of/ — Ded. of Idylls 37 

watch'd, and had not held his/; . Vivien 

sunn'd The world to/ again : . ir 

To sleek her ruffled/ of mind . ir 

if I schemed against your/ in this, ir 

ravaged woodland yet once more To/ ; if 

saying, ' P to thee, Sweet sister,' . Elaine 

1 P,' said her father, ' O my child, n 

beyond these voices there is/. . Gui7ievere 

pass his days in/ among his own E71. Arden . 147 

true heart, which hunger'd for her/ it . 271 

all the warmth, the/, the happiness 11 . 762 

not to break in upon her/. . . n 788 

f which each had prick* d to death. Ayhner's F. 52 

wings of brooding shelter o'er her/, ir . 139 

Jilted I was : I say it for your/. ir . 354 

Prince of/, the Mighty God, . 11 . 66g 

The things belonging to thy/ . n . 740 

For mine is a time of/, . Gra7id77iother 89-94 

the message is one of P. . . u .96 

age is a time of/, u - 97 

Across the whirlwind's heart of/, The Voyage 87 

To some more perfect/. . . Requiescat . 8 

Peacock. 

On the tree-tops a crested / lit, . CEtw7ie . 102 

The/ in his laurel bower, . . Day-Dm. . 35 

The parrot scream'd, the/ squall'd, n . 144 

smooth'd a petted/ down . . Prz7icess, ii. 432 

droops the milkwhite/ like a ghost, n vii. 165 
bright and light as the crest Of a/, Maud, I. xvi. 17 

bays, the/* j neck in hue . . T/ie Daisy . 14 

peacock-yewtree. 
p-y and the lonely Hall, . Eft. Arden 99-609 

peak. 
Some blue/'.? in the distance rose, Dyi7ig Swa7i n 
snowy/ and snow-white cataract CE7W7ie . 207 
high on every/ a statue : . Pal. of Art. 37 
Lotos blooms below the barren/; Lotos-E's. . 145 
climbs a/ to gaze O'er land and main Pri7icess,vH. 20 
over Sinai's/'.? of old . . . In Mem. xcv. 22 
the budded p's of the wood are bov/d Maud, I. vi. 4 
The mountain wooded to the/, . En. Arde7i . 573 
By/'-? that flam'd, or, all in shade, The Voyage 41 
every height comes out, and jutting/, Spec.of Iliad 13 



peal (s.) POEM. LINE. 

With p's of genial clamour sent . Will Water. 1S7 
A single/ of bells below, . . hi Mem. ciii. 5 

peal (verb.) 
a hundred bells began to /, . M.d' Arthur Ep. 29 
thewatchman/ThesIidingseason : Garde7ier , s D.ij8 
sweet church bells began to /. ♦ Two Voices 408 

peaVd. 
an answer/ from that high land, Visiofi ofSi'71 221 
all about us/ the nightingale, . Pri?icess, i. 217 
old songs that/ From knoll to knoll, hi Me77i. xciv. 13 

Peali7ig. 

in the distance/ news Of better . Princess, iv. 63 

church below the hill Is/, . . hi Me77i. ciii. 4 

wild voice/ up to the sunny sky, . Maud, I. v. 13 

heard the/ of his parish bells . En. Ardeti . 616 

Pear. 

held the/ to the garden-wall. . Maria7ia . 4 

and like a/ In growing, . Walk, to the M. 45 
tumbled half the mellowing p's ! hi Mem. lxxxviii.20 

pearl (see co77ib of Pearl. ) 
a brow of/ Tress' d with redolent . Arabia7i N*s. 137 
morning driv'n her plow of/ . Love a7id Duty 96 
Forth streaming from a braid of/ ; Day-Dm. . 82 
now a rain of P's, Or steep-up spout Pri7icess, Pro. 62 
an erring/ Lost in her bosom : . tr iv. 42 

Time hath sunder'd shell from/.' I71 Mem. li. 16 
in this stormy gulf have found a/ Maud, I. xviii. 42 
In gloss of satin and glimmer oi p's u xxii. 55 

Small and pure as a/, ... 11 II. ii. 2 

burst in dancing, and the /'j were spilt ; Vivie7i . 302 
never more the same two sister p's ; \\ . 304 

one true line, the/ of p's; . . it 309 

Guinevere, The/ of beauty : . Elai7ie . 115 

'a red sleeve Broider'd with p's, 3 . ?i . 372 

wore the sleeve Of scarlet, and the/'jr; n . 501 

sleeve of scarlet, broideredwithgreat/'v . 602 

carved and cut, and half the p's away, n . 803 

add my diamonds to her p's ; . u 1218 

pearl-71 ccklace. 
Is like the fair p-ti of the Queen, . Vivien . 301 

Peasa7tt. 
arts of war The /Joan and others ; Pri7icess, ii. 147 
When the wild/ rights himself . n iv. 3G6 



Counting the dewy/' s, 
I babble on the/'j. 



. M.d'Arthzir 84 
. T/ie Brook . 42 



peck. 



all wing'd nothings/ him dead ! . Enid . . 275 

Peda7it. 
held his sceptre like a. p's wand . Priticess, i. 27 

Pedestal. 

Upon an even/ with man.* . . Pri7icess, iii. 208 

push'd by rude hands from its/, . n v. 55 

seat you sole upon my/ Of worship — Vivien . 727 

Peep (s.) 
passing one, at the high/ of dawn, Vivien . 410 

In her nest at/of day ? . Sea Drea77is 282-90 

peep (verb.) 
any male thing but to/ at us.' . Princess, Pro. 151 

Peep'd. 
P, and saw The boy set up . . Dora . .127 
P — but his eyes, before they had their will, Godlva 69 
underneath The head of Holofernes//'r;«£:^^, iv. 208 
the tender face P, shining in . ir vii. 46 

Sun/ in from open field, ^ Home they brought him' 6 

peer (s.) 
Regard the weakness of thy/'j; 'Love thou thyland'^ 
drunk delight of battle with my p's, Ulysses . 16 
Could find no statelier than his p's Two Voices 29 
Forerun thy p's, thy time, . . if .88 

Surprise thee ranging with thy/'j InMem. xliii. 12 
Thy spirit in time among thy p's ; 11 xc. 6 

in sight of Collatine And all his p's, Lucretius . 236 



TEJVJWSOX'S WORKS. 



307 



Mariana . 65 
The Letters 3 
Ay liner's F. 817 



A Dirge 



Elaine 



37 



1034 



peer (verb.) POEM. line. 

not to pry and / on your reserve . Princess, iv. 399 

peer'd. 
from the crevice / about 
I /athwart the chancel pane 
of all Who /at him so keenly, 

peereth. 
The frail bluebell /over 

feerless. 
my glory to have loved One />, 

fi'g. 

The mantles from the golden / s . Day-Din. . 39 
Let uie screw lliee up a/: . . Visiono/Siii 87 

Pelelan. 
Into the fair Z' banquet hall, . QLnone . 221 

Peleiis. 
Ranged in the halls of P; . OZnone . 79 

Pelf. 

dropt the goose, and caught the/, The Goose . 13 

pelt. 
/me with starry spangles and shells, The Merman 28 
/ us 111 the porch with (lowers. . Jn Mem.Con. 68 

/ with outrageous epithets . . Aylmer's F. 286 

Pen 

With such a pencil, such a /, . To E. L. . 6 

/<V/rt «<i*. 

Betray'd my secret /, . . . SIS.Stylites 67 

/J 1 cannot have gone thro', . t , .99 

power with Heaven From my long/.' 11 . 142 

From my high nest of/ here . 11 . 164 

here I lay tins/ on myself, . . Enid . 1587 

all the/ the Queen laid upon me. " . 1702 

if I do not there is/ given— . Guinevere . 185 

pence. 

that eternal want of /, . . . Will Water. 43 

Thy latter days increased with / i> . 219 

Even in dreams to the chinkof his/, Maud, I. x. 43 

pencil. 

Came, drew your/ from you . Gardener's D. 26 

such a 1- verp drew. . 11 . 139 

Then I took a/, and wrote . . Ed. Gray . 25 

icli a /, such a pen, . . To E. L. . 6 

Pendragon, 
The dread P, Britain's king of kings Elaine . 423 
Came round their great /', . . 11 . 527 

Pcndragonsh 'tp. 
The Dragon of the great /', . Guinevere 395-S92 

Peuelan. 
ng divine P pass, . . To E. L. . 3 

pension. 

or touch Of/, ' Love thou tliy land, etc. 26 
pent. 
close . . StS.Stylites 73 
.wnd /' in a crevico Princess, iii, 65 

pentagram. 

Some figure like a wizard's/ . The Brook . 103 

penthouse. 
A snowy /> for his hollow eyes, . Vivien .657 

Penuel. 

In the dim tract of /*. 'Clear-headedjriend' etc. 29 



people. 
. 
I 

when a : rej .ice 

' down the /■ 



. To the Queen 24 
. ■> .35 

. DyinrSwan 31 



/.. 0/ Shalott, i. 

den slow, Pal. n/ Art 140. 

I pen h i .\ 1 M. a" Arthur n 

■■ mine To all the/, 11 . 108 

/ cried ' Arthur is come again : 11 Ep. 23 



POEM. LINE. 

scarce can hear the/ hum . . St S.Stylites 37 
silly / take me for a saint, . 11 , 125 

Good/, you do ill to kneel to me. 11 . 131 

O Lord, Aid all this foolish/; . 11 

to make mild A rugged /, . . Ulysses . 37 
With the standards of tlie/'s . Locksley I/. 126 
Slowly comes a hungry/, 11 . 135 

have loved the/ well, . . . Codiva , 8 
but that she would loose The/: .11 -38 

On to God's house the / prest : . Tivo Voices 409 
He gave the/ of his best : 'You might 'have 'Won 1 25 
And the / loved her much. . . L. 0/ Burleigh 76 
Then her /, softly treading, . 11 -97 

until the set of sun Up to the/: . Princess, Pro. 3 
were there any of our/ there . 11 li. 247 

babbling wells With her own/'i life : 11 v. 325 



11 vi. 221 

• » Con. 104 

In Mem. xxi. is 

n lxiiii. 15 

•1 xcvi. 16 

Maud,\\\.\\. 35 

Ode on Well. 54 

M . 142 

II . 144 

'I . I46 

15' 

163 

267 

39 



Enid 



Vivien 



All / said she had authority— 

To let the/ breathe? . 

more and more the / throng . 

The pillar of a p's hope, 

Whate'er the faithless/) say. 

loyal / shouting a battle cry 

heart of a/ beat with one desire; 

And a reverent/ behold 

thro' the centuries let a p's voice . ■■ 

A p's voice, The proof and echo . 11 

A p's voice, when they rejoice . 11 

A p's voice ! we are a / yet. . . 11 

Betwixt a/ and their ancient throne, 11 

Dead March wails in the p's ears : 11 

A princely p's awful princes, . The Daisy 

Laborious for her/ and her poor— Ded. 0/ Idylls 34 

love of all Thy / comfort Thee, . _ 11 .52 

by and by the/, when they met 

gathered from the p's eyes . 

like a shadow, past the p's talk 

some of your kind / take him up, 

a grateful / named Enid the Good 

The / call d him Wizard : 

The / call you prophet : . . ir 

loss of half his / arrow-slain , . 11 

ere the / chose him for their king. Elaine 

For fear our/ call you lily maid . 11 

Of whom the/ talk mysteriously, 11 

this 1 know, for all the / know it, 11 

when now the lords and dames And/, o 

the wild / say wild things of thee, 11 

break and Blaze Before the/, . Guinevere 

With what a hale the/ and the King <• 

The mockery of my /, and their banc.* ir 

To poor sick /, richer in his eyes 11 

The younger/ making holiday, . En. Arden 

happy/ strowing cried ' Hosanna 11 

he himself Moved haunting/, . 11 

/ talk'd — that it was wholly wise Aylmer's F. 268 

/ talk'd --The boy might get a notion 11 . 270 

The weakness of a / or a house, 

speak before the/ of her. child, 

hid the Holiest from the p's eyes 

her own / bore along the nave 

The / said, a weed 

all the/ cried ' Splendid is the dower.' 11 i0 

joy to the / and joy to the throne, W. to Alexan. 29 

her / all around the royal chariot Boiidicea . 73 

I. est I fall unawares before the/, Ilendeeasyllabics 7 

A plague upon the /fell, . The Victim 1 

So thick they died the/ cried • m .5 

The land is sick, the / diseased ■ 11 . 47 



. 56 
. 61 
. 82 
1392 
i 11 
. 26 
. 166 

• 4'5 

• 35 

• 3S5 
. 424 

1075 
«337 
1356 
■ 92 

• »55 

• 522 
. 676 
. 62 
. SOI 

605 



• 570 
. 608 

• 77* 
. 812 

The Flower 4, 24 



P the hollow dark, 



peopled. 



D.o/F. Wont. 18 



peptics. 
Or do my/ differ . . . . Will Water. Co 

perceive. 
a man faf -off might well/ . Elaine . 457 

perceived. 

And I / no touch of change . . In Mem. XVI. 17 

P the waving of the luuids that blest Guinevere 578 



;o3 



CONCORDANCE TO 



perceiving. poem. line. 

He,/, said: ' Fair and dear cousin, Enid. i6yx 

P that she was but half disdain'd, Vivien . 35 

Perch (s. ) 
the lawless/ Of wing'd ambitions. Ded .of Idylls 21 
Came to her old/ back, and settled. Vivien . 752 

perch (verb.) 
Light Hope at Beauty's call would/ Coquette, i. 3 

perch'd. 
P like a crow upon a three-legg'd stool A udleyCt. 44 
/ about the knolls A dozen angry Princess, Pro. 72 
P on the pouted blossom of her lips : ?i . 195 

Percivale. 

What say ye then to fair Sir P . Vivien . 597 

A sober man is P and pure : n . 605 

So Arthur bad the meek Sir P . Elaine 1257 

perfect. 

Thou art /in love-lore. . . Madeline . 9 

That type of P in his mind . . Two Voices 292 

if a dream, Sweet dream, be/. . Princess, vii. 134 

Not/, nay, but full of tender wants m . 300 
As pure and/ as I say? . . In Mem. xxiv. 2 

a mist of green And nothing/ ; . The Brook . 15 

From forehead down to foot / — . Elaine . 639 

Perfection. 

The clear / of her face. . Mariana in the S. 32 

Dead /, no more ; nothing more, . Maud, I. ii. 7 
That passionate/, my good lord — Elaine . 123 

perfect ness. 
Set light by narrower /. . , In Mem. cxi. 4 

perfect-siveet. 
Frowns p-s along the brow . . Madeline . 15 

perform. 
I thy hest will all / at full, . . M. d' Arthur 43 

performed. 
'Hastthou/mymissionwhichIgave?il/'.^'^4ri'//7 t '?'67 

perfume. 
As/ of the cuckoo-flower? . . Margaret . 8 
one warm gust, full-fed with/, . Gardener sD. 112 
P and flowers fall in showers, . Sir Galahad 11 
fluctuate all the still/, . . . In Mem.xciv. 56 

peril. 
any of our people there In want or/, Princess, ii. 248 
A carefuller in/, did not breathe . En. Arden . 50 

Period. 
Devolved his rounded p's. . . A Character 18 
hoped that ere this p closed . . St S. Stylites 17 

Perish. 
Lest she should fail and/ utterly, Pal. of Art 221 
Till they/ and they suffer — . Lotos-E's. . 168 

1/ by this people which I made . M.d' Arthur 22 
P in thy self-contempt / . . Locksley H. 96 

I had been content to/, w , 103 

better men should/ one by one. . 11 . 179 

To/, -wept for, honoured, known, . Tivo Voices 149 
promise (otherwise You/) . . Princess, ii. 276 
fails at last, And pes as I must ; . Lucretius . 261 

perished. 
I remember one that/; . . Locksley H. 71 
* They/ in their daring deeds/ . Day-Din. . 114 
Thy leaf has/ in the green, . . luMemAxxlv. 13 
Not yet/, when his lonely doom . En. Arden . 627 
P many a maid and matron, . Boadicea . 85 

Permanence. 
Be fix'd and froz'n to/; . . Two Voices 237 

permission. 
He craved a fair/ to depart, . Enid . . 40 

perplex. 
many things/ With motions, . Tivo Voices 299 

no ruder air/ Thy sliding keel . Princess, ix. 9 

perplex'd. 
perfect Joy, / for utterance, . . Gardener* sD. 250 
And/ her, night and morn. . . L. of Burleigh 78 
P in faith, but pure in deeds — . In Mem. xcv. 9 



POEM. LINE. 

But he vext her and/ her . . Aland, I. xx. 6 
look'd and was/ in mind, . . Elaine . S34 

P her, made her half forget herself Aylmer's F. 303 

perplexing. 
P me with lies ; . . . St S. Stylites 100 

Perplexity. 
In doubt and great/, . . . Pal. of Art 278 

persecute. 
banded unions/ Opinion, 'You ask me why,' etc. 17 

Persephone. 
or the enthroned P in Hades, . Princess, iv. 419 

Persian. 
Gazed on the P girl alone, . . Arabian N's. 134 
the P, Grecian, Roman lines . Princess, ii. 114 

person. 
law for 11s; We paid in/. . Walk. totheM.7% 

Doneinyourmaiden's/to yourself: Enid . . 216 
the men who served About my /, n . 454 

rusted arms Were on his princely/, ir . . 544 

Personal. 
And therefore splenetic, /, base, . Maud, I. x. 33 

Personality. 
The abysmal deeps of P, . . Pal. of Art 223 

persuade. 
I might/ myself then, . . . Maud, I. x. 56 

Persuasion. 
P, no, nor death could alter her : . Aylmer's P. 418 

Perused. 
conscious of ourselves, P the matting: Princess, ii. 54 

Peruvian. 
strange shares in some P mine . Sea Dreams 15 

pestle. 
To / a poison'd poison . . . Maud, Li. 44 

pet. 
in a p she started up, . . . Talking O. . 229 

petal, 
p's from blown roses on the grass, Lotos-E's. . 47 
two dewdrops on the/ shake . Princess, vii. 53 
* Now sleeps the crimson/, n . 161 

Peter. 
Iaugh'd, and swore by P and by Paul Godiva . 24 
l P had the brush, My P, first/ . Aylmer's F. 254 

Peter s-pence. 
Ere yet, in scorn of P-P, . . Talking O. 45 

Petition. 
make a wild/ night and day, . Princess, v. 94 
At your new son, for my/ to her Enid . . 780 
for my strange/ I will make Amends tr . . 817 

Petitioned. 
P too for him. .... Princess, vi. 300 
/ for his leave To see the hunt, . Enid . .154 

petulance. 
the Seer Would watch her at her/, Vivien . 31 

Pctula?icy. 
for her fault she wept Of/ . . Vivien . £02 

petulant. 
wrathful,/, Dreaming some rival, Lncretius . 14 

pezv. 
grasping the p's And oaken finials Aylmer's F. S22 

fewit. 
Returning like the/, . . . Will Water. 250 

phalanx. 
into that/ of the summer spears . Aylmer's F. in 

phantasm. 
white-eyed p's weeping tears of blood, Pal.ofArt2^g 

phantom. 
a/ two hours old Of a a maiden . Adeline . iS 
The/ of a silent song, . . . Millers D t 71 



TJ-.V.VVSOX'S WORKS. 



309 



LINE. 

Fso( other forms of rule, 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 5y 

make One act a / of succession : . Princess, iii. 312 

all the /, Nature, stands — . . In Mem. iii. 9 

like to noiseless p's flit : . . 11 xx. 16 

mine o'.vn p chanting hymns? . » evii. 10 

.aiding/ cold. . . Maud.ll.iv. 55 

Till I saw me dreary/ arise and fly • ■ III. vi. 30 

. the I' of tlie house . . Elaine io«6 

■m'd the/ of a Giant in it, Guinevere . 596 

A/ made of many p's moved . En. Arden . 603 

p of a wish that once could move, Coquette, ii. 10 

;lier than any p of his kind . Lucretius . 193 

phantom-fair. 
fintly-flushed, how p-f, . The Daisy . 65 

phantom -warning. 
Should prove the p-zv true . . In Mem. xci. 12 

Pharaoh. 
May P's darkness, folds as dense Aylmer's F. 771 

Pharos. 
breaks the P from his base . . Princess, vi. 319 

phase. 

immolation, any/ of death, . . Princess, iii. r J1 

painful p's wrought . . In Mem. Ixiv. 6 

. thru' life of lower/, . . n Con. 125 

pheasant-lord. 

oWp-t's, These partridge-breeders Aylmcr's F. 3S: 

Phenomenon. 
Arbaces, and P, and the rest . The Brook . 162 

philanthropies. 
And nursed by mcaly-mouth'd / . The Crook . 94 

Philip (sec Kay.) 
last by Ps farm 1 flow . . . The Brook . 31 

rm where brook and river meet. 11 . 38 
P chatter'd more than brook or 

bird; Old/ 1 ; .... .. .5: 

push'd at P's garden gate . . i> .83 

in I went, and call'd old /'out . m . 120 

And with me /', talking still : . 11 . i< ; 

d -is from P's door, 11 . 167 

P, of all his lavish waste . » . 191 

1 one day. /' the next, En. Arden . 25 

P, his blue eyes All flooded .11 -3' 

111 silence ; ... 11 . 41 

n'd kinder unto P . . n .42 

His father lying sick .11 .64 

P look'd And in their eyes 11 -72 

P's true heart, which hunger' d for her 11 . 271 

-.ud faltenngly . n . 283 

'Then you will let me Annie? 11 . 321 

P put the boy and girl to ! 11 . 328 

/' did not fathom Annie's mind : i» . 341 

P was her children's all-in-all . >i . 345 

call'd him father /'. /'gain'd As F.noch 11 . 351 

ther P (as they call'd him h . 362 

with us Father P' he deni . 365 

ith her well-content ; 11 . 373 

P sitting at her side forgot Her presence" . 381 

P coming somewhat closer spoke 11 . 395 

God reward you for it, /', .1 . 422 

.". wait a little : . . 11 . 427 

\1111ie as I have waited 11 . 431 

1 fl line 11 . 437 

/' with his eyes Full of that lifelong ■■ , 460 

/' did but trifle with her : . . 11 . 472 

it her and /' too, 11 . 474 

face contracting grew . " . 483 

ht he knew : . ■ . 11 . 516 

/' was her all-in-all, 11 , 521 

I I put her little I. 'i . 707 

the biith Of P's child: 11 . 710 

I in the rear of J r s house, 11 . 728 

P's dwelling fronted on the street, 11 . 7 1 

P, the slighted suitor of old timet, 11 . 746 

say to /' thai I Licst him too ; . :i . 887 

philosopher. 
Ecmin»a/'j life .... Maud. I.iv. 49 



tOphy. POEM. LINE. 

fair philosophies That lilt the fancy; Princess, iii. 322 
And many an old p . .In Mem. :. 

For fear divine P .Should push . • • lii. 14 

Affirming each his own / — . . Lucretius . 213 

philtre. 
brew'd the/ which had power, they said Lucretius 16 

Pliosphor. 
till P, bright As our pure love, . In Mem. ix. 10 
Bright P, fresher for the night, . 11 cxx. 9 

phosphorescence. 
a/ cheering even My lady, . . Aylmer's F. 116 

phrase. 

household talk, and p's of the hearth Princess, ii. 214 

every/ well-oil'd, ... 11 iii. 117 

In/'i here and there at random . Aylmer's I. 434 

physician. 
a vile/, blabbing The ca- e of his patient Ma ud, 1 1 . v. 36 

Fiaccuza. 
At Lodi, rain, P, rain . . . The Daisy . 52 

piano. 
She left the new/ shut ; . . Talking O. 119 

pick, 
p the faded creature from the pool, Enid . . (71 
/the vicious quitch Of blood and custom u . 1751 

To dig, pick, open, find and read . / 'ivien . 510 

P's from the colewort a green caterpillar, Guinevere 33 

pickaxe. 
A /in her hand: .... Sea Dreams 98 

pick'd. 
'/ the eleventh from this hearth . The Epic . 41 
/ offenders from the mass . . Princess, i. 26 
p a ragged-robin from the hedge, . Enid . .7-1 
/ the lance '1 hat pleased him best, 11 

pickpocket. 
Fs, each hand lusting for all . Maud, I. i. 22 

picnic. 
Let us/ there At Audley Court.' Audley Ct. . 2 

picture. 
with wide blue eyes As in a /. . M. d Arthur 170 
intent On that veil'd/— . Gardener's D. 265 

More like a/ seemeth all . . Day-Dm. . 42 
I wore her/ by my heart, . . Princess, i. 37 
The mimic p's breathing grace, In Mem. Ixxyii. 11 
I make a / in the brain ; 11 Ixxix. 9 

still his / form'd And grew . . Elaine . 9E6 

picturesque. 
The/ of man and man.' . In Mem. lxxxviii. 42 
To make old bareness/ . 11 exxvii. 19 

Ficus. 
snared P and Faunus, rustic Gods.' Lucretius . 182 

piece. 
wrinkled / of womanhood, . . Princess, v. 58 
all. as in some /of art, . In Mem, exxvii. 23 

ve a / of turret stair, . Enid . . 320 
Saw once a great/ of a promontory 11 . ion 

p's of his armour in one place . 11 . J223 

cheek lUilge with the unswallow'd/, ii . 1470 

shadow of a/ of pointed lace, . Elaine 11(8 

a lovely / of workmanship 1 ' . Aylmer's I . 

a rough/ Of early rigid colour . 11 . 280 

All over earthy, like a/ of earth, . Sea Fran 
Cut the Roman boy to p's . . Boddicta I 

a /of inmost Horticultural art Hendecasylla 
in one day Cracks all to p's . . Lucretius . 24S 

pieced. 
I slept again, and/ The broken vision ; Sea Dreamsios 

piecemeal. 

Till all my limbs drop/ . . StS.Stylites 43 

pierce. 

Yet could not all creation/ . , A Character 5 

P's the keen seraphic flame . . InMim XXX, 27 

one would/ an outer ring, . . 11 IxxzvL -7 



3io 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

p's the liver and blackens the blood, The Islet . 35 
Pointed itself to/, but sank down Lucretius . 63 

pierced. 

P thy heart, my love, my bride . Oriana . 42 
P thro' with fierce delight . . Fat una . 34 
men and horses/ with worms, . Vision of Sin 209 
wanderfrom his wits/* thro' with eyes, Princess,n. 418 
may be/ to death before my eyes Enid . . 104 
and the head P thro' his side, . Elaine . 489 

walls of yew Their talk had/, .11 . 965 

piercing: 
high dawn/ the royal rose . . Vivien . 589 

pig- 
great with/, wallowing in sun Walk, to the M. 80 

pigeon. 
quail and/, lark and leveret lay, . Audley Ct. 23 
p's, who in session on their roofs . Tlie Brook . 127 

pigged. 
on the leads we kept her till she/. Walk. totheM.84 

pike. 
when his bailiff brought A Chartist/. Walk, to theM. 63 
as prompt to spring against the/' s, Princess, hi. 269 

Pike. 

high field on the bushless P, . Ode to Mem. 96 

pile (s.) 

skins of wine, and p's of grapes. . Vision of Sin 13 

When God hath made the / complete InMem. liii. 8 

grins on a/ of children's bones, . Maud, I. i. 46 

look'd the Lombard p's ; . . TJte Daisy . 54 

pile (verb.) 
should/ her barricades with dead. InMem. cxxvi. 8 

piled. 
Life/ on life Were all too little, . Ulysses . 24 

piling. 

P sheaves in uplands airy, . . L. ofShalottXz^ 

pillar. 

A/ of white light upon the wall . Ode to Mem. 53 

Patient on this tall/ I have borne StS. Stylites 15 

Three years I lived upon a/, . rr . 85 

I, Simeon of the/, by surname . m . 158 

slid From/ unto/, . . . Godiva . 50 

under gloom Of cavern p's; . . To E. L. . 18 

ample awnings gay Betwixt the/' s, Princess, i\. 12 

Her back against a/ ... 11 iii. 164 

As comes a / of electric cloud . ir v. 513 

azure p's of the hearth Arise to thee ; m vii. 201 

The/ of a people's hope . . InMemAxiii. 15 

shake The p's of domestic peace . 11 lxxxix. 20 

Ap stedfast in the storm, . . 11 cxii. 12 

Who shall fix Her p's? . . . tr cxiii. 4 

And sat by a/ alone ; . . . Maud, I.viii. 2 

last remaining/ of their house, . Ay Inter's F. 295 

pilla r-p u ?i ish men t. 
not alone this/-/ .... StS. Stylites 59 

pillow. 
Dripping with Saba^an spice On thy/, Adeline . 54 
Turn thee, turn thee on thy/; . Locksley H. 86 
The gold-fringed/ lightly prest : . Day-Dm. . 98 
smooth my/, mix the foaming draught Princess,ii. 233 
laid his feverous/ smooth ! . . Aylmer's F. 701 
Fancy came and at her/ sat, . Coquette, i. . 5 

pilot. 
The summer/ of an empty heart . Gardener 'sD. 16 
P of the darkness and the dream. . Audley Ct. . 71 
P's of the purple twilight, . . Locksley H. 122 
your example/, told her all. . Princess, iii. 321 

wreck itself without the ps guilt . Aylmer's F. 716 

pilot-star. 
grown dim with gazing on ihep-s's. Lotos-E's. . 132 
Enid, thep-s of my lone life, . Enid . 1155 

pimpernel. 
the/ dozed on the lea ;. . . Maud,l. xxii. 48 



put. POEM. LINE. 

Where children cast their/' s and nails Vivien . 280 

pinch. 

P a murderous dust into her drink, Vivien . 460 

pine (tree.) 
creeps from / to /, . . . CEnone . 4 

dewy-dark aloft the mountain/; ir .48 

yon whispering tuft of oldest/, n .86 

away my tallest /'j. My tall darkp's u . 204 

Up-clomb the shadowy/ . . Lotos-E's. . 18 
sweet, stretch'd out beneath the/. n . 144 

A gleaming crag with belts of p's . Two Voices 189 
sweating rosin, plump'd the/ . Amphion . 47 
a stately P Set in a cataract . Princess, v. 336 

glide a sunbeam by the blasted P 11 vii. 181 

There amid perky larches and/, . Maud, I. x. 20 
Beyond the Pyrenean ps, . . Ode on Well. 113 
In lands of palm and southern/; The Daisy . 2 
Garrulous under a roof of/ : To F. D. Maurice 20 
For groves of/ on either hand, . v .21 

petty marestail forest, fairy p's, . Aylmer's F. gz 
A perilous meeting under the tall P's 11 . 414 

and above them roar'd the/. . it . 431 

to the garden now, and grove of p's 11 . 550 

Fantastic plume or sable/; . . The Voyage 44 
Above the valleys of palm and/.* The Islet . 23 
all the p's of Ida shook to see . Lucretius . 86 
No larger feast than under plane or/ n . 210 

king of the wrens from out of the/.' The Window 151 

Pine (fruit.) 
A raiser of huge melons and of/, Princess, Con. 87 

pine (verb.) 
You /among your halls and towers L.C. V.deVere 58 
/'sin sad experience worse than death Princess, vii. 296 
To/ in that reverse of doom . I?t Mem. lxxi. 6 

pinezvood. 
o'er a bridge of/ crossing, . . Princess, iii. 317 
lake whiten'd and the/ roar'd . Vivien . 487 

pinnacle. 
Three silent ps of aged snow . Lotos-E's. . 16 
Dislodging/ and parapet . . D. of F. Worn. 26 
statued/V, mute as they. . . The Daisy . 64 

pint. 
Go fetch a / of port : . Will Water. 4 

The/, you brought me, was the best n . 75 

No/ of white or red ... 11 .82 

To each his perfect/ of stout, . u . 115 

For this good/ of port. n . 212 

pint-pot. 
underneath, Ap-p, neatly graven. Will Water. 248 

Pip. 

A thousand p's eat up your . . Enid . . 274 

pipe (tube, etc.) 

'you pitch the/ too low : . . Ed. Morris 52 

He set up his forlorn p's, . . Amphion . 22 

great organ almost burst his p's, . Princess, ii. 450 

earliest/ of half-awaken'd birds . 11 iv. 32 

make ihemp's whereon to blow. . In Mem. xxl. 4 

pipe (cask. ) 
the best That ever came from/. . Will Water. 76 

pipe (verb.) 
Norland winds/ down the sea, . Oriana : 91 
plover/ along the fallow lea, . May Queen ~\\. 18 
bird that/'s his lone desire ' 'You might have won* 31 
/ and trill, And cheep and twitter Princess, iv. 82 
Fly to her, and/ and woo her . 11 -97 

children call, and I Thy shepherd/ »• vii. 203 
/ but as the linnets sing : . .In Mem. xxi. 24 
rarely /'s 1 the mounted thrush ; . n xc. 2 

Where now the seamew/'s, . . n cxiv. 13 

and the Devil may/ to his own. . Maud, I. i. _ 76 
Peace P on her pastoral hillock . 11 III, vi. 24 

/of nothing but of sparrow-hawks! Enid . . 279 

piped. 
Sometimes the linnet/ his song : SirL. andQ.G.io 



TENXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE. 

birds tint/ their Valentines, . Princess, v. 229 

the Kobin / Disconsolate, . . En. Arden . 677 

piping. 

That with his p he may gain . In Mem. xxi. 1 1 

pippin. 
while the blackbird on the/ hung Audley Ct. 37 



pique. 
feigning/ at what she cali'd 

piracy. 
King impaled him for hi*/ : 



. Princess, iv. 564 



Vivien 



pirate. 
A tawny/ anchor'd in his port . Vivien 
since the/ would not yield her up 11 



. 408 

. 418 



pirouetted. 
Young ashes/ down . . . Amphion . 27 

///. 
scrambled past those p's of fire, . StS. Sty/ties 181 
there in the ghastly / long since . Maud, I. i. 5 
from the place and the/ and the fear? 11 . 64 

lately died, Gone to a blacker/, . ir x. 6 

He laid a cruel snare in a/ . ti II. v. 84 

comes to the second corpse in the/ ? 11 . 88 

p's Which some green Christmas crams Coquetlc,m. 13 

pitch. 
you / the pipe too low : . . Ed. Morris 52 

'/'our pavilion here upon the sward .Princess, iii. 3 28 

pitcher. 

sets her/ underneath the spring, En Arden . 207 

piteous. 
/was the cry: .... Princess, vi. 126 

pitied. 
trust me. Sir, I /her. . . Princess, iv. 21 1 

last the (Juccn herself and/ her: Elaine 1262 

pitiful. 
shall wc care to be/? . . . Doadicea . 32 

pity fs.) 
His books— the more the p, . Audley Ct. . 58 

schoolboy ere he grows To /' — It 'a/6, to the M. :oo 
i hour, Till / won. . . Codiva . 35 
Kill us with/, break us with ourselves Princess,u\. 241 
all prophetic /.fling Their pretty maids •> v. 371 

<> for a horse o'er-driven . . In Mem. Ixii. 1 
Vithout knowledge, without/, . Maud, II. iv. 53 
11 him : . . Enid . 1374 

id of scornful / or pure scorn, ■■ . 1707 
whose vast / almost makes me die Guinevere . 530 
Annie could have wept for/ of him, En. Arden 4' 1 
save for/. lake . n . 557 

the living fount of / in Heaven. . Aylmer's F. 752 
/', the violet on the tyrant's grave. ■. . 845 

wrote satire, with no/ in it. . Sea Dreams 197 

fir aloof From envy, hate and /, . Lucretius . 77 

verb.) 
there the Queen herself will / me, Elaine 1053 

pray for those and/ them, Ayl/uer's F, 775 
did they/ me supplicating I , BoSdieea . 8 

pitying. 
mother/ made a thousand prayers '.Princess, i. 21 
Brm'd man sideways, / 11 vi. 141 
.. P the lonely man, En. A 
Sullen, defiant, /, wroth, . . Ay Inter" t /■ . 4 ,j 

plaice. 
afoor I corned to the /. . . If. Parmer 34 

plat, 

ly/, agoodl) . Arabian N's. 53 

Apart from /, withholding time, . 11 .75 

meed with that/ and time, . n .97 

1. ir of all that/ and time, . 11 . J52 

All the/ is holy greund ; . , Poet's Mind q 

■■■: p . Dying Swan 72 

battle deepen' d in its/ . . Oriana . 51 



POEM. LINE, 

in its/ My heart a charmed slumber Plea/tore . 127 
grow round him in his/. . . J-atima . 40 
have attain'd Rest in a happy/ . Uinone . 129 
is not this my/ of strength,' . Pal. 0/ Art. 233 

Lost to her/ and name ; . . ti - ; 

1'he llower ripens in its/, . . Lotos-Es. . hi 
Spoke slowly in her place. . E>. o/P. II om. 02 
cut off from hope in that sad/ . 11 . 105 

The/ of him that sleeps in peace. To J. S. . to 
in her/ she did rejoice, ' Of old sat Freedom' etc. 5 
title, /, or touch Of pension, ' Love tlwu thy land ' 25 
in the moon athwart the / of tombs. M. d'A rthur 46 
bore him thro' the/ of tombs. . 11 . 175 

old order changeth, yielding/ to new, 11 . 240 

In that still/she, hoarded in herself Gardener's D. 48 
in that time and/ I spoke to her . 11 221-6 

the / is to be sold . . . Walk, to the M. 11 

among the greens Looks out of/ Ed. Moms 85 
So left the/, left Edwin, 11 . 137 

"lis the/, and all around it, . Locksley If. 3 

He pray'd, and from a happy/ . Two Voices 224 
The/ he knew forgetteth him.' . 11 

In her still/ the morning wept : . 11 . 275 

if I lapsed from nobler/, 11 . 358 

Passing the / where each must rest, » .410 

rhymes are dazzled from their/ . Day-Dm. . 19 
The fountain to his/ returns . ir -3' 

Here all things in their/ remain, 11 . 73 

And alleys, faded p's, . . , Amphion . to 
Is there some magic in the/? . Hill Water. 79 
How out of/ she makes The legend 11 . 146 

Then they started from their/'i . Vision of Sin 33 
he sat him down in a lonely/, . Poet's Song 5 
something it should be to suit the /, I'riucess,Pro.2o6 
made to suit with Time and /, . 11 . 224 

still/, and pluck'd her likeness out ; 11 i. 91 

she who had left her/, . . 11 ii. 149 

find you here but in the second /, 11 iii. 141 

A tree Was half-disrooted from his/, 11 i\ 

To push my rival out of/ . . 11 . 316 

you stoop'd to me From all high/s 11 . 410 

maiden from her/, . . ■■ v. 540 
work no more alone I Our/ is much : u vii. 250 
look'd all native to her/ . . 11 . 304 

From out waste /\r comes a cry, . In Mem, iii. 7 
And all the/ is dark ... 11 viii. 7 

and feels Her / is empty, . . ti xiii. 4 

And in the/' s of his youth. . . 11 xviii. 8 
It was but unity of/ , . 11 xli. 3 

And so may /' retain us still, .11 .5 

will speak out In that high /, . 11 xliii. 16 

1 know that in thy/ of rest . . 11 lxvi. 2 

Again our ancient games had/ . 11 Ixxvii. jo 

Thy sweetness from its proper/ 1 11 Ixxxii. 6 

be. tis within a lonely/, . . h lxxxiv. 110 

I find no/ that does not breathe . 11 xcix. 3 

We leave the well-beloved 4 . . » ci. 1 

: of/, like growth of time, . 11 civ. n 

fa Uc p ride in/ and blood, . . 11 cv. 21 

What find I in the highest/, . 11 cvii. 9 

Let her know her/; . . 11 cxiii. 15 

hold me from my proper/, . . 11 cxvi. 

And of himself in higher/, . . 11 cxvii. 15 

Thy/ is changed ; thou an the same, it cxx. 20 

Who moves about from/ to/, . 11 exxv. 10 

maidens of the /That pelt ns . " Can, 67 
if I lied from the/ and the pit . Maud, I. 1. 64 

dark old/ will be gilt by the touch 11 . 66 

old man never comes to his/; . 11 xiii. 24 

In the silent woody/'* . 1. 11. iv. 6 
making his high / the lawless perch Ded. 0/ Idylls ji 

at BOme/ I shall < • at. arms . Enid . . 219 

roam the goodly p's that she knew ; ti 

waste/' J of the hem, n 880 

down a rocky pathway from the/ 11 . 1 m 

the wild lord of the/, I.iinoiirs. 11 

f his armour in one />, . ti . 1223 

I the dark/'; and let in the law, " . 1-.1 

the/ which now Is this world's hugest Elaine . 76 

sound not wonted in that / . . 11 . 814 

all the / whereon she stood was green ; 11 1 194 



312 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

thou reseated in thy/ of light, . Guinevere . 521 
Would. Enoch have the j> ? . . En. Arden . 12. 
haunting people, things and P's . 11 .60 

Flared on him, and he came upon the p 11 
that other, reigning in his /, . n 

a bygone Rector of the p, . . Aylmers F. 
rustling once at night about the/, ir 

all neglected p's of the field . n . 

beside your hearths Can take her fi 11 . 736 

Trembled in perilous p's o'er a deep Sea Dreams 11 
Jenny, my cousin, had come to the/ GrandmotJter 25 
Fair is her cottage in its ^ T . . Reguiescat , 1 

I see the/ where thou wilt lie . Sailor Boy . 8 
lives and loves in every/; . . OnaMourner 5 

place (verb, 
in thy various gallery P it, . 
murmur'd Arthur, l P me in the barge, ' M .d' Arthurio^ 

placed. 
in the towers I p great bells . 
over that is p the sparrow-hawk 
over these they/ a silver wand 
And/ them in this ruin ; 
/ where morning's earliest ray 
often/ upon the sick man's brow . Ay liner's F. 

plagia rised. 
Until he/ a heart . 



682 
764 
1 1 
547 
693 



. Ode to Mem. 85 



Pal. of Art 129 

F.nid , 

549 

643 

5 

700 



. Elaine 



Talking O. . 



plagiarist. 
calls her/ ; I know not what : . Princess, iii. 

plague (s.) 

T-light and famine,/ and earthquake Lotos-E's. 



Remember what a/ of rain ; 
A/ upon the people fell, 
Help us from famine And/ . 

plague (verb. ) 
began To vex and/ her. 
set on to / And play upon 

plagued. 
P her with sore despair. 
P with a flitting to and fro, 



The Daisy . 
The Victim 



Guinevere 



*9 



Pal. 0/ Art 224 
Maud, II. ii. 33 



worldly-wise begetters, /themselves Ay liner's F. 482 

plain (adj.) 

will thirty seasons render/ . . Two Voices 82 

I cannot make this matter/, . h . 343 

Besought me to be/ and blunt, . Elaine 1293 

plain (s.) 
The plain was grassy, wild and bare, Dying Swan 1 
herds upon an endless/, . . Pal. of Art 74 
swine That range on yonder/. . " . 200 

smiled at the twilight/, . . D.ofF.Wom. 62 

wild wind rang from park and/, . The Goose . 45 
She glanced across the/; . . Talking O. . 166 
on the ringing p's of windy Troy. Ulysses . 17 
Clothes and reclothes the happy p's; Day-Dm. . 22 
I leave the/, I climb the height ; Sir Galahad 57 
The maiden Spring upon the/ SirL. andQ, G. 3 
fleeter now she skimm'd the p's . tr . 32 

lord of the ringing lists, And all the?*, — Princess,v. 492 
had a cousin tumbled on the/, . i» vi. 299 

Calm and still light on yon great/, In Mem. xi. 9 
Imperial haPs, or open/; . . 11 xcvii. 29 
The brook shall babble down the /, 11 c. 10 

■when we crost the Lombard/ . The Daisy . 49 
sunlight on the/ behind a shower Vivien . 253 

they would pare the mountain to the/ 11 . 678 

On some vast/ before a setting sun Guinevere . 77 
winds from offthe/ Roll'd the rich Spec, of Iliad 7 
A thousand on the / ; ... <• . 19 

brightens and darkens down on the/ The Window 2 

plain-faced. 
gray tower, or /^tabernacle . Aylmers F. 618 

plainness. 
Nay the/ of her dresses. . . Maud, I. xx. 14 

plan (s.) 
Old wishes, ghosts of broken p's, . Will Water. 29 



POEM. LINE. 

comes the feebler heiress of your/, Princess, iii. 221 
Dismiss me, and I prophesy your/, 11 iv. 335 

' The/ was mine. I built the nest.' n . 346 

scorn At him that mars her/, . 11 v. 126 

build some/ Foursquare to opposition.' 11 . 221 

I scarce am fit for your great/V: " vi. 201 

mingles all without a/ ? . . In Mem.x\i. 20 
boundless/ That makes you tyrants A/aud, I. xv'm. 36 
Enoch lay long-pondering on his/'j-;£«. Arden. 133 

plan (verb.) 
while 1/ and/, my hair Is gray . Will Water. 167 

plane (level surface.) 
Athwart a/ of molten glass . . In Mem. xv. n 

plane (a tree. ) 

beneath an emerald/ Sits Diotima, Princess, iii. 284 

wine and chess beneath the p's . u vi. 229 

under/ or pine With neighbours . Lucretius . 210 

planed. 
you p her path To Lady Psyche, Princess, iv. 296 

planet. 
I breathed In some new/; . . Ed. Morris 115 
O, happy/, eastward go ; l Move eastward,' etc. 4 
some clear/ close upon the Sun, Princess, ii. 22 
suns, that wheeling cast The p's . tr . 104 

all the fair young/ in her hands — n vii. 248 

that woke The darkness of our/, In Mem. Ixxv. 10 
that with me trod This/, . . u Con. 138 

Our/ is one, the suns are many, Ma?td, I. iv. 45 
And the / of love is on high . n xxii. 8 

plank. 

blind with rage she mlss'd the/, . Princess, iv. 159 

/ and beam for roof and floor, . 11 vi. 30 

come stepping lightly down the /, InMem. xiv. 7 

piannd. 

all mosaic choicely/ . . . Pal. of Art 145 

plant (s.) 

Like to the mother/ in semblance, The Poet . 23 

Which would blight thep's. . Poet's Mind 18 

I grew, like some green p, . D. ofF. Worn. 205 

The sap dries up : the/ declines. Two Voices 263 

All creeping p's, a wall of green . Day-Din. . 65 

to watch the thirsty/'.? Imbibing ! Princess, ii. 400 

plant (verb.) 
/ a solid foot into the Time, . Princess, v. 405 

I go to/ it on his tomb, . . In Mem. viii. 22 
make all clean, and/ himself afresh. Enid 1753 

Plantagenei. 
The lion-heart, P, ... Margaret . 34 

plantain. 
hedgehog underneath the/ bores Aylmers F. S50 

plantation. 
Is yon/ where this byway joins Walk, to the M. 4 
He left a small/; . . . Amphion . 20 

To grow my own/. n . 100 

planted. 
when we/ level feet, . . . Princess, iv. 12 

plash. 
/ of rains, and refuse patch'd with Vision of Sin 212 

plaster. 
alum and / are sold to the poor . Maud, I. i. 39 

plat. 
I keep smooth p's of fruitful ground The Blackbird ■$ 

platan. 
clear-stemm'd p's guard The outlet A rahian IV s. 23 
The thick-leaved P's of the vale . Princess, iii. 159 

plate. 
squares of men in brazen p's, . D. ofF. Worn. 33 

Came out clear p's of sapphire mail. Two Voices 12 

Plato. 
P the wise, and large-'brow'd Verulam Pal. of Art 163 
But Homer, P, Verulam ; . . Princess, ii. 144 
Or lend an ear to P where he says Lucretius , 147 



TEX.WSO.V'S WORK'S. 



play (s.) line. 

At last, tired out with /, . . Talking O. 206 

crat/.' . ' Break, break] etc. C 

1 leaven p with profit . . Princess, iv. 131 

00 in and out as if at merry/, Maud, I.xviii. 31 
left lii> wine and horses and/, . 11 xix. 74 
She is weary of dance and/.' . 11 XX 
watch her at her petulance, and/, Vivien . 31 

play (verb.) 

1 would roam abroad and/ . . The Merman n 

vault frum the throne and / The Mermaid 33 

must/ such pranks as these. L.C. i '.<:'. . 

'ill merrily glance and/, . . May Queen, i. 39 

/ with flying forms and images, . Gardener's D. 59 

id Lord Ronald, Latly Clare 73-5 

.1 Slothcr with emotion Princesi 

lave to gain the tyranny . 11 iv. 114 

/ the Lion's mane! m vi. 14S 

and/ A . JnMem.xn. 17 

The tender-pencil' d shadow / . n xlviii. 12 

I'll have leave at times to/ . ■■ lviii. 11 

<nder when my fancies/ . 11 lxv. 2 

Hc/'jwith threads, lie beats his chair 11 

ill grief with symbols/, . 11 lxxxiv. 
For him she p's, to him she sings 11 xcvi. 
It circles round, and fancy /' j, . u Con. 
p the game of the despot kings, . Maud, I. x. 
to live, long as my pulses/ . . •• xviii. 



mi^h: - , having power, 

I himself to/ up <n her . 

and her nuns To /upon me Gui 

\nd/ upon, and harry me ■■ . 35 

:tir, with which 1 used to / 11 . 543 

en as heretofore Aylmer's F. 523 

in thy heart the scrawl shall/.' . Sailor Bey . 12 

played. 
Scarce my life with fancy/ 



and fro 



. Maud, 
'. Enid 


cxxiv. 7 
I. i. 63 

vi. 67 

1140 


. ■ 




'537 
-7 


. Lu. A rden 


209 


11 




=4 
350 



Miller's P. 45 

Art 151 

Z?.2i6 

round me/, >. 133 

men with knowledge merely /, . Two Voices 172 

thy father/ In his free field •• . 319 

The happy wind-, upon her/. Sir/.. andQ. G. 38 

f the patron with her curls. . . 1 rinccss,Pro.\y,i 

a p upon them 1. v. 249 

. In Mem. Ixiii. 23 i 

'iade 11 K-.i. 14 

■ it / with gracious lies, 

1 have/ with her when a child 
n it, 
.cly blue /' into green, 

it with slight and sprightly 
j I hut / on Torre : 

and lumber 
tse . 
/ with bun And call'd him Father 

playing. 
P mad pranks along the heathy . Circumstance 2 

ike . . Prunes:.. . 

/ with the blade he pnek'd his hand Aylmer's F. 239 
playmate. 

■ nee her/ on the hills . (T.nnne . 16 I 

for want of /'i Aylmer's F. bi 

plea. 
' fir a little on his /, . . Enid . 

twice I sought \np my cause, . Princess, iv. y. 
let her/ in vain ; . . . . En, Arden 

pleaded. 
* tenderly, . . . Miller's P. 135 
ly When Cyril p . . Princess, vii. <; 

pleader. 
■ it ihe/\ room, Aylmer's F. 440 
plea t 

■ 74 

them patucd Uortcnjua, / .' Princess, vii. 1 1 7 



pleasauce. line. 

my passion seeks P in love-sighs . Lilian . q 

A realm of / Ar.. 

pleasant. 
Love will make our cottage/, . L. of Burl 
made the past so/ to us : .1,11. 

net made/ by the baits Of gold . Ay inter's P. 
' heat quicker, for the time Is/, , . . >ner i^ 

the woods and way s Are /, . 11 .14 

pleasantry. 
From talk of war to traits uf/ — . Elaine 

please. 
fearful that you should nut/. . Miller's D. . 148 
shapes and hues that/ me well I . Pal. of Art 104 
She could not / herself. . . 7V// 
betwixt them both, to/ them both, Princess,t 
At that last hour top him well . InAfem.vi. ij 
thinking 'this will/ him best,' . •■ -3' 

when gifts of mine could/, . . The Letters 22 
Enid, but to /her husband's eye, .11 

king himself should/ To cleanse 11 

To/ her, dwelling on his boundless " . I \ 

to / me this poor gown, . 11 . 1527 
Edith whom his pleasure was to/ Aylmer's F. 232 
Sap, Good man, to / the child . Sea Dreams 258 

pleased. 
newness of thine art so fi thee, . Ode to Mem. £3 
\ljp me well enough. . . . The Epic . -4 
-ifmanymcn. M. d Arthur 91 
that/ us from its worth : ' Yon might have won ' 22 
it/ us not : in truth We shudder . Princess, i 
neither/ myself nor them. . . 11 Con 

But Lilia/ me m 

since it/ a vanish'd eye, . . In Mem. \\n. 21 
led by tracks that/ us well, . . 11 x*a. 2 

Like one with any trifle / lxv. 4 

They/him, fresh from brawlingcourtsii lxxxviii. 11 

i it/ in livelier moods, . ■■ 
each has/ a kindred eye, . . •, xcix. 17 
Nor knew we well wh.it / us most The Daisy 
pick'd the lance That/ nun best, . Enid . 1029 
wholly/ To find him yet unwounded 11 . 1219 

in a manner/, and turning, stood u 
/> her with .1 babbling heedlessness Gun 
that which/ him, for he smiled . En. A rden 
him We/ not— he was seldom/.* . The Voyage 74 

plea 
To make him/ in her uncle's eye Dora . 

pleasit ■ 
With /and love and jubilee : . Sea-Fairies 36 
What/ can we have To war with evi r. 93 

■ e]i .More than much/ To J. S. . 43 

f the eyes. . . lU.d'Artkn 

for the/ that I ir, . Gat 

inmost ring A/I disoem'd, Talking 0. , 174 

p, woman s pain— . . Locksley H. 14 j 
Like a beast with lower/' s, . 

I'ain rises up, old/'i pall. . . Two Voices 164 

1 ire and P, Hope and Pain Day-Dm. 

I will take my / there : . . 11 . 244 

You moved her at your/. . . Amphion . 60 

Built for f and for state. . . L.ofBurlei 

What/ lives in height . . . I'm 

S nie / from thine early years. . In Mem. iv 10 

That so my / may he whole. 11 Ixx. 8 

fulsome P clog him and drown, . Maud,\.\\\. 4 

nor a vantage-ground For/: . Ded. of Idylls 23 

desire To close with her lord s/" . Enid . 1063 

Came purer ft unto mortal kind . n . 1613 

have some rest and / in himself, . Vivien 

have small rest or/ in herself . 11 

she had her/ in it ... 11 

of that hii;h / which I had n 

For/ all about a held of flowers : Elaine 

/' to have it, none ; to lose it, pain ; » 

on love And sport, and tilts and/, Guinevere 

would have been my/ had I Men. •• 

not to see the world For pt . En. A rden 

ty wrongs Or /'f, ■■ . 350 



5*4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LIXE. 

Edith whom his/ was to please, . Aylmers F. 232 
made hi*/ echo, hand to hand, . 11 . 257 

since the nobler p seems to fade, . Lucretius . 227 
Without one/ or without one pain \\ . 265 

pleasure (verb.) 
roll'd His hoop to p Edith, . . Aylmers F. 85 

pleasu reable. 
Ev'n such a wave, but not so/, . Vivien . 143 

pleasure-Iwuse. 
I built my soul a lordly /-//, . Pal. of A rt 1 

pledge (s.) 

giving safe p of fruits, . . . Ode to Mem. 18 

reconcilement, p's given, . . Gardener 'sD '.252 

P of a love not to be mine, . . Princess, vi. 1S0 

arms On loan, or else for/; . . Enid . . 220 

pledge (verb.) 
I / her, and she comes and dips . Will Water. 17 
I / her silent at the board ; . h . 25 

/ you all In wassail : Pn?icess,Pro.i&2> 

To/ them with a kindly tear, . In Jlem. \sx:dx. 10 
p her not in any cheerful cup, . Coquette, hi. 9 

Pledged. 

/ To fight in tourney for my bride, . Princess, v. 342 

Have/ us in this union . . Elaine . 116 

and she hated all who/. if . 740 

pledgest. 
"Who / now thy gallant son ; . In Mem. vi. 1.0 

pledging, 
p Lancelot and the lily maid . Elaine . 734 

Pleiads. 
Many a night I saw the P's, . Locksley H. 9 

plenteousness. 
Set in this Eden of all/, . . En. Arden . 562 

plenty. 

P corrupts the melody . . . The Blackbird 15 

Yet is there/ of the kind.' . . Two Voices 33 

hand in hand with P in the maize, Princess, vii. 1S6 

the boy Will have./: . . . Maud, I. vii. 8-16 

plied. 
clock-work steamer paddling/ . Princess, Pro. 71 
/ him with his richest wines, . 11 i. 172 

plight (s.) 

nor by / or broken ring Bound, . Aylmers F. 135 

plight (verb. ) 
T ro thee my troth did/, . . Oriana . 26 
Will I to Olive /my troth, . . Talking O. 283 

plighted. 
f> troth, and were at peace. . . Princess, vii. 68 
The heart that never j* troth . InMem. xxvii. 10 

plot (plat.) 
level p's Of crowned lilies . . Ode to Mem. 10S 
paced the thymy/'.s of Paradise, Love and Death 2 
I steal by lawns and grassy/' s, . The Brook . 170 
ail the turf was rich in p's . . Enid . . 660 

plot (conspiracy.) 
Afi, a.p,a.p, to ruin all ! * 'No/, no/' Princess, 11. j-j^ 
foi line p's may fail, . . . Vivien . 669 

plot. 
That he p's against me still. . Maud, I. xix. Si 

plotted. 
He has / against me in this, . Maud, I. xix. 80 

plough—plow (s.) 
morning driv'n her/ of pearl Love and Duty 96 

Eight daughters of the/, (v. 329) Princess, iv. 259 
those eight mighty daughters of the/ >• . 52S 

He praised his/'s, his cows, his hogs, The Brook 125 
an' runn'd/ thruff it an' all, . N. Farmer . 42 

plough — plow (verb.) 
p's with pain his native lea . . In Mem. lxiii. 25 
an' Thornaby holms to / .' . . A". Fanner . 52 



ploughing. PO EM. LI NE. 

and Charlie / the hill . . . Granamother 80 

ploughman. 

in the furrow broke the p's head, Princess, v. 212 

plover. 
tufted/ pipe along the fallow lea, MayQueen, ii. 18 
wind sweep and the / cry : ' Come not, zo/ien,' etc. 5 
the great p's human whistle . . Enid . . S98 

pluck. 

I will/ it from my bosom, . . Locksley H. 66 

1 Hard task, to/ resolve,' I cried Two Voices 118 
that men may/ them from our hearts, Princess t m. 240 

this night should/ your palace down ; 11 iv. 395 

splendour p's The slavish hat . Maud, I. x. 3 

' to/ the flower in season ;' So says Vivien . 572 

/' s The mortal soul from out . Lucretius . 258 

plucked. 
Devils/ my sleeve ; . . . StS.Stylites 168 
she started up, And / it out . Talking O. 230 

P his one foot from the grave, . Amphion . 43 
and/ her likeness out ; . . Pri?icess, i. 91 

And/ the ripen'd ears, . n . 247 

she/ the grass, She flung it from her it Con. 3x 
1/ a daisy, I gave it you. . . The Daisy . 83 
P the grass There growing longest Enid . 1105 

seems to be/ at by the village boys •• . 1408 

he had the gems P from the crown, Elaine . 58 
Lancelot/ him by the heel, . . Guinevere . 35 
/ a life From the dread sweep . En. Arden . 54 
the children / at him to go, u . 366 

left alone he/ her dagger forth . Aylmer's F. 470 
from which Livid he/ it forth, . tf . 627 

plucking. 
P the harmless wild-flower . . Maud, II. i. 3 

plumage. 
Conjecture of the/ and the form ; Enid . . 333 

plume. 
A funeral, with/'.? and lights L. o/Shalott, ii. 31 
She saw the helmet and the/, . ir iii. 40 

From spur to/astar of tournament, M.d' Arthur 223 
Ruffles her pure cold/, n . 268 

A light-green tuft of/'j she bore SirL. andQ. G. 26 
each, in maiden p's We rustled : . Princess, i. 199 
all about were birds Of sunny /, . Enid . . 659 
brandish'd/ Brushing his instep, u . 1208 

a lothly/ fall'n from the wing . Vivien . 577 
from spur to / Red as the rising sun Elaine . 307 
P's driv'n backward by the wind . 11 . 479 

with p's that mock' d the may, , Gninez'ere . 23 
coco's drooping crown oip's . En. Arden . 575 

Fantastic/ or sable pine ; . . T/te Voyage 44 

phaned. 
pines, that/ the craggy ledge . CEnone . 205 
Empanoplied and/ Weenter'd in, Princess, v. 472 
a shatter'd archway/ with fern ; . Enid . . 316 

pluj?ielet. 
When rosj'/' j tuft the larch, . InMem. xc. 1 

plummet. 
Two p's dropt for one . . . Princess, ii. 159 

plump. 
Grew/ and able-bodied ; . . The Goose . 18 
One shade more/ than common . Will Water, 150 

phnnP-anned. 
A p~a Ostleress and a stable wench Princess, i. 223 

plump'd. 
sweating rosin, / the pine . .Amphion . 47 

plunder (s.) 

is a world of/ and prey . . Maud, I. iv. 24 

the sack and/ of our house . . Enid . . 694 

Earl Doorm with/ to the hall. . 11 . 1440 

phmder (verb. ) 
I cannot steal or/, no nor beg : . Enid . 1336 

plundered. 
bark had/ twenty nameless isles ; Vivien . 409 



TEX.VVSO.V'S WORKS. 



31"! 



plunge (s.) POEM. LINE. 

CitS the whitening hazels made a/ En. Arden 376 

plunge (verb.) 
river sloped To p in cataract . Princess, iii. 274 

nor rather./* at once, Being troubled Lucretius 151 



plunged. 
bet" 



M. d' Arthur 134 
Lt. Brigade 32 
Elaine . 54 



/ Among the bulrush-beds, 
P in the battery-smoke 
down the shingly scaur he/, 

Ply. 
joint of state, that ///<•* Its ' Love thou thy land' 47 
plies His function of the woodland : Lucretius . 45 

pock-pitten. 
That great/-/ fellow . . . Aylmer's F. 256 

poem. 
Look, I come to the test, a tiny/. II endecasyllabics 3 



this poor flower of/ 



poesy. 



In Mem. viii. 19 



The/ in a golden clime was bom The Poet . 1 
one poor/' jf scroll ir -55 

Vex not thou the p's mind (rep.) . Poet's Mind 1 
The parson Holmes, the/ Kverard Hall The Epic 4 ' 
and the/ little urged ... 11 48 1 

mii.; Likc/V, fromihe vanity of song? Gardener's D. 99 
days were brief Whereof the /'r talk Talking O. 186 
A tongue-tied P in the feverous days Golden Year 10 
as P's seasons when they flower, . 11 .28 

this is truth the/ sings . . I.ocksley II. 7; 

ve myself a/: . . . WillWai 
when the Ps words and looks . 11 . 193 

might have won the P's name, 'You might have won 1 
that wear tlie P's crown . 11 .10 

n>>w the /' cannot die ... 11 . 13 

The rain had fallen, the /'arose, . Poet's Song *. x 
P's, wliuse thoughts enrich the blood Princess, ii. 164 

me of the Ps of her land : . " vii. 159 

such as lurks In some wild /', In Mem. xxxiv. 7 

he Tuscan p's on the lawn : " Ixxxviii. 24 

the/iswhuTd . Maud, I. iv. 39 

As ever painter painted, / sang, . Aylmer's P. 106 



poetess. 
I wish I were Some mighty/, 



Princess, Pro. 132 



poet-forms. 

The P-fs of stronger hours, . Day-Dm. . 226 

poet-like. 
P-l he spoke. .... Ed. Morris . 27 

Rather, O yc Gods, /'-/, . . Lucretius . 93 

.' -princess. 
/'-/ with her grand Imaginations Princess, iii. 256 

point. 
clotted into p's and hanging loose, M. a" Arthur 2:9 
under looming shores, P alter/; , " Ep. 18 
1 from/to/ . I.ocksley II. 134 
/-: notwai 1 I.' Princess, v. 196 

d upon the / Where idle boys » . 298 

conflict with the crash of shivering p's •» . 480 

oration flowing free Frem/ to/ inMtm.Vxxxvi. 93 
i.ilkin I he drew him in, T/ie Brook . 154 

and th bicker in it . Enid . 13 

f.iintly veil 'iiiM/-', Of slander, . Vivien . 28 
It buzzes wildly round the/; . n . 282 

all /'v. 1 . Elaine . 614 

her friend's / with pale tranquillil . 729 

that/'. he saw the King Guinevere . 400 

And now, the bloodless / reversed, The I oya 

point pint ) 
I've 'd my/o' yaiile ivry noight . A'. Farmer. 7 

point (verb.) 
p thee forward to a di Love and Duty at 

11 iii': shadow from tin- truthl Princess, 
/ to it, and « I >yal warmth ■• ii. 275 

/ the term of human strife, . . InMem.xWx. t.i 
A hand that p's, and palled shapes 11 l.\ix. 7 



pointed. poem. line. 

and/ toward the land . . , Lotos-Es. . 1 
Thereto she/ with a laugh, . . V.oJ P. Worn 15 , 
/ on to where A double hill . . Princess, iii, 157 
this lost lamb she/ to the child) . n iv. 342 

1 tarry for thee,' andshe/to ilars Maud.XW \'\. 13 
He/ out a pasturing colt . . The Brook . 136 
finger up, and/ to the dust . . Enid . 1302 

Are scatter'd, and he/ to the field, 11 . 1650 

and rose And / to the damsel, . Elaine 
and at top She/ seaward . . Sea Dreams 118 
/■itself to pierce, but sank down .Lucretius . 63 

pointing, 
p to his drunken sleep, . . . Locksley II c 1 

poise. 
In crystal eddies glance and/, . Miller's D. . 52 

poised. 
court-Galen/ his gilt-head cane, Princess, i. . 19 

poison (s.) 
the/ with her balmy breath, . D. o/F. Wom.aji 

Full of weak/, turnspits for the clown Princess . 
To pestle a poison'd/ . . . Maud, I. i. 44 

poison (verb. ) 
now we ■» our babes, poor souls ! . Maud, II. v, ' 
and p's half the young. . . . Guinevere . 51S 

poison-Jlowers. 
The honey of/;/" .... Maud, I. iv. 56 

Poland. 
Shall I weep ofay fall? . . Maud, I. iv. 46 

polar star. 
Is twisting round the/ r; . . In Mem. c. 12 

pole. 
love tum'd round on fixed p's, l Loz^e thou thy land' 5 
Betwixt the slumber of the p's . /«.'/<?»«. xcviii. 18 

polish. 
keeps the wear and/ of the wave. Enid . . 682 

politics. 
At wine, in clubs, of art, of/ . Princess, Pro. 160 
The fading/ of mortal Rome, . 11 ii. ii.ii 

polluted. 
Here looking down on thine / 
he, the King, Call'd me/: . 

pollution. 
And makes me one / : . 



Guinevere 



Guinevere . 612 



polluting. 

' ;elf . Vivi 



652 



/', and imputing her whole sell 

pomp. 
At civic revel and/ arid game, Ode on Well. 147,227 

pond, 
cutting eights that day upon the/ The Epic . 10 

ponder. 
/ those three hundred scrulls .Lucretius . 12 

ponder', I. 
Paris/, and I cried 'O Paris' . CF.none . 165 
Then Enid/ in her heart . . Enid . 913-7 9 

Pontius. 
P and Iscariot«by my side . . StS.Stylites 16s 

poodle. 

a score of pugs And p's ycll'd . .£</. tfon . . 

/<W. 
desolate creeks and p's among, . Dying Swan 41 
angled in the higher/. . . Mil 

sleepy/ s dam. The/ beneath it n . 99 

Touching the sullen/ below : . u 

Flash m the /'x of whirling Simois. (Fnone . 202 
Salt/, lock'a in with bars of ind; / 
and the bulrush in the/. May Queen, ii. 28 

In the/ ; fin ■ 
'." . In Mem, xlviii. 4 
Nearthatoldl olden carp; /.'»», / . 648 

In. burnish'd brethren of the/; . 11 



CONCORDANCE TO 



1'OEM. LINE 

her burnish' d sisters of the p; . Enid . 655 

tho' she lay in the dark/, n . 657 

pick the faded creature from the/, 11 .671 

Gray swamps and p's, waste places 11 . S3o 

slipt and feJl into some/ or stream, Elaine . 214 

A little bitter/ about a stone . Guinevere . 52 
Down to the/ and narrow wharf En. A?'den . 691 
the brook, or a/, or her window-pane The Window 4 

poor. 
Nor any/ about your lands? L. C. V. de Vere 68 
abidest lame and/, . . . Two Voices 197 
But he was rich where I was/, InMem. lxxviii. 28 

Ring out the feud of rich and/, 11 cv. n 

the/ are hovell'd and hustled together, Mated, I. i. 34 
are sold to the/ for bread . it -39 

and I am nameless and/. . . ir iv. 18 

How mend the dwellings, of the/; ToF.D. Maurice^ 
Laborious for her people and her/ — Ded. oj 'Idylls 34 
now/, but ever open-door'd.' . Enid . . 302 
specially should your good knight hep, Elaineg^, 1311 
I grieve to see you/ . . . En. Arden . 403 

but less loved than Edith, of her/ ; Aylmers F. 167 
from her own home-circle of the/ if . 504 

meek, Exceeding '/ in spirit.' . it . 754 

And some are / indeed ; . . The Flower 22 

Poplar (see poplar grove under grove. ) 
Hard by a/ shook alway . . Mariana . 41 
shadow of the/ fell n -55 

to the wooing wind aloof The / made it . 76 

The seven elms, the/'i four . Ode to Mem. 56 

The p's, in long order due, . . Amphion . 37 
blasts which blow the/ white . In Mem. lxxi. 3 
/Vmade a noise of falling showers Elaine 410-522 
the cape That has the/ on it : . n *°34 

Beyond the/ and far up the flood, ti 1044 

poppy. 

the/ hangs m sleep . . . Lotos-E's. . 56 
unsown, where many poppies grew, Dora . . 71 
more crumpled than a/ from the sheath, Princess, v. 28 

Poppy -m ingle d. 
A land of hops and/-7/z corn . Aylmers F. 31 

pop?tlace. 
call us Britain's barbarous /'j 



Boddicea 



porch. 
garden /Vs on the brim, . . Arabian N^s. 16 
thronging all one/ of Paradise . Pal. of Art 101 
The honeysuckle round the/ . MayQueen, i. 29 
up the/ there grew an Eastern rose, Gardener 'sD. 122 
cloudy/ oft opening on the Sun ? Love a?id Duty 9 
rooms which gave Upon a pillar'd/, Princess, i. 227 
/ that sang All round with laurel, n ii. 8 

Then summon'd to the/ we went " iii. 162 

pelt us in the/ with flowers. . In Mem. Con. 68 

They leave the/, they pass the grave 11 . 71 

'Dark/,' I said, ' and silent aisle, The Letters 47 
Strode from the/, tall and erect . Aylmers F. 825 

po rcli-p illars 
P-p on the lion resting . . The Daisy . 55 

Po7-e. 
dote and/ on yonder cloud . I?i Mem. xv. 16 

fared. 

\p upon her letter which I held . Princess, v. 45S 

poring. 
P> over miserable books — . . Locksley H. T72 
Now/on theglowworm, now thestar,iVz'«£T<?.?.y,iv.i93 
yearlong/ on thy pictured eyes . n vii. 319 

As when a painter, / on a face, . Elaine . 331 

Port (harbour. ) 

There lies the/ : the vessel puffs Ulysses . 44 

found thee lying in the// . . InMem. xiv. 4 

To that fair/ below the castle . The Daisy . 79 

tawny pirate anchor'd in his/, . Vivien . 408 

prettiest little damsel in the/, . En. Arden . 12 

northward of the narrow/ n . 102 

Sail'd from this/. ... 11 .125 



POEM. LINE. 

Fearing the lazy gossip of the/, . En. Arden 332 
Then all descended to the/, . it • 443 

By this the lazy gossips of the/ . u . 469 

Told him, with other annals of the/ n . 703 

when they buried him the little/ . n . 915 

port (demeanour. ) 
modern gentleman Of stateliest/ ; M. a" A rthnr, Ep. 23 

port (wine.) 

Go fetch a pint of/: . . . Will Water. 4 

tho' the/ surpasses praise, . n -77 

dear For this good pint of/. . 1, . 212 

Portal. 
found at length The garden/'^. . Princess, iv. 182 
guard them's of the house . In Mem. xxix. 12 

doubt beside the/ waits, . . it xciii. 14 
crimson'd all Thy presence and thy/V, Tithouus 57 

Porta l-wa rdlng. 
Far as the p-w lion- whelp . . En. Arden 98 

porter. 
with grooms and -p's o?i the bridge Godiva . 2 

portion. 
P's and parcels of the dreadful Past. Lotos-E's, 02 
carves A/ from the solid present, Vivien . 312 

Portioned. 
P in halves between us, . . Gardener s D. 5 

portrait. 
those old p's of old kings, . . Day-Dm. . 43 
hangs his/ in my father's hall . Pri?icess s ii. 221 

Portress. 
At break of day the College P came Princess, ii. 1 

possess. 
I will p him or will die. . . Fatima . 39 

What souls/ themselves so pure, In Mem. xxxii. 15 
and/ your horse And armour, . Enid . . 923 

possessed. 
P The darkness of the world, . Arabian JVs. 71 
For love/ the atmosphere, . Miller s D. 91 

soul/ of many gifts . 71? .With Pal. of Art 3 

marvel what/ my brain : . hi Me7n. xiv. 16 

A rainy cloud/ the earth, . . 11 xxx. 3 

The silent snow/ the earth, . tr lxxvii. 3 

Not knowing what/ him: . . Aylmers F. 556 

possession. 
I take/ of man's mind and deed. Pal. of Art 209 
Enoch would hold/ for a week : . En. Arden _ 27 

Possible. 
all Life needs for life is/ to will — Love and Duty 83 
O that 'twere/ After long grief . Maud, II. iv. 1 
Ah Christ, that it were/ . . ii 13 

post (s. ) 
thro' twenty P's of telegraph . Princess, Pro. 77 

quit the/ Allotted by the Gods: . Lucretius . 148 

post (verb.) 
made a point to/ with mares ; . Princess, i. 187 

postscript. 
came a/ dash'd across the rest . Princess, v. 414 

posy. 
Home with her maiden/ . . Maud,\.yX\. 22 



pot. 



Will Water. 220 



Go down among the/'i 1 ; 

potherbs. 
wrongs like p's in the street . Princess, v. 449 

Pouring. 
Waves on the shingle/, . . 1865-1866 . 11 

pou STO. 
P S whence afterhands May move Princess, ill. 246 

potiltry. 
a larger egg Than modern/ drop, Will Water. 122 

Pound. 
wedded her to sixty thousand/'.? . Ed. Morris 126 



TENNYSON'S IVORA'S. 



>'7 



four. POEM. LINE. 

/' round mine cars the livelong bleat Ode to Mem. 65 
Holy water will 1 / . . . Poet's Mind 12 

poured. 
a fire Is/ upon the hills, . . Fatiina . 31 
pay twilight p On dewy pastures Pal. of Art £5 
P back into my empty soul . . D. of P. Wont. 78 
■oft brown ha side: . Gardener* sD.iiA 

le the torrent ever/) . . To E. L. . 13 
pouring. 
From craggy hollows /, . . D.of P. Wont. 1S2 
And England/* on her foes. . Ode on Weil. 117 

poussetting. 
P with a sloe-tree : . . . Amphion . 44 

pouted. 
His own are/ to a kiss : . . Dciy-Dm. . 51 

poverty. 
lift the household out of/; . . En. Arden . 482 
His baby's death, her growing/ . n . 706 

pouter. 

arms, or/ of brain, or birth . . To the Queen 3 

In impotence of fancied/. . . A Character 24 

shake All evil dreams of/ . • . 47 

fill the sea-halls with a voice of/; The Merman 10 

10 Paris made Proffer of royal /, . Uiuoue . 109 

and still she spake of /, . . 11 . 119 

P fitted to the season ; . . . 11 . 121 

in / Only , are hkest gods, ■> . 127 

of/ Flatter'd hi^ spirit ; . 11 . 134 

,'•■ ■ 11 -143 

Yet not for/, (/ of herself would come u . 144 

without light Or/ of movement, . Pal. of Art 246 

eyes with tearful/, . ' • 3 

Id make from land to land '' 'why' 21 

future time by/ of thought. 'Love thou thy laud' 4 

!'...« . 64 

d of the/ in his eye . . M.d' Arthur 122 

know I have some/with Heaven St S. Stylites 141 

h from me. ... 11 143 

3 of this world, . v ,184 

try If yet lie keeps the/. . Talking O. . 28 

, who wait On noble deeds, Godiva . 71 

the day of human / .' ' Two I 'oiccs 7 3 

If Nature put not forth her/ 11 . 160 

my sullen heart a / Broke, » . 443 

1 the /''i . Day-Dm. 

Until the charm have/ to make . WtllWai 

half the/ to turn This wheel , " .83 

binds a tyrant's// . . Vision of Sin 128 

He had no t wholly quench'd his / ; 11 217 

somin wn Princess, ii . 24 

:•: and of/; 11 . 45 

f Oasis, . 11 . isi 

urst his pi for/, . n . 45: 

1 my rival out of place and /. o iv. 316 
Autiiii. fruits of/; n vi. 39 

tnuli than / In know ledge: 11 vii. 221 
full-stimm'd in all their p's, . • u . 272 

— and perhaps they felt their/. . 11 Con. 13 

gradually the p's of the night . ■• . m 

I ive my/'f away : . In Mem. iv. 1 
Itunn'i /• to ilnnk . 11 .v. i. j - 

The chain, and thrones of civil / ? 11 xxi. 16 

1 Within the green . 11 xxvi. 6 
1 the same . 11 xxx. 20 
1 with mortal p's, ,11 

p's are still, . 11 Ixiii, :3 

That N 11 Ixviii, 2 

Hath . 1 wen ? ■. Ixxiv. '6 

11 Ixxxiii, 31 

il p's, 11 Ixx 

with/ ic . 11 Ixxxvi 33 

■it, . 11 

r ever .11 
I 'or/. . . 11 c.Mii. 1; 

:ic in / . . n 

The^i whom we guess; <\ exxiii. 4 

II exxvii. 17 

■ A • " exxix. 7 

thou art worthy j full of// . . 11 Con. 37 



M. LINE. 

Strong in the/ that all men adore, Maud, I. x. 14 
Cold fires, yet with / to burn . 11 
/'j -of the height, y j i of the deep . 11 II 
brainless mobs and lawless P s . Ode on Welt. 153 
pal ter"d with Eternal God for/; . „ , \ 

Kouiid us, each with different/'* . 11 ! 263 

I too gentle, have not used my/; . Enid . 
dearer by the/ Of intermitted custom; ■■ 
are in my/ at last, are in my /. ,11 . ucg 

1 will make use of all the/ I have. 11 . 71 4 

out of her there came a/ upon him ; 11 
t tyrants in their day of /, . n 
id himself, and scatter all his/' j,u 
lo the/'s of Doorm Are scatter'd,' n 

light/ upon your fate . Vivien . 1 -■ 
1 will not yield to give you/ . ,, . 223 

Faith and unfaith can ne'er be equal /\r;.i . 238 

/ upon me thro' this charm, . 11 . 364 

might play me falsely, having/, . n 
to tyrants when they came to/) . 11 
elemental secrets, ps And forces : 11 . \ • 

like a ghost without the /to speak. Elaine 
the owls Wailing had/ upon her, 11 . 995 

the Ps that tend the soul, . . Guinevere 
grace and /, Wrought as a charm n . 142 

for the / of ministration in her, . 1, 

land. While I have / to s,peak En ArdenZ-jS 
Turning beheld the /''.vol" the House Ayinier. i 
but he had pis, he knew it : . ,, . 393 

and the hands of / Were bloodier, 11 . 452 

happy men that have the / to die Tithonus . 70 
once had/ to rob it of content. . Coquette, ii. 8 
the philtre which had/, they said Lucretius . 16 
check'd His/ to shape ; . . 11 .23 

all generating /'$ and genial heat 11 . 97 

prac. ice (s. ) 

run My faith beyond my/ . . Ed Morris . e,* 

had not stinted/, O my God. . St S. Stylites 58 

and his work, That/ betters?' . Prii 

What/ howsoe'er expert . . In Mem. Ixxiv. 5 

sin that /burns into the blood, . Vivien 
Nor yet forgot her/ in her fright, 11 . 796 

practise (verb. ) 
And do not/ on me, . . . Enid . 1205 

practised. 
still I find Your face is /, . Vivien . 217 

inasmuch as you have/ on her, . Ay liner's j 

praise (s.) 
Blew his own p's in his eyes, . A Character 22 

ht and morn ? ' Mariana in the S. ^4 
neither count on / ; . 'Love thou thy land, ' 
Iter Grew oratory. . . Gardener. 
love were cause enough for/.' . 11 . 104 

She broke out in / To God, . . Dora . .110 
But yield not me the/; . . St S. Stylites 182 
And others, passing/, . ' . 58 

While still I yearn d for human/, Two I'oi. 

' hill to/ or blame. 11 . 258 

■A . . I Till Water. 77 

'Ihe/t! > constancy.' in Mem. xxi 12 

Had surely added/ to/. . . 11 xxxi. 8 
I leave thy/.? unexprest . . 11 lxxiv. t 
a little dust of/. 11 .12 

1 ith honest/, 11 Ixxxi 

In/ and in dispraise the same, . Ode on Wei, 
no one word of loyal/ For Arthur, Vivien 
to true young hearts than their own/, Elaine . 418 
chill'd the popular p's of the King Guinevere . 14 
. A Dedicat 
of thy /. ' My life is full, ' , I 
would take the/ and care no more. Coquette, ii. 14 

praise (verb.) 
/ the heavens for what they have t ' Gardener'., 

1 ir which to/ the hi . 1 ; 

And / thee more in both . . '/'«, 

1 1 innol / the tire 
ollcu heard me/ Your feats of arm:, Laid . 



518 



CONCORDANCE TO 



praised, poem. line. 

One/ her ancles, one her eyes, . Beggar Maid n 
And much I p her nobleness, Princess , Pro. 124 

Then they/ him, soft and low, . if v. 536 

If I p the busy town, . . In Mem. Ixxxviri. 37 
Hep his land, his horses, (rep.) . The Brook . 124 
p the waning red, and told The vintage Aylmer's F.^ob 

praising. 
Sipt wine from silver,/ God, . Will Water. 127 

prance. 
boy began to leap and/ ' Home they brought him' 7 

Pranced. 
lightly/ Three captains out ; . Princess, v. 244 

prancer. 
she whose elfin/ springs . SirL. andQ. G. 33 

prank. 
mad p's along the heathy leas ; . Cirmmstance 2 
must play such p's as these. L. C. V. de Vere 64 

Sweet love on p'soi saucy boyhood : Princess } vii.^2^ 

Prasutagus. 

Me the wife of rich P, . . . Boadicea . 48 

prate (s.) 

child kill me with her foolish/ V Guinevere . 223 

prate (verb.) 
of the moral instinct would she/ Pal. of Art 205 
/ Of penances I cannot have gone St S. Styliies 98 
we, that/ Of rights and wrongs, . Godiva . 7 
■when I hear you/ I almost think P?'incess, v. 145 
Why do they/ of the blessings of Peace? Maud,I.i. 21 

prated. 
I that/ peace, when first I heard Princess, v. 255 

prat est. 

* Thou /here where thou art least, InMem. xxxv'ii. 2 

prattle. 

full heart of yours Whereof you /, Vivien . 399 

Prattling. 
P the primrose fancies of the boy, The Brook . 19 
said the little novice/ to her. . Guinevere . 181 
Unmannerly, with/ and the tales if . 314 

Pray. 
P, Alice, /, my darling wife, , Miller's D. 23 

I / thee, pass before my light of life CEuoue . 237 
Where I may mourn and/ . . Pal. of Art 2Q2 

P Heaven for a human heart, L. C. V. de Vere 71 
P for my soul. More things are . M. d' Arthur 247 
fast Whole Lents, and /. . . StS. Stylites 179 
p Your highness would enroll them Princess, i. 235 
Yet 1/ Take comfort : . . . u v. 76 

Leave thou thy sister when she/V, In Mem. xxxiii. 5 
/ That we may meet the horsemen Enid . 1340 

'1/ you of your courtesy, He being if . 1489 

P you be gentle,/ you let me be : if . *555 

Yea, God, I /you of your gentleness, 11 . 1558 

lp you lend me one, if such you have Elahie . 193 
let me hence I / you.' ... if . 766 

P for my soul, and yield me burial. if * 2 73 

P for my soul thou too, Sir Lancelot, if I2 74 

P for thy soul ? Ay that will I. . if 13S6 

I p him, send a sudden Angel . n *4*4 

P for him that he scape the doom. Gtiinevere . 345 
said the little novice, ' I / for both ; if . 347 

P and be pray'd for : m . 673 

/ them not to quarrel for her sake En, Arden . 35 
O rather/ for those and pity them Aylmer's P. 775 
take this and/ that he, Who wrote it A Dedication 4 

prayed. 
With all my strength I / for both, May Queen, ii. 31 
He p, and from a happy place . Two Voices 224 
maiden-meek 1/ Concealment : . Princess, in. 118 
p me not to judge their cause . if vii. 220 

So/ the men, the women . . if Con. 7 

had you cried, or knelt, or/ to me, Enid . 1692 

when of late you/ me for my leave n . 1736 

A hermit, who had/, labour'd and/, Elaine . 402 
Pray and be/ for , . . . Guinevere . 673 



POEM. LINE. 

then he/ ' Save them from this, . En. Arden . 117 
while he/, the master of that ship if . 119 

P for a blessing on his wife and babes n . 1S8 

P for a sign 'my Enoch is he gone?' if . 487 

fingers into the wet earth, and/. . if . 7S1 

prayer. 
Ifp's will not hush thee. . . Lilian . 27 

More things are wrought by/ . M d 'Arthur 247 
knowing God, they lift not hands of/ if . 252 

gates of heaven with storms of/, StS. Stylites 7 
with hoggish whine They burst my /. n . 175 
So keep I fair thro' faith and/ . Szr Galahad 23 
pitying made a thousand p's ; . Princess, i. 21 
A liquid look on Ida, full of/, . 11 iv. 350 

one part of sense not flint to/, . if vi. 166 

grant my/. Help, father, brother ir , 285 

my/ Was as the whisper of an air InJlfem.xvn. 2 
Her eyes are homes of silent/ . tr xxxii. 1 
blest whose lives are faithful P's, ir 13 

built him fanes of fruitless/ . . n lv. 12 

breathing a/ To be friends, . . Maud,\.x.\x. 55 
Not a bell was rung, not a/ was read 11 II. v. 24 
only breathe Short fits of/, . . Enid . 1004 

wear out in almsdeed and in/ . Guinevere . 679 
Rejoicing at that answer to his/ . En. Arde?t- . 127 
evermore P from a living source . u . 802 

me your p's, for he is past your p's, Aylmer's F. 751 
Blazon yourmottos of blessing and/*/ W.iaAlexan. 12 

prayer-p relude. 
labour'd thro' His brief/-/, . . Aylmer's F. 628 

pi'aying. 
P all I can, If prayers . . . Lilian . 26 

/ God will save Thy sailor . . In Mem. vi. 13 
another, a lord of all things, / . Maud, II. v. 32 
she was ever/ the sweet heavens Enid . , 893 
Blessing her, / for her . . En. Arden 880-5 

/ him To speak before the people Aylmer's F. 607 

Preach. 
I will not even/ to you . . To J. S. . 39 

Whose foresight/Vi" peace, . . Love and Duty '34 
Our own experience P'es. . . Will Water. 176 
who would/ it as a truth . . In Mem. lii. 11 
/ our poor little army down, . Maud, I. x. 38 

priest P an inverted scripture, . Aylmer's F. 44 

p7-eached. 
p An universal culture for the crowd Princess, Pro. 108 

Preacher. 
A harm no/ can heal ; . . . Maud, I. iv. 22 
when ihep's cadence flow'd Softening Ay Inter* sF. 729 
/ says, our sins should make us sad : Grandmother 93 

Preachijig. 
p down a daughter's heart. . . Locksley H. 94 
Not/ simple Christ to simple men, Sea Dreams 21 

preamble. 
prolong Her low/ all alone . . Pal. of Art 174 
tricks and fooleries, O Vivien, the/? Vivien . 115 

precaution. 
Creeps no/ used, among the crowd, Guinevere . 515 

precedent. 
slowly down From/ to/: ( You ask 77zeiuhy' etc. 12 
That codeless myriad of/, . . Ayhner's F. 436 

precinct. 
did I break Your/; . . . P?'incess } iv. 402 
in the p's of the chapel-yard, . Vivien . 601 

precious. 
Love's too/ to be lost . . . InMem.Yx'xv. 3 

Precipices. 
from the lean and wrinkled/' s, . Princess, iv. 4 
Went slipping down horrible p's . Enid . 1228 

Among the palms and ferns and/'j; En. Arden . 594 
breakers boom and blanch on ihep's, Boadicea . 76 

precontract. 
1 Our king expects — was there no/ ? Princess, m. 191 
as top's, we move, my friend, . if . 210 

/ wed with thee ! / bound by/ . ir iv. 520 

loth to render up My/, . 11 v. 290 



TE.WVYSOX'S JVORA'S. 



>'9 



predoomed. POEM. line. 

most P her as unworthy. . . Elaine . 7J5 

preeminence. 

To assail this gray/ of man ! . Princess, iii. 21S 

prefer. 
each/'* his separate claim . . In Mem. a. 18 

prefigured. 
ah, you seem All he /, . . . Princess, iii. 193 

prejudice. 
Cut P against the grain : ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 22 
leap the rotten pales of/ . . Princess, ii. 126 
old-recurring waves of p Resmooth 11 iii. 224 

prelude 's.) 
with some/ of disparagement . The Epic . 49 
This/ ha> prepared thee. . . Cardener'sD.267 
The/ to some brighter world. . Day-Dm. . 252 
Are but the needful p's to the truth : Priucess,Con.j4 

prelude. 
And I— my harp would / woe— . InMem.lxxxv'ii.g 

preluded. 
sweet breath P those melodious . D. of F. Worn. 6 

premier. 
city roar that hails P or king ! . Princess,Cou.io2 

prepare. 
but/: I speak : it falls.' . . Princess, ii. 206 

prepared. 

This prelude has/ thee. . . Gardener"sD.26y 

/ The daily burden for the back. In Mem. xxv. 3 

let there be / a chariot-bier . . Elaine 1115 

The rites/, the victim bared . The Victim 70 

presage. 
after seen The dwarfs of / : . . Princess, iv. 427 
\ o /, but the same mistrustful mood Vivien . 170 

presence. 

The light of thy great/; . . die to Mem. 32 

. ll.uone . 78 

Her/, hated both of Gods and men. 11 . 225 

I strength and grace And/, in Mem. cii. i3 

111 his fi I .mend . . . . " exxv. 2 

Your/ will be sun in winter, Top. D. Maurice 3 

■ te And / . Enid . . 431 

her gentle/ at the lists . " . 795 

\n I / I might guess Elaine . 183 

1 the/ of an enemy's fleet . Guinevere . 277 

sitting at her side foigot Her/, . Jin. Arden. 382 

flattering the poor roofs Aylmer'sE. 175 

!1 in /of ini: Tithonus . 21 

m'd all Thy / and thy portals, 11 . 57 

presence room. 
That morning in the/ r 1 stood . Princess, i. 50 

present adj.) 
■ friend, past, /, and to be ; In Mem. exxviii. 9 
in his natal grove, . . The Daisy . 18 

present (gift.) 
' I can make no marriage/ . . L.of 'Burleigh 13 
A /, a great labour of the loom . Princess, i. 43 
. er all her p's petulantly : . Aylmer'sE. 235 

present itimc.) 

rifythe/; .... Ode to Mem. 2 

id P wound in one, . . Miller's IK 197 

used [Within the P . ' Love thou thy land' etc 3 

n'd in the golden /, . . Gardener* sD. 1*1$ 

I dung to all the/ . . Locksley II. 14 

A night-long /" of the Past . . In Mem. Ixx. 3 

in the / broke the blow, . . 11 lxxxiv. 56 

Thou, like my / and my put, 11 cxx. 19 

carves A portion from uie solid /, Vivien . 312 

present (verb.) 

vming spirit {• . . Ode to Mem. 73 

tonth is various to/ . . Two Voices 74 

e to/ them to the Queen, . Elaine . 70 

presented, 
p Maid Or Nymph, or Goddess, . Princess, i. 193 



presentiment. 
But spiritual/' s, . 

preserve. 
P a broad approach of fame, 



POEM. LINE. 

Iii Mem. xcL 14 



78 



457 
n v. 511 

Golden Year 42 
Maud, II. v. 35 

Talking O. 179 

Locksley II. 90 

Two Voices 245 
/.. of Burleigh 10 
Princess, ii 

11 vii. 72 
Lucretius 



Sea-Fairies 



. Ode on Well. 

press (crowd.) 
slanted o'er a/ Of snowy shoulders Princess, iv. 
Made at ine thro' the/, . . 11 v. 

press (printing.) 
happy sails and bear the P ; 
His party-secret, fool, to the/ 

press (verb.) 
/ The maiden's tender palm 
/ me from the mother's breast, 
answer should one/ his hands? . 
Pes his without reproof: 
they /in from all the provinces . 
her father cease to / my claim, . 
so/ in, perforce Of multitude 

press d—prest. 
bosoms / To little harps of gold . 
Approaching, / you heart to heart. Miller's V. 
p the blossom of his lips to mine . Uinonn 
hot lips/ Close, close to thine .11 . 

/on lips Less exquisite than thine.' GardeneVsD. 149 
On to God's house the people/: Two Voices 409 
The gold-fringed pillow lightly / : Bay-Dm. . 98 
closer/, denied it not: . . Princess, iv. 213 

She /and /it on me — . . 11 v. 273 

/ Their hands, and call'd them . 11 vi. 75 

where warm hands have/and clos'd In Mem. xiii. 7 
What time his tender palm is/ . •• xliv. 2 

when I / the cause, I learnt that James The Brook 98 
Lancelot ever/ upon the maid . Elaine . 907 

evermore the daughter/ upon her /:"//. Aril 
to her meek and modest bosom p . Aylmer's F. 416 
I / my footsteps into his, 

pressing. 
P up against the land, 

pressure. 
Yet seem'd the / thrice as sweet 
I take the/ of thine hand. . 
days of difficulty And /. 



167 

3 
160 
76 
199 



L ucr etius 

Elcdnore . 112 

Talking O. . 145 
In Mem. cxviii. i.' 
En. Arden . 254 



presumptuous. 

dishonourable, base, /'/ . . Aylmer's F. 293 

nor believe me Too/ . . Hettdecasyllabiis 16 

pretence. 

vain/ Of gladness, . . In Mem. xxx. 6 

Our greatest yet with least/, . Ode on Well. 29 

pretenders. 
To keep the list low and p's back, Vivien . 442 

pretext. 

Light p's drew me . . Gardener's D. 188 

some /held. Of baby troth . . Princess, v. 3S7 

going to the king, He made this/, Enid . . 33 

with what face, after my / made . Elaine . 142 

kin,' Will then allow your/, . ti . 153 

made the/ of a hindering wound, 11 . 581 

when he learns Will well allow my/ 11 . 585 

Some/ of fineness in the meal . En. Arden . 338 

prettiest. 
'which was/, Best-natured?' . Princess, i. 230 

prettily. 
How/ for his own sweet sake . Maud, I. vi. 51 

pretty. 
'/'were the sight If our old halls Princess, I' 
while my /one, sleeps. . . " ii. 463-71 

Have all his/ young ones educated, En. Arden 140 
This/, puny, weakly little one, . >• • 195 

u !i, very'/ •' but I was against it Grandmother 7 
. The Flower 21 



And some arc / enough, 

prevail. 
Let her work/. . 

Prevailed. 
won His path upward, and/, 



. In Mem. cxiii. 4 
. Ode on Welt. 214 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Prevailing, poem. line. 

P in weakness, the coronach stole DyingSwan 26 

prey (for bird ' oj 'ft, beast of ft, see bird, beast, etc. ) 
stared, with his foot on the/ . Poet's Song- 12 

The seeming/ of cyclic storms . InMem. cxyu.ii 
is a world of plunder and/. . Aland, I. iv. 24 

on a foray, rolling eyes of ft, . Enid . 1387 

whole/ Is man's good name : . Vivien . 57S 

prey (verb.) 
ft By each cold hearth . . . In Mem. xcvii. 17 

ftrice. 
fourfield system, and the/ of grain A ndley Ct. . 33 
learn the/, and what the/ heask'd, The Brook 142 
the colt would fetch its/; . ■ . ti . 149 

a robe Of samite without/, . . Enid . . 71 
to give at last The/ of half a lezlmElaiue 1158 

ftrick. 
ft Each leaf into a gall) . . Talki?igO. . 69 

To/ us on to combat . . . Princess, v. 294 
the blood creeps, and the nerves/ InMem* xlix. 2 

pricked, 
ft with goads and stings ; . . Pal. of Art 150 
corn-bin open, / my ears ; . . The Epic . 45 
while each ear was/ to attend . Princess, vi. 263 
/ their light ears, and felt . . Enid . 1042 

Geraint, who being/ In combat . 11 . 1349 

I was/ with some reproof, u 1738 

couch'd their spears and/ their steeds Elaine . 478 
a spear P sharply his own cuirass, n . 488 

All ears were/ at once, . n 720 

peace which each had / to death. Ayhners F. 52 
playing with the blade he/ his hand, n . 239 

ftricking. 
{Look at it) / a cockney ear. . Mated, I. x. 22 

prickle (s.) 
The furzy/ fire the dells, . . Two Voices 71 

prickle (verb.) 
P my skin and catch my breath, . Jlfaud,I.xiv, 36 

pride. 
all the outworks of suspicious/; . Isabel , . 24 
merriment of kingly/, . . . Arabian N's. 151 
on herself her serpent/ had curl'd. Pal. of Art 257 
Your/ is yet no mate for mine, L. C. V. de Vere 11 
Kiy brand Excalibur, Which was my/ M.d' Arthur 28 
old Sir Robert's/, His books — . AudleyCt. . 57 
shame and/, New things and old, Walk. to theM '.52 
Self-blinded are you by your/: . Two Voices 23 
that abyss, or scornful/ .' ir . 120 

Wilt thou find passion, pain or/ ? ir . 243 

your Princess cramm'd with erring/, Princess,\\i. 86 
Ring out false/ in place and blood,/« Mem. cv. 21 
The proud was half disarm'd of/, n cix. 6 

The fire of a foolish/ flash'd . 3'Iatcd, I. iv. 16 

We are puppets, Man in his/ . ir . 25 

often a man's own angry / . . 11 vi. 6t 

thought, is it/, and mused . . n viii. 12 

surely, now it cannot be/.' 11 13 

Down with ambition, avarice, /, . ti x. 47 

I to cry out on/ ti xii. 17 

that I am to be vext with his/ / . ir xui. 5 

the keeper was one, so full of/, . tr II. v. 79 
doubling all his master's vice of/>, Enid . . 195 
will I fight him, and will break his/ if . . 221 
break his/ and have it of him. tr . 416 

break his/, and learn his name, 11 424 

Refusedhertohim, then his/ awoke; 11 . . 448 
But that his/ too much despises me: m . . 464 
next day's tourney I may break his/.' n . . 476 
3\Iy/is broken: men have seen myfall.'ir . . 578 
my/ Is broken down, for Enid sees m . . 589 
when I was up so high in/, . . 11 . 1^38 

So wax'd in/, that I believed myself 11 . 1683 

dead love's harsh heir, jealous/ ? Elaine 1389 

My/ in happier summers . . Guinevere . 532 
To whom my false voluptuous/, . 11 . 634 

our/ Looks only for a moment . Ay Inzer's F. 1 
/ Lay deeper than to wear it . 11 . 121 



POEM. LINE. 

taking/ in her, She look'd so sweet Ay Inters F. 554 
a time lor these to flaunt their/ 1 11 . 770 

ftricst, 
if there be a/, a man of God, . StS. Stylites 211 
As the/, above his book . . Vision of Sin 117 

one The silken/ of peace, . . Princess, v. 170 
This faith has many a purer/, . InJfem. xxxxii. 3 
dilettante. Delicate-handed/ . JIIaud,l.v\\i. n 
with music, with soldier and with/, Ode on Well. Si 
his/ Preach an inverted scripture Ayhners F. 43 
'Gash thyself,/, and honour . 11 . 644 

The P in horror about his altar . T/ie Victim 7 
The P went out by heath and hill ; 11 • 3^ 

seem'd a victim due to the/. . 11 -37 

The P exulted _ t. . 3 S 

now the P has judged for me.* . n .60 

the P was happy .... 11 65-78 

Priestess. 

P in the vaults of Death, . . In Mem. iii. 2 

priesthood. 
ever and aye the P moan'd . . The Victim 23 

ftrime (adj.) 
from his father's vats,/ 3 which I knew; Andley Ct. 27 

prime (s.) 
/ Of goodHaroun Alraschid ArabianN , s. io,etpass. 
gray/ Make thy grass hoar . . Two Voices (5 
Beyond her own material/ ? . 11 . 378 

Raw from the/, and crushing down Princess, ii. 106 
about my barren breast In the dead/.* 11 vi. 186 

And at the spiritual/ . . . In Me?n.x\'\i. 15 
Dragons of the/, That tare each other if lv. 22 

The colours of the crescent/ ? . 11 cxv. 4 

Primrose. 
/yetisdear,The/ofthelateryear,/«yl/if;«.lxxxiv.ii3 

Prince (see Arac, Geraint.) 
else the island ft's over-bold . . Eotos-Es. . 120 
the powers and/'i' of this world, 
bring the fated fairy P. 
A fairy P, with joyful eyes, . 
be you The P to win her ! 
'Then follow me, the P* I answer'd, 11 
API was, blue-eyed, and fair . ir 

She answer'd, ( then ye know the P V n 
in me behold the P n 

* O Sir, OP,I have no country ; 11 

to save A/, a brother? . . . tr 

help my/ to gain His rightful bride, if 

1 know the P, I prize his truth : . 11 
tho* your Fs love were like a God's ir 
when we sent the P your way . 11 
like a gentleman. And like a/: . 11 
Arranged the favour, andassum'dthe/' " 
could not slay Me, nor your/ : . ir 
seems a gracious and a gallant P, 11 
do much to gratify your P — . ti 
let your P (our royal word upon it, n 
embattled squares, And squadrons of the P, 
bore down a P, And Cyril, one. . ir 
Cyril seeing it push'd against the P, tr 
a great cry, The P is slain. . 
on to the tents : take up the P.' 
may tend upon him with the /. ' 
but the P Her brother came ; 
Never, P ; you cannot love me. 
A princely people's awful ft's 
a P indeed, Beyond all titles, 
A tributary / of Devon 
Allowing it, the P and Enid rode, u . -43 
a/ whose manhood was all gone ir . . 59 
Low bow'd the tributary P, , ir 174 
P Had put his horse in motion .11.. 20s 
P's blood spirted upon the scarf ir 208 
P, as Enid past him, fain To follow ir . . 375 
the P and Earl Yet spake together, 11 . . 384 
prove her heart toward the A' it 513 
Loudly spake the P, ' Forbear : . 11 . . 555 
noble/ who won our earldom back, 11 . . 619 



StS. Stylites 184 

Day-Dm. . 76 

n . 107 

Princess, Pro. 220 

. 220 

i. 1 

ii- 35 

. 196 

. 200 

. 271 

iii. 144 

. 216 



379 

507 

S79 

63 

204 



237 

S°7 



262 

324 

3 r 7 

9 



The Daisy 
Ded. of Idylls 40 
£irid . 



TEXXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



POEM. LINE, 

being so beholden to the P, . Enid . . 623 

P had found her in her ancient home; ■■ . . 644 

you were talking sweetly with your P 11 . . 698 

mended fortunes and a P's bride : it . . 718 

the P Hath pick'd a ragged-robin 11 . . 723 

and, worse, might shame the P . " . . 726 

As this great/ invaded us if . 747 

did her honour as the Ps bride, . 11 . . 835 

!-.-s, making slowlier at the P — 11 , 1016 

/'had brought his errant eyes Home n . 1094 

thus he moved the P To laughter ti . 1144 

when the /* was merry, ask'd Limours 11 , 1146 

/' bad him a loud good night 11 . 1210 

/', without a word, from his horse fell, n . 1357 

saw her Pass into it, turn'd to the P, 11 . 1735 

So spake the King : low bow'd the/', 11 . 1768 

call'd him the great /"and man of men " . 1809 

a P In the mid-night and flourish Elaine . 552 

the /' Reported w'ho he was, . 11 . 624 

ride no longer wildly, noble Pi . 11 . 630 

proud P who left the quest to me. 11 . 758 

all the tale Of King and P, . . 11 . 820 

P and Lord am I In mine own land, 11 . 912 
knew the P tho' marr'd with dust, Guinevere . 37 

Sir Lancelot holp To raise the P, " 47 
P of peace, the Mighty God, . Aylmer's F. 669 

heads of chiefs and p's fall so fast, 11 . 763 
did greet Troy's wandering P . Ona Mourner 33 

princedom. 
this pretext, that his/ lay . . Enid . . 33 
Forgetful of hi.-./ and its cares. .11 . .54 

princelike. 
thro' these P his bearing shone ; . Enid . . 545 

princess (see Ida.) 

The happy/ follow'd him. . . Day-Dm. . 172 

I wish That I were some great/* J'rinccss, Pro. 134 

some great P, six feet high, . 11 . 218 

eems our P as required — 11 . 223 

betroth'd To one, a neighbouring P: 11 i. 32 

Who moves about the /' ; . . 11 . 75 

They,- Ulcer to the inhabitant . 11 ii. 21 

edge unturnablc, our Head, The /'.' 11 . 187 

' Let the /'judge Of that ' 11 . 216 

lid have been the Head, . 11 iii. iS 

inform The /': . . . 11 -47 

your 1' tramm'd with erring pride 11 . 86 

My/, O my/.' true she errs, . << . 91 

in the P rode 11 . 153 

with some di-.cj.iin Answer'd the /' 11 iv. 44 

!. the P, <) the Head!' . 11 . 158 

They haled as to the P . . •• . 252 

.The/'withhcrmonstrouswoman-guard, •• . 540 

Site was a / too : and so 1 swore. 11 v. 285 

A gallant tight, a noble/ — . . 11 Con. 19 

Like our wild /' with as wise a dream 11 . 69 

shall dream I sec my / . . . Enid . . 752 

in His /, . 11 . . 759 

miles of coast, A palace and a/, . Vivien 439-98 

principle. 
P's are rain'd in blood : 'Love thou thy land' etc. 80 
hidden/ to move, . . Two Voices 133 

print (s.) 
take the/ Of the golden age — . Maud, I. i. 29 

print 
hill and wood and field did / . /«.l/ t v«.lxxviii. 7 

prism. 
Make p's in every carven glass . Day-Dm. . 55 

prisoner. 
and himself the/ at the bar, . Sea Dreams 172 



privet. 
white as/ when it II 



lVall.totJ1eM.4S 



privilege. 
manlike end myself ? — our/— . Lucretius . 229 
prize Is.) 
-ar.' . . Sir Galahad 80 



Princess.Con. £6 



LINE. 

earn our/, A golden broach : . Princess, . 

'1 ne /ofbeauty f"r the fairest there. Enid . . 485 

were she the/ of bodily force, 11 541 
won it for thee, The/ of beauty.' 11 

tho' you won the/ of fairest fair, . 11 . . 719 

shook herpulses, crying ' Look, a/.' 11 . . 972 

since a diamond was the/ . . Elaine . 33 

his the/, who wore the sleeve . 11 . 500 

'Advanccandtakeyour/Thediamond;'" . 502 

me no p's, for my / is death ! i« . 505 

/ Untakcn, crying that his/ is death.' 11 . 530 

deem this/ of ours is rashly given : 11 , 540 

Came not to us, of us to claim the/, " . 543 

won he not your/.' 11 . 572 
bore the/ and could not find . '■ 11 

' Your/ the diamond sent you . 11 . 817 

prize (verb. ) 

should 1/ thee, couldst thou last. Will Water. 203 

I know the Prince. I / his tiuth : . Princess, iii. 217 

that she should/ The soldier? . 11 v. 166 

sole men we shall / in the after-time 11 . 402 

/ the authentic mother of her mind. 11 . 423 

prized him more Than whoshould/him Vivien . 16 

prized. 
loved the man, and / his work ; M.d'Arthur.Ep. 8 
/ my counsel, lived upon my lips : Princess, iv. ^74 
/him mure Than who should prize him /7z7 £ -« . 15 

prize-oxen. 
A lord of fat p-o and of sheep, 

process. 
widen'd with the/ of the suns. . Locksley 11. 138 
Eternal/ moving on, . . . InMetnAxxxL 5 

procession. 
Let the long long/ go . . . Ode on Well. 15 

proclaim. 
From my high nest of penance hercpSt S. Sly/ 
/'thefaultshewouldnotshow:'lV« miglitha- 1 
For many and many an age/ . Ode on Well. 226 
let/a joust At Camclot, . ' Elaine . 77 

proclaimed. 

Spake to the lady with him and /, Enid . .552 

proclaiming. 
P social truth shall spread, . . InAfem.aayi. 5 

/' his the prize, who wore the sleeve Elaine . 500 

P Enoch Arden and his woes ; . En. Arden . t' ) 

proclamation. 
sent His horns of/ out . . . Vivien . 431 

Proctor. 
he had breath'd the P's dogs . . Princess,Pro.u 3 
prudes for p's, dowagers for deans, n . 141 

TwWVleapt upon us, crying ' Names:' 11 iv. 240 

Procuress. 

P to the Lords of Hell. . . In Mem. Iii 16 

prodigal. 

realms of upland, /in oil, . . Pal. of Art 

/ of all brain-labour . . . Aylmers F. 447 

prodigious. 

a match as this ! Impossible,//' . Aylmer's F. 315 

Professor, 

we heard The grave /'. . . Princess, ii. 349 

Sat compass' d with p's: . . 1, . 4.1 

prof' ■ 

P of royal power, ample rule . CI' none . 109 

mine own Refuse her p, . Princess, vi. 

Made/ of the league of golden . Vivien . 496 

proffer verb.) 

/ these The brethren I Princess, vt 54 

■ .r'd. 

At one dear knee wc/ v.iu ^, . InMi ■>■.• Kwiii. 13 

profit is.) 
now to leaven play with A . . Princess, 1 

The lady Blanche: much /J . 11 vi.au 



322 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Will bloom to/, otherwhere. . In Mem.lxxxi.12 

What/ lies in barren faith . . ti cvii. 5 

surely was my p had I known : . Guinevere . 651 

With fuller p's lead, an easier life, . E?i. Arden . 145 

With daily-dwindling/'.? held , 11 . 697 

profit (verb.) 

It little p's that an idle king, . Ulysses . 1 

What/'.? it to put An idle case? . In Me77z.xxxv.1j 

what p's me my name Of greatest Elai7ze 1403 

Progress. 
Our/ falter to the woman's goal . Princess, vi. tii 
With statelier/ to and fro . . InMem. xcvii. 22 

Prolong. 
/ Her low preamble all alone, 

promenaded '. 
With cypress/, . 

promise (s.) 
the / of my bridal bower, 
for the/ that it closed : 
the crescent/ of my spirit 
words of/ in his walk . 
falling in a land Of/; . 
hold Your/; all, I trust, may yet 
other distance and the hues Of 
With / of a morn as fair ; 
The/ of the golden hours? . 
Knowing your/ to me ; 
Forgetful of his / to the king, 
Bribed with large p's the men who 
bethought her of her / given 11 

not leave her, till her / given — h 

Made/, that whatever bride I if 

you have my/ — in a year : . . En. Arden 
before her face, Claiming her /. . 11 

promise (verb.) 

/ thee The fairest and most loving CEnone . 182 

/ (otherwise You perish) . . Princess, ii. 275 

might have shamed us : /, all.' . n _ . 279 

I p you Some palace in our land, . if iii. 145 

Pro 771 ise-bou 71 den. 
awed and/-£ she forbore . . En. Arden . 870 

promised. 
And Dora /, being meek. 
What could we else, we/ each ; 
ft help, and oozed All o'er 
she/ then to be fair. 
p more than ever king has given, 
She ceased : her father/ ; 
Lancelot ever/, but remain'd 
and once again She /. . 
/ that no force, Persuasion, no, 
Prv>7tisi7ig. 
Made such a voluble answer/ all, En. Arde7i . 903 
like a household god P empire : » O 71 a Mourner 31 

promo7itory. 
Who seems a/ of rock, 
Saw once a great piece of a /, 
about the thy my pro77zo7itories 
tear an oak on a / 

prompt. 
as / to spring against the pikes, 



proof. poem . LI NE. 

wall about thy cause With iron-worded/, To J.M.K.q 



Pal. of Art 173 

A77lphi07l . 38 

D.ofF.Wo7n.2i8 
Locks ley H. 14 

. !8 7 

Day-D7n. . 123 

Pri7zcesSj ii. 124 

" . - 34o 

/ ; tp iv. 69 

I71 Me77i. lxxxiii. 29 

11 lxxxiv. 106 

. Maud,\. xxii. 50 

E7iid . . 50 

» - • 453 
if . . 602 

if . . 605 
733 
434 
455 



lest thy heart be put to/, 

here is / that you were miss'd 

give them surer, quicker/ — 

/ and echo of all human fame, 

Tho* as yet there lived no/, . E7iid 

served for/ that I was loved, . 11 

As / of trust. O Merlin, teach it me. Vivie?i 

The great/ of your love : . if 

prurient for a/ against the grain, 11 

/ of trust — so often ask'd in vain ! n 

by nine years'/ we needs must learn Elaine 

flowery causes onward to the / . Lucretius 

Proofless. 
Spleen-born, I think, and / . . Vivien . 552 

prop. 
falls A«creeper when the/ is broken, Aylmer*s F. 810 



. Locksley H. 77 

Pri7icess, Pro. 175 

•1 iii. 265 

. Ode 07t Well. 145 

26 

796 

180 

204 

337 
769 

63 
120 



$ro^ 



this is/ to the clown, . . . Princess, iv. 227 

prophecy. 
If aught of/ be mine ' C lear-headedfrie7id> etc. 8 
She rose upon a wind of/ . . Pri7icess, ii, 154 
might not seem thy prophecies . In Me77z. xci. 13 
For the/ given of old . . . Maud, II. v. 42 
A prophet certain of my / . . E7iid . . 814 
ifancient/n?//;^;'^ Have err'd not Gui7ievere . 446 

Prophesied. 

Approvingly, and/ his rise . 

Prophesy. 
I p that I shall die to-night, 
Dismiss me, and I / your plan 

Prophesy Z7ig. 
p change Beyond all reasons : 



Ayhner's F. 474 

StS.Stylites 217 
Princess, iv. 335 



Dora . . 44 
Pri7icess 7 ii. 280 
if v. 231 

Maud, I. i. 68 
Vivie7i . 436 

Elai7ie 1124 

Gza7zevere , 93 
E71. Ardeji . 906 
Ay liner's F. 417 



Will . . 6 
Efiid . ion 

Sea Dreams 38 
Bo ad ice a . 77 



. Pri7icess, i. 141 

. Gardefier'sD. 62 
. Princess, iv. 256 
In Me77i. lxxxvi. 8 
. Maud, II. v. 57 
. E7iid . . 814 
. Vivie7i . t66 

. Gui7ievere ., 270 
. Ayhncr's F. 741 



Pri7icess, iii. 269 

pro7te. 
She veil'd her brows, and/ she sank, Pri7icess,\. 104 
/ from off her seat she fell, . . Gui7ievere . 411 

falling/ he dug His lingers . . E71. Arde7i . 780 

protiest. 
that most impute a crime Are/ to it, Vivien . 675 

,pro7ioU7ice. 
Nor can/ upon it . . . Maud,l.xx. 16 

Protiou7iced. 
the King P a dismal sentence . Vivien . 441 

procemio7i. 
my rich / makes Thy glory fly . Lucretius . 70 



Prophet. 
heart was like a/ to my heart, 
fire on a masthead, P of storm : 
The/'^ blazon d on the panes ; 
P, curse me the babbling lip, 
A/ certain of my prophecy . 
The people call you/ ; . 
ill p's were they all, 
no/ but the voice that calls . 
Cries 'come up hither/ as a/ to us 11 . 745 

Prophetess. 
have dash'd The passion of the/, Priiicess, iv. 122 
sang the terrible p'es. . . . Boddicea . 37 

prophet-m in d. 
Self-gather'd in her/-7«, ' OfoldsatFreedoin,' etc. 6 

Propitiated. 
Taranisbe/ Boddicea . 16 

proportio7i. 
gave him mind, the lordliest P 



p7'oposed. 
Grave doubts and answers here /, 

proppi7ig. 
in the naked hall, / his head, 
own dear bride/ his head, . 

proprietress. 
Is she The sweet / a shadow ? 

propt. 
P on beds of amaranth and moly, . 
broken statue / against the wall . 
half on her mother/, 
So/, worm-eaten, ruinously old, . 

prose (s.) 
I will work in / and rhyme, . 
Let raffs be rife in / and rhyme . 

prose (verb. ) 
/ O'er books of travell'd seamen, . 

Proserpi7ie. 
Like P in Enna, gathering flowers : 



Two Voices 20 

hi Mei7t. xlvii. 3 

Eizid . 1429 

if . 1432 

Przncess, ii. 393 

Lotos-E's. . 133 

Princess,Pro. 99 

11 iv. 348 

En. Arden . 694 

TalkingO. . 289 
Will Water. 61 

Amphwi . Si 

Ed. Morris 112 



TEAWVSO.V'S WORKS. 



prospect. poem. LINE. 
Largerangeof/hadthemolhersow, Walk totlieM.&$ 

My / and horkon gone. . . /«j>/e7«.xxxviii.4 

prosper. 

While yon sun p's in the blue, The Blackbird 22 

And the third time may p, . . M.d' Arthur 130 

it he scarce would/ . . Princess, lii. 60 

ic mix With men and// . In Mem.cx'ni. 3 

..led with thy voice ; . n exxix. 15 

prosper' d. 

and / : so three years She /: Pal. of Art 217 

And/; till a rout of saucy boys . Princess, v. 384 

and so/ that at last A luckier . En. Arden . 48 

prosperity. 
In such a sunlight of/ . . . Aylmer's F. 421 

prosperous. 
Be/ in this journey, as in all : . Enid . . 225 

prole, tor. 
call'd him dear/ in her fright, . Vivien . 795 

protomariyr. 
falling, /of our cause, . . . Princess, iv. 4S4 

proud. 

know you/ to bear your name, . L.C. V.de Vereio 

n whence 1 came. 11 . 12 

lither/,andflcdovcrthesca;/:<i'. Cray . 14 

1 the lips: .... Princess, i. . 95 

The/ was half disarm'd of pride . InMem.ax. 6 

it, in being so/; . . Maud, I. iv. 17 

turn thy wncel and lower the/; . A;;/*/ . . 347 

hei palace, /and pale. . Elaine . 611 

Their ancient name! they might hep; Aylmer's F. 378 

rolling o'er the palaces of the /, . 11 . 636 

mean vileness, we are grown so/ — n . 756 

'O Loy, tho' thou art young and/, Sailor Coy . 7 

prove. 
sought to / how I could love ( 

•.hat it is I would not do.' 
iher, part and/, 

tongue can/, 
nyself a poet : 

is death did/: . . /. of Burleigh bb 

the child. Princess, ii. 44 

. leaky vase, . n . 318 

/ Your knight, and fight your battle 11 iv. 571 

ly mother/ As true to thee " vi. 186 

ing where we cannot / ; . InMem.Pro. 4 

I I' mg to/ No lapse of moons . 11 xxvi. 2 

re is not to part and / ; . 11 xlvii. 5 

and I shall/ A meeting somewhere, 11 Ixxxiv. 98 

Id / the phantom-warning true, 11 xci. 12 

ience/ we are, and then . •■ cxix. 6 

1 >u wilt/ their tool . . Maud, I. vi. 59 

if it /a girl ...... vii. 7-15 

lean toward the Prince.' . Enid . . 513 
ay/ such force in her . 11 . . 80s 
: might /her to the uttermost .. 

line, . Vivien 
1 I1.1t 1 should / it on you unawares, .. 
( in to/ me vile,. . 11 . 345 

1 ild not/ it upon me, 11 . 537 

1 1 to p him wholly hers.' . .. . 7:4 

im his work : . . Elaine '. 158 

■1 . . 1, . 652 

1 ■ your children: En. Arden '. 407 

. Ay tiiiers F. 364 

call hie you /him, rogue 5m Drea 

no truer Time himself Can / you A Dedication 2 

proved. 

thou less unworthy/— . Lockslty II. 63 

il 'ly/, . In M, in. 1 iv. 14 

iths that never can be / . .1 exxx. 10 

that dark day, a day like 11 Com, 7 

Maud, 1 1 1. vi. 55 

/ him everyway 1 Ine of our noblest Enid . i 7 ^ 7 

im, rogue, and/, forgive. Sea Dreamt 167 

but him i / impossible ; . . Lucntius . 190 



L.C.V.deVerm 

Godiva . 27 

Two Voices 134 

11 . 445 

. Will Watt 



'•137 

177 



Lucretius . 19s 



"5 



proven. poem. line. 

'Not/' Avcrill said, . . . Aylmer's F. 53 
/ or no, Wliat cared he '! . . 11 .54 

provender. 
For lust or lusty blood or/; 

proverb. 
This/ flashes thro' his head, . Day -Dm. 

providence. 
sermonizing On/andtrustin Heaven, En. A rden 20s 

province. 

they press in from all the p's, . Princess, 1!. 83 

. thy/ were not large, . IiiMcm.xlv. 13 

tho' they sought Thio' all the p's Enid . . 730 

A/ with a hundred miles of coast, Vivien 438-97 

proving. 

converse in the hall, P her heart : Enid . . 521 
this cursed charm, Were/ it on me Vivien . 268 

prow. 

Sparkling flints beneath the/ . Arabian if s. 52 

round about the/ she wrote L. 0/ Shalott, iv. 8 

round the / they read her name, m , 4^ 

Sleep, gentle heavens, before the/ ; In Mem. ix. 14 

and play About the/ ... n xii. 18 

The Lady 's-head upon the/ . The Voyage n 
Now nearer to the/ she seem'd . 11 -67 

prov'ess. 
whereas I know Your/, Arac, . Princess, v. 394 
Lancelot, and his/ in the lists, . Elaine . 83 

His/ was too wondrous, 11 . 541 

old/ were in aught decay'd . 11 . 583 

here and there a deed Of/ done . Guinevere . 456 

proxy-wedded. 
p--u with a bootless calf . . Princess, i. 33 

prude. 
P's for proctors, dowagers for deans, Priucess,Pro. 141 

prudence. 
a/ to withhold .... Isabel . . 15 
by si ->w/ to make mild . . Ulysses , 36 
Let not your/, dearest, drowse, . Princess, ii. 318 

pruned. 
Thro'crowded lilac-ambush trimly/; Gardener' sD. 1 1 1 

prurient. 
/ for a proof against the grain . Vivien . 337 

Prussian. 
Last, the /' trumpet blew ; . 



Ode on Well. 127 



pry. 



not to / and peer on your reserve, Princess, i v. 399 

psalm. 
with sound Of pious hymns and/'i St S. Slylites 33 
solemn ps, and silver litanies . Princess, il. 453 

roll'd the/ to wintry skies . . /// Mem. Iv. 11 

Psyche. 
Two widows, Lady P, Lady 1 Handle Princess, i. 127 

1 lady Blanche' she said, 'And Lady P.' 11 . 230 

prettiest, Uest-natured? ' Lady P.' u . 231 

with your own, A. Lady Pi pupils.' n . 237 

Lady /'will harangue The fresh arrivals n ii. 81 

crost the court To Lady l"s: . 11 .86 

' Well then, P, take my life . . .. .187 

seen And heard lli..- Lady/'.' . 11 . 194 

'are you that Lady P [rep.) . 11 . 219 

While P watch'd them, smiling . 11 . 344 

learnt N'n more from Ps lecture . 11 . 371 

long-limbo 1 lad that had a P too ; 11 .384 

dear is sister P to my heart, . 1. . 396 

rail at Lady P and her side. . 1. Lii. 17 

Herself and Lady P the two arms; •• . 19 

Lady /' « ill be cru h'd ; . . » .47 

! her theorie ... .76 

poor P whom she drags in tow.' . .. .87 

climbing, Cyril kept With /', . 11 . 337 

P flush d and wani.'d and shook ; 11 iv. 142 

thei knew, < >r /', . . .. ■ »»5 

sent For P, but she was not there : 11 . 1118 



324 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 


LINE. 


Princess 


iv. 219 


it 


. 222 


tr 


• 297 


M 


• 3 IQ 


II 


v. 48 


II 


. 501 


tl . 


• 523 


II 


vi. 13 


II 


- is 


Tl 


. 116 


S " 


. 192 


II 


. 267 


If 


VH. 40 


II 


• 57 



call'd For P's child to cast it 
where are P, Cyril? both are fled : 
you planed her path To Lady P } . 
hear of it From Lady P: ' 
Had come on P weeping : . . 
With P's babe, was Ida watching 
With P's colour round his helmet, 
Came P, sorrowing for Aglaia. 
Ida stood With P's babe in arm : . 
P ever stole A little nearer, . 
turn'd half-round to P as she spran 
'Come hither, O P,' she cried out, 
But P tended Florian : . 
suit obtained At first with P. 

fuddled. 
' So/ as it is with favouritism." . Princess, iii. 130 

upon the level in little/ 5 of wind, Princess, iv. 237 

$uff. 
to p your idol-fires, 'Love tiwu thy land, 

the vessel p's her sail : . . . Ulysses 

Puff'd. 
gust of wind P out his torch . . Vivien 
P tier fairy nostril out ; 11 

pug. 
a score of p's And poodles yell'd . Ed, Morris 119 

puissance. 
of her brethren, youths of p ; . Princess, i. . 36 

pull. 
P not down my palace towers, 
P off, p off, the broach of gold, 
that make the rose P sideways 

pulpit-drone. 

humming of the drowsy /-a? . 



* etc. 69 
• 44 

. 53i 
. 697 



Pal. of Art 
Lady Clare 
InMemAxxi. 



pulpiteer. 
To chapel ; where a heated/; 

Pulsation. 
Hung tranced from all/ 
Make me feel the wild/ 
The wild/ of her wings ; 
The deep/'.? of the world, . 



To J. M. K. 10 

. Sea Dreams 20 

. Gardener* sD. 255 

. Locksley H. 109 

. In Mem. xii. 4 

11 xciv. 40 



pulse (beating.) 
strike within thy p's, like a God's CEnone . 159 
stirr'd with languid p's of the oar . Gardener sD. 41 
And her whisper throng* d ray p's . Locksley H. 36 
shot Light horrors thro' her p's: . Godiva . 59 

lent The/ of hope to discontent. . Tzuo Voices 450 
desire to kneel, and shook My/'?, Princess, iii. 178 
keep One/ that beats true woman, 11 vi. 164 

My/' j therefore beat again . luMem.lxxxlv. 57 

every / of wind and wave 11 -73 

The measured p of racing oars *-» . 11 Ixxxvi. 10 
The p's of a Titan's heart ; . . v cii. 32 

keeps A thousand />'s dancing, . u cxxiv. 16 
my/'.r closed their gates with a shock Maud, I. i. 35 
Lord of the/ that is lord of her breast 11 xvi. 13 
to live, long as my/'splay . . 11 xviii. 66 
Is it gone ? my/ s beat — - . . 11 II. i. 36 
shook herp's, crying, 'Lookaprize! Enid . . 972 
stir the/ With devil's leaps, . Guinevere . 517 

p's at the clamouring of her enemy Boddicea . 82 

fulze (seeds.) 
eating hoary grain and /the steeds Spec, of Iliad, Note 



Ayhucr's F. 441 



Pun. 
the /, the scurrilous tale — , 

puny. 
This pretty, /, weakly little one, — ■ En. Arden . 195 

pupil. 
Some meeker/ you must find . L.C. V. de Vere t8 
with your own. As Lady Psyche's/',?.' Princess, i. 237 
A patient range of p's; . . . n ii. 89 

angled with them for herp's love : it iii. 77 



pupillage. 
sons of kings loving in/ 

puppet. 
P to a father's threat . 
We are p's, Man in his pride 

puppy. 
blind and shuddering puppies, 



POEM. 

Vivieti 



LINE. 

• 367 



Locksley H. 
Maud, I. iv. 



The Brook . 110 



Purchase. 
sent mine host to/ female gear ; 
To /his own boat, and make a home En. Arden . 
Yet he hoped top glory, . . T/ie Captain 

purchased, 
p his own boat, and made a home En. Arden . 

Pure. 
Her court was/; . 
A man more/ and bold and just 
May He within himself make/ / 
all else of Heaven was/ 
but what lot is/ ? . 
Make Thou my spirit/ and clear 
To make me / of sin. 
Because my heart is/. . 
is not our cause/ ? 
As/ and perfect as I say ? . 
What souls possess themselves so/, 
Her faith thro' form is/ as thine, u xxxiii. 

love will last as / and whole . 11 xlii. 

How/ at heart and sound in head, 11 xciii. 

Flow thro our deeds and make them/— it cxxx. 
Small and/ as a pearl, . . . Aland, II. ii. 
to a cause that I felt to be/ . . n III. vi. 
Which he has worn so / of blame Ode on Well. 
P as he from taint of craven guile . n 

it chanced they are happy, being/. ' Vivien 
all men true and leal, all women/; ir 
Delicately/ and marvellously fair, Elaine 
P, as you ever wish your knights 
taken everywhere for/, 
in that world where all are/ 

Pure f less. 
kiss'd her with all/, brother-like, 
To doubt her/ were to want a heart Elaine 

Purged. 
When I have/ my guilt' 



Princess, i. . 196 

47 



. To ilie Queen 25 

. To J. S. . 31 

. M d Arthur 245 

. Gardener's!). 78 

Walk, to the M. 89 

. St Agnes' Eve 9 

. 32 

. Sir Galahad 4 

. Princess, v. 393 

In Mem. xxlv. 2 

xxxii. 15 

9 



3i 

72 

135 

595 
643 
1360 
1366 
5i3 
559 



Guinevere 



Enid 



*73 2 
1368 



Pal. of Art 296 



purify. 
and so thou/ of thy soul 



Guinevere 



557 



purity. 
such a finish'd chasten'd/, . 
wove coarse webs to snare her/ 

Purl. 
To/ o'er matted cress . 

Purlieu. 
dusky p's of the law. 

Purple, 
Shot over with/, and green, 
long p's of the dale. 
/ blazon'd with armorial gold. 

made No/ 111 the distance, mystery Princess, vi. 179 
red with spirted/ of the vats . it vii. 187 

The/ from the distance dies, In Mem.xxxvvX. 3 
And blossom in / and red . . Maud, I.xxii. 74 

thistle bursting Into glossy p's, . Ode on Well. 207 
In crimsons and in p's and in gems Enid . . 10 

Purpled. 
furr'd and/, still the clown . 

purple frosty. 
Behind a/^"bank 



. Isabel . .41 
. Ay Inzer's F. 780 

. Ode to Mem. 59 

In MemAxxxvni. 12 

. Dying Swan 20 
. A Dirge . 31 
. Godiva . 52 



Princess, iv. 228 



/ u rple-skirted. 
the p-s robe Of twilight 

pu rple-spiked. 
standing near P-s lavender . 

purport. 
with such a chain Of knitted/, 
if your Highness keep Your/, 



In Mem. cvi. 3 

The Voyage 21 

Ode to Mem. 110 

Two Voices 168 
Princess, iii. 196 



TEXVYSOWS WORK'S. 



0-3 



purpose. POEM. LINE, 

see My far-off doubtful /. f . CEnone . 247 
lest the ^crus Should blind my/, M. d' Arthur 153 
my/ holds To sail beyond the . Ulysses . 59 
He .ill answer to the/, . . Locksley //. 55 
one increasing/ runs, ... n -137 

clench'd his/ like a blow ! . . Princess, v. 296 
ken, clinging to her/, . 11 . 334 

like a broken / waste in air : . 11 vii. 199 

/"in/, will in will, 11 . 287 

Such splendid / in his eyes, . . In Mem. lv. 10 
I embrace the / of God, . . Maud, III. vi. 59 
one main/ ever at my heart) . Enid . 1679 

for my main/ in these jousts, . 11 . 1685 

and my/ three years old, it 1697 

With/ to present them to the Queen. Elaine . 70 
jilt the/ of my life. . . Guinevere . 450 
mine helpmate, one to feel My/ . " .. 482 

vast design and / of the King . 11 662 

A /evermore before his eyes, . En. Arden . 45 
no heart to break his p's To Annie. 11 . 155 

let me hold my / till 1 die . " . 876 

Faded with morning, but his/ held Aylmer'sF. 412 

purposed, 
p with ourself Never to wed . Princess, ii. 46 

purse. 
loosed a mighty/, Hungat hisbelt Enid . . 871 

purse-niouth. 
Maud with her sweet /-« . . Maud, I. i. 71 

pursue. 
'mine enemies /' me, . . . Cuinevere . 139 

pursued. 

out of breath, as one/ . . Princess, iv. 356 

he/ her calling 'Stay a little ! . Elaine . 680 

!i the street . Sea Dreams 161 

dead?' ' The man your eye /. 11 . 262 

pursuer. 
I heard the puff'd/ . . . Princess, iv. 2.16 

pursuit. 
body half (lung forward in/, . Aylmer's F. 587 

push. 

/thee forward thr.' ! ".one . 160 

>'off, and sitting well in order smite Clysses . 58 

To/ my rival out of place . . Princess, iv. 316 

Here, / them out at gates.' . . 11 . 5.7 

Should/ beyond her mark . . In Mem. lit, 15 

that pes ns off from the board, . Maud, I. iv. 27 

Did tie /, when he was uncurl'd . n II.il. 18 

No will / me down to the worm, . Tlu Window 1 1 5 

push'd 
behold thy bride,' She/ me from Love and Duty 50 
/theh 1 hack, — . . Golden Year 65 

/ with lances from the 1 ick . . Princess, Pro. 46 
/' her flat hand against his face . 11 ii. 345 

but / t . . . n iv. 178 

from her face They/ us, . . 11 . 533 

le hands from its pedestal 11 v. 55 

Cyril seeing it, / against the Prince, « . 53a 

And/' irden-gate. . The lirook . 83 

door, /' from without, dravc backward Enid 1122 

pushing. 
/ could mnvc The chair nf Idris . Enid . . 542 
/ his black craft among them all . Vivien . 413 

Puss. 
'petty Ogress.'and ' ungrateful P," Princess, Pro. 156 

put. 
r, part and prove . TwoVoicet 134 

id/ it on her, . /.. , 
- it P on more calm . . /v. 

I ir apart . /»/ Mem Ixxxi. 1 -, 

t / down «.ir ! . . Maud, I. x. 44 

tid 130, 848 

r gown, " . I ;^7 

10 0.1c moment, she/ forth the charm Vivien . ti6 



POEM. LINE. 

But she — she /him off — . . En. Arden . 457 
Suddenly/ her linger on the text " . 493 

Then take it, love, and/ it by . The Kinglet 11 
P forth and feci a gladder chine . On a Mourner 1$ 

putting. 
made a Gardener/ in a graft", . Vivien 



puzzle. 
keep it like a/ chest in chest . Vivien 



329 

5°4 
P. IF. 
Remains the lean P. IV. on his tomb : T/te Brook 192 

pyebald. 
three p's and a roan. . . Walk.totheM.\o\ 

pyramid. 
The Rhodope, that built the/, .Princess, ii. f!3 

Pyrenean. 
Beyond the P pines ; . . . Ode on Well. 113 



Q 

quail. 
yam.' pigeon, lark and leveret lay, Audley Ct. 23 

Quaker. 
Whatever the Q holds, from sin : Maud, II. v. 92 

quantity. 

All in q, careful of my motion, Hcndecasyllabics 5 

quarrel (s.) 
Why? What cause of q> . . The Brook . 07 
call it lovers'?\s, yet I know . Enid . 11- ; 

In all your q's will I be your knight. Elaine . 957 
remember a q I had with your fuller, Grandm 

quarrel (verb. I 

With time I will nut q: . . Will Water. ?<-6 

Would y with uur lot : . . . 11 . 226 

pray them not toy lor her sake, . En. Arden . 35 

quarretTd. 

She and James had q. . . The Brook . 96 

if they q, Enoch stronger-made . En. Arden . 30 

quarry. 

but as a block Left in the q ; . Princess, vii. 216 

Nor q trench'd along the hill, . JnMciu. xcix. 11 

quart. 

I've 'ed my q ivry market-noight . N. Farmer 8 

q na rter-sessions. 
A q-s chairman, abler none ; . Princess, Con. 90 

quay. 

like a hive all round the narrow q, Audley Ct. . 4 

rock to rock upon the glooming q, •• . 83 

And I went down uuro the q, . In Men:, xiv. 3 



queen. 
In her as Mother, Wife, and Q : ■ To the Queen 28 

fof marriage, a most perfect wife Isabel, . 28 
'rom me, Heaven's y, Paris, to thee CEnone 
watch'd by weeping q s. . . Pal. 0/ An 
were you q of all that is, . LC.i'.del'ere 19 
I'm to bey o the May. mother, May Quccn,\.+,et pass. 
to sec me made the ('; . .11 . .26 

on the green they mado me £ of May;n ii. 10 

A q' w ith swarthy cheeks . 1). 0/ F. Won:. 1.7 

I died up, ii .11 

'1 htce (/ jwith crowns of gold— . M d'Arti 
those three O'x Put forth their hand . 205 

maid shall he my?/' . Beggar Maid 16 
swarm as bees about their q . Princess, i. 39 

from the Q's decease she brought her up »i iii 70 

her mother, shore the tress n 
and made myself a Oof farce I n vii. 223 

it Enid . . 14 
And Enid loved the Q, . ... . . 1 , 

when a rtim'11 " ■ the Q, 11 . -• j 

Q petitioned for his leave . .11 . .154 



325 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

she return'd Indignant to the Q; Enid . 203,414 

Q Sent her own maiden to demand it . . 410 

this great insult done the Q.' . ti . 425, 571 

pardon for that insult done the Q, ti . 583 

there the Q forgave him easily. 11 . . . 592 

there be made known to the stately^, 11 . . 607 

stately Q whose name was Guinevere, 11 . . 667 

His princess, or indeed the stately q, 11 . . 759 

great Q, In words whose echo lasts, 11 . . 781 

our kind Q, No hand but hers, n 7S7 

Look'd the fair Q, but up the vale 11 . . 831 

there the Q array 'd me like the sun : 11 . 1549 

penance the Q laid upon me . 11 . 1702 

you were often there about the Q, 11 . 1717 

great Q once more embraced her friend 11 . 1795 

Q's fair name was breath'd upon, ir . 1799 

a rumour rife about the Q, . . Vivien . 10 

like the fair pearl-necklace of the Q, ir . 301 

made her Q : but those lsle-nurtur'd ti . 420 

charm, which being wrought upon the Q» . 434 

as noble, as their Q was fair? . 11 . 458 

taught the King to charm the Q . 11 . 491 

that commerce with the Q, I ask you, ti . 620 

purpose to present them to the Q, Elaine . 70 

And the Q Lifted her eyes, . . 11 .84 

Love-loyal to the least wish of the Q " .90 

were not once so wise, My(?, . 11 . 105 

for Q's and not for simple maids.' . 11 . 231 

only Q's are to be counted so, . " . 238 

guilty love he bare the Q, . . 11 , 245 

when he saw the Q, embracing ask'd, 11 . 569 

the Q amazed ' Was he not with you ? 11 . 571 

111 news, my Q, for all who love him, 11 . 596 

SomereadtheKing'sface,somethe(?'j,ii . 723 

suddenly on the Q with the sharp news. 11 . 726 

to drink to Lancelot and the Q, . ir . 733 

Q who sat With lips severely placid n . 735 

any mouth to gape for save a Q's — ■ 11 . 771 

there the Q herself will pity me, 11 1053 

loves the Q, and in an open shame : 11 1076 

Lancelot and the Q and all the world, 11 1101 
deck it like the Q's For richness, 

and me also like the Q . . 11 1112 

go in state to court, to meet the Q. 11 1118 
sent him to the Q Bearing his wish, 

whereto the Q agreed . . 11 1162 

piece ofpointed lace, In the (T-r shadow, 11 1169 

Lancelot kneeling utter'd, ' Q, Lady 11 1173 

but, my Q, I hear of rumours . 11 1183 

half turn'd away, the Q Brake . 11 1190 

as Arthur's q I move and rule : . 11 1215 

an arm to which the Q's Is haggard, 11 1220 

the wild Q, who saw not, burst away 11 1237 

she sleeps— the Fairy Q, so fair ! . 11 1248 

last the Q herself and pitied her • . 11 1262 

Then said the Q (Sea was her wrath, 11 1299 

' Q, she would not be content . :i 1304 

mass, and rolling music, like a Q. 11 1326 

the Q, Who mark'd Sir Lancelot tr 1338 

pass on, my Q, forgiven.' . . 11 1343 

a love Far tenderer than my Q's. . 11 1386 

Q, if I grant the jealousy as of love, 11 1390 
Q who sat betwixt her best Enid . Guinevere . 28 

Sir Lancelot told This matter to the Q, 11 . 54 

the stately Q abode For many a week, n . 144 

when she heard, the Q look'd up, . 11 . 162 

first she came, wept the sad Q. . 11 . 180 

strong castle where he holds the Q ; " . 192 

For his own self, and his own Q, . -i . 195 

the good King and his wicked Q, . n . 207 

were I such a King with such a Q, 11 ■ 208 

to her own sad heart mutter'd the Q. " • 211 

ere the coming of the Q' . . " 221-31 

thought the Q within herself again ; u . 222 

Before the coming of the sinful Q.' 11 • 268 

snake the Q and somewhat bitterly. ^ 11 . 269 

This evil work of Lancelot and the Q '<' 11 . 305 

thought the Q' lo ! they have set her on n . 306 

the pale Q look'd up and answer'd her. n . 325 

a mournful answer made the Q. « . 339 

Such as they are, were you the sinful Q.' 11 .351 



POEM. LINE. 

Fired all the pale face of the Q, . Guinevere . 355 

stood before the Q As tremulously 11 . 361 

Q had added 'get thee hence' . 11 . 364 

the Q immersed in such a trance, . n . 398 

Rose the pale Q, and in her anguish n . 580 

he gave them charge about the Q, 11 . 585 

Insipid as the Q upon a card ; . Aylmer's F. 28 

each man murmur'd ' O my Q, . The Voyage 63 

You my Q of the wrens ! (rep.) . The Window 81 

I'll be the King of the Q of the wrens 11 . 84 

queenhood. 
with all grace Of womanhood and q Enid . . 176 

queuch'd. 
The fame is q that I foresaw, . luMem.lxx'ii. 5 
his greatness whom she q. . . Vivien . 67 

quencher. 
You would-be q's of the light to be, Princess, iv. 515 

quenching, 
q lake by lake and tarn by tarn . Princess, vii. 25 

query. 
let my q pass Unclaim'd, . . The Brook . 104 
He put the self-same q, . . Enid . . 269 

all queries touching those at home Aylmer's F. 465 

quest. 
upon this fatal q Of honour, . . Enid . 
cease not from your q, until you find.' Elaine 

sally forth In q of whom he knew not, 11 

with his diamond, wearied of the q, 11 

who he was, and on what q Sent, n 

lose the q he sent you on, . . 11 

let me leave My q with you : . u 

wearied of the q Leapt on his horse, 11 

go no more On q of mine, . . 11 

Lest I be found as faithless in the q 11 

proud Prince who left the q to me. 11 

q Assign'd to her not worthy of it, u 

question (s.) 
q unto whom 'twere due : 
smiling, put the q by. . 
your q now, Which touches on the 
this q of your troth remains : 
the q settled die. ' .... 
In many a subtle q versed, . 
Nor thro' the q's men may try, 
after madness acted q ask'd : 
q rose About the founding . 

question (verb.) 
'Twere well to q him, and try 

questioned. 
She, q if she knew us men, . 
or could answer him, If q, 



I5SI 

• 547 
. 560 
. 613 
. 625 
. 652 
. 688 

• 699 

• 7i3 

• 757 

• 758 



(Snone . 80 

Day-Dm. . 164 

Princess, iii. 304 

11 v. 269 

11 . 307 

In Mem xcv. 6 

11 cxxiii. 7 

Enid . 1661 

Vivien . 260 

Talking O. 27 

Princess, iv. 2T2 
En. A rden . 655 



questioner. 
little time for idle q's.' . 

quick (adj.) 
We are twice as q '.' 
— they say that women are so q — 

quick (flesh.) 
I myself A Tory to the q 

quick (hawthorn. 
Rings Eden thro' the budded q's, 
burgeons every maze of q 

quicken. 
bloodless east began To q to the sun, 
Your wailing will not q him : 
mountain q'sinto Nymph and Faun 

quickened. 
Be q with a livelier breath, . 

quickening, 
slowly q into lower forms ; . 

quicker. 
Her hands are q unto good : 
It may be, I am q of belief . 



Enid , . 272 

Princess, Pro. 137 
En. Ardcn . 405 

Walk, to the M.73 

) 

InMem.lxxxyu.2 
ti cxiv. 2 

Enid . . 535 

1398 

Lucretius . 187 

In Mem. cxxi. 13 

Vision of Sin 210 

In Mem.xxxm. 10 
Elaine 1 198 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



327 



hOEM. 

QLnone 



LINE. 
. 200 



On a Mourner 6 



A Character 
CEnone 

Gardener sD. 



2 3 
-\ 
IS3 

10 

7 

879 

162 



zg 



236 



quick-falling. 
q-f dew O f fruitful kisses, 

quickset-screens 
Fills out the homely q-s 

quiet. 

Q, dispassionate, and cold, . 

the hill : 

I . :ful '/— ■ 

all was q : from the bastion d walls Princess, 1. 
This look off Hatters thus. . . /» Mem. x. 
there, is the village, and looks how q Maud, 1. iv, 
Making a treacherous-/ in Ins heart, Elaine 
blasting the long q of my breast . Lucretius 

quiuquenniad. 
Or gay q's would we reap . . Day-Din. 

quinsy. 
• A q choke thy cursed note !' . T/ie Goose 

quintessence. 
As with the q of flame, . . . Arabian N't. 123 
pure q's of precious oils . . Pal. of Art 

The (lower and q of change . . Day-Dm 
He had known a man, a q of man, Aylmers/-. 

quip. 
all his merry q's are o'er. . D.o/theO. Year 29 

quire. 
low matin-chirp hath grown Fully, Love and Dntytfi 
O Milan, O the chanting q' s, . The Daisy . 57 

quirk. 
With twisted q's and happy hits 

quit requite.) 
ill then should I q your brother's 

quit (leave.) 
q the post Allotted by the Gods : Lucretius 

quitch. 
the vicious q Of blood and custom Enid . 

quiver. 

Willows whiten, aspens q, . 

insand moons will q ; ■ 

quiver'd. 

Her eyelid f as she spake. . 

death q at the victim's throat : 

quivering: 
heart of Britain, leave it gorily q ? fio, 



In Mem. 

Ixxiii 



POEM. LINE. 

she shall rear my dusky r. . . Locksley It. 1 i 
Becomes dishonour to her r— . Tvjo Voices 25s 
Who took a wife, who rear'd his r, 11 . 328 

Some legend of a fallen r . . " . 359 

r Of giants living, each, . . Princess, iii. 251 
springs the crowning r of humankind 11 vi 
That ' Loss is common to the r' 
a —to some one of his 
Will shelter one of stranger r. 
that great r, which is to be . 
The herald of a higher r, 
throned r's may degrade : . 
Betwixt us and the crowning r 
herfather, the wrinkled head of the r? Maud,\. iv. 
in his force to be Nature's crowning r » 
At war with myself and a wretched r, 11 x. 

That huge scapegoat of the r . ti xiii. 

whole weak r of venomous worms, " ILL 
while the r's of mankind endure, Odeon Well. 
O purblind r of miserable men . Enid . 
in their chairs set up a stronger r 11 . 1788 

Some other r of Averills' . . Aylmer's F. 54 



cxvu. 
exxvii. 



4 
4 
i 
'4 
7 

Con. 128 
13 
33 
35 
42 
46 
219 
850 



Will Water. 18 



Elaine 



1751 



. L.ofShaloll,\.io 
. A Farewell 14 

. Miller's D. 144 
. D.ofF. Worn. 115 



224 

• 577 

• -I) 

• 79' 

• 844 

• 29 



xli. 

cxiii. 



M 



Princess, iv. 243 

Princess, ii. 230 
n v. 107 

AudleyCt. . 30 



dicea 



. Lucretius . 186 



1 Princess, iii. 199 
IT. Farmer . 53 



Sets all the lops q — 

quoit. 
Q, tennis, ball— no games? . 
quoloty. 
Looiik 'ow 7 smoiles 

quote. 
— it makes me sick to q him— 
Love, let me q these lines, . . " 

quoted, 
q odes, and jewels fivc-words-long Princess, ii. 



. Sea Dreams 



3Z5 



R 

raiite. 
niver agin the r. . . N. Farmer. 16 

rath 
in' rembled un oot. . .N. Farmer. 32 

■ at. 

The r fondles his own harmless face, Aylmer'sFA^x 

rabble. 
soft and milky r of womankind, . Princess, vi. 290 

lineage, etc.) 
We wi Sislers 1 

Chanted from an ill-used r of men Lotos-St. ■ 165 

nl y ,• 1 1 in, hip and thigh I) of F. Wont.iyi 

with the human r, 'Of old sat Freedom} etc.vo 



Nor of what r, the work 
with her the r of Aylmer, past. . » 

link'd their r with times to come— " 

made by these the last of all my r « 
those who sorrow'd o'er a vanish'd r 11 
vary from the kindly r of men, . Tithonus 

race (running, etc. ) 
Till all my widow" d r be run ixvii. 20) InMcm ix. i3 
He still outstripp'd me in the r; . 
in her onward r For power. . 

race (verb.) 
and r By all the fountains: . 
raced. 
(lew kite, and r the purple fly, 
inward r the scouts With rumour 
races. 

how The r went 

Rachel. 
Fairer than R by the palmy well, Aylmer's F. 670, 

racing. 
Clouds that are r above, . . The II 'iudotu 6 

rack. 
furrowing into light the mounded r, LoveandDutyn 

rack'd. 
r with pangs that conquer trust ; . In Mem. xlix. 6 

radi 
where the passions meet, Whence /V /// .1/<v;;.lxxxvii. 5 

raff. 
Let r's be rife in prose and rhyme Will Hater. 61 

rag tatters.) 
Her r\t scarce held together ; . The Goose . 2 
one r, disprinced from head to heel Princess, v. 2; 
And him, the larar, in his r's : In Mem. cxxvi.10 
flout and scorn By dressing it in r'st Enid 1524 
;own, This silken r, . n 1528 

and throng, their r's and they, . Lucretius . i;o 

-tone.) 
horneblcnde, rand trap and tuff, . Princess, iii. 344 

rae^e (s.) 
His early r Had force . .Mr 

blind with r she miss'd the plank . Prim, tss, 1 
I remain on whom to wreak your r •• . ^31 

The captive vi ■ InMem.x: 

her brother ran m his r t" the gate Maud, II. I. 12 
With inarticulate r, and making ligtu En. Ai 



Unequal laws unto a savage 



Ulysses 



verb. ) 
R like a fire among the noblest names, Vivien 651 

as my father r in his mood . . Maud. I. i 53 

mst the public liar: . . The Let:. 

ragged. 

Too r to be fondled on her lap, . Aylmer's F. 666 



328 



CONCORDANCE TO 



ragged-robin. poem. 
Hath pick'd a r-r from the hedge, Enid . 



LINE. 

■ 7 2 4 
raging. 

The wind is r in turret and tree. . The Sisters 21 
What ! am I r alone . . . Maud, I. i. 53 
shot at, slightly hurt R return'd: Aylmer's F. 549 
She heard him r, heard him fall ; . Lucretius . 272 

raid. 
booty from the morning's r; , Enid „ 1413 

rail (s.) 
take their leave, about the garden r's Princess } Cou. 38 
In suchdiscourse we gain'd the garden r's. 11 . 80 

rail (verb.) 
To r at Lady Psyche and her side Princess, iii. 17 
He loved to r against it still, In Mem. lxxxviii. 38 
Who shall r Against her beauty ? if cxiii. 1 

fight for the good, than to rat the ill; Maud, III. vi.57 
if she had it, would she r on me . Vivien . 659 

raiVd. 
still she r against the state of things. Princess, iii. 68 

raillery* 
feigning pique at what she call'd The r,Prmcess } iv. 565 

railway. 
In the steamship, in the r, . , Lochsley H. 166 
A petty r ran .... P?'iucess, Pro. 74 

rai?nent. 
in her r's hem was traced in flame The Poet . 45 
In diverse estrange : . , . Pal. of Art 168 
In r white and clean. . . . St Agnes' Eve 24 
A woman-post in flying 7% „ . Princess, iv. 357 
Loosely robed in flying r ; . . Boddicea . 37 

rain (s) 
R makes music in the tree 
Wash'd with still r's 
Autumn r's Flash in ihe pools 
With shadow-streaks of r. 
There will not be a drop of r. 
falls not hail, orr, or any snow, 
tho' beneath a whispering r 
R, wind, frost, heat, hail, damp, 
I swear, by leaf, and wind, and r y 
Low thunders bring the mellow r, 
when the r is on the roof 
r or hail, or fire or snow ; 
winter r's that beat his grave. 
Came in a sun-lit fall of r. 
Old plash of r's, and refuse . 
The r had fallen, the Poet arose 
and now a r of pearls 

blowzed with health, and wind, and r, v iv 
ghastly thro' the drizzling r . I?i Mem. vii. 

A flower beat with r and wind, . ir viii. 15 

takes the sunshine and the r's, . it x. 14 

flakes Of crimson or in emerald r . ir xevh. 32 
and fed With honey'd r . . Ma?£d,I.xv'm. 21 
and the heavens fall in a gentle r, ir II. i. 41 
Remember what a plague of r ; . The Daisy . 50 
r at Reggio, rat Parma (rep. J • _ " ■ 5 1 



fl. Dirge . 26 
Circumstance 7 
(Euoue . 2or 

Pal. of Art ^ 76 
May Queen, i. 35 
M. d 'Arthur 260 
Gardener sD. 261 
StS. Stylites 16 
Talking O. . 81 



Lochsley H. 



270 



. Two Voices 261 
Sir L. a7id. Q. G. 4 
. Vision of Sin 212 
. Poet's Sou° . 1 
Princess, Pro. 62 
260 



before the useful trouble of the r: Enid . 1619 

in the noon of mist and driving r, Vivien . 486 

r of heaven, and their own bitter tears Aylmer's F. 428 
Tears, and the careless r of heaven, n . 429 

With ashy rs, that spreading made The Voyage 43 
Bullets fell like r ; . . . The Captain 46 

thrice I heard the r Rushing : . Lucretius . 26 
The mistand the r, the mist and the r The Window 106 

rain (verb.) 
R out the heavy mist of tears, . Love and Duty 4,$ 
lightly r from ladies' hands. . Sir Galahad 12 

To r an April of ovation . . Princess, vi. 50 

rainboiv. 
The r forms and flies on the land Sea-Fairies 25 
The r lives in the curve of the sand » . 27 

r hangs on the poising wave . n .29 

between the rand the sun. . . Margaret . 13 
leap the rs of the brooks, , . Locksley H. 171 



POEM. LINE. 

Broke, like the rfrom the shower, Two Voices 444 
Flung the torrent r round : . . Vision of Sin 32 
This flake of r flying on the highest Princess, v. 309 
like a r fall 'n upon the grass . Elaine . 430 

rain'd. 

Principles are r in blood ; ' Love iJwu thy land ',' etc. 80 
dimly r about the leaf Twilights . Audley Ct. . 80 
and there r a ghastly dew . . Locksley H. 123 
R thro' my sight its overflow . Two Voices 45 
a giant's flail, The large blows r, . Princess, v. 490 



Heavily the low sky r . 
Hold swollen clouds from r, 



. L.ofShalott,\v.$ 
. D.qfF.JVom. 11 



raise. 
Thou wilt never r thine head . A Dirge . 19 
R thysoul; Make thine heart ready Gardener sD. 26 7 
the time Is come to r the veil. . ?r . 269 

could r One hope that warm'd me Two Voices 121 
To r a cry that lasts not long, . IuMe7n.lxx'w. 10 
Sir Lancelot holp To r the Prince, Guinevere . 47 
Most can r the flowers now, . . The Flower 19 

raised. 
when I r my eyes, above 
Paris had r his arm 
She r her piercing orbs, 
rthe blinding bandage from his eyes: 
At the word, they r A tent of satin, 
r the cloak from brows as pale 
Behold a man r up by Christ ! 
r her head with lips comprest, 
R my own town against me . 
arose, and r Her mother too 
r and laid him on a litter-bier 
He rhis eyes and saw The tree . 
He r his head, their eyes met 
silk pavilions of King Arthur r 
many more when Modred r revolt 
when Annie would have r him 
'You r your arm, you tumbled down 

raiser. 
A r of huge melons and of pine, . 

raising. 
hear Her own death- scaffold r 

raked. 
And r in golden barley. 

raking. 
R in that millennial touchwood-dust Aylmer's F. 514 

Ralph. 
that was old Sir R's at Ascalon . Princess,Pro. 26 
there was R himself, A broken statue 11 . 98 

read Of old Sir R a page or two . 11 . 121 

R Who shines so in the corner . tr . 144 

the good Sir R had burnt them all — " _ . 229 

Sir R has got your colours : . . 11 iv. 571 

Disrobed the glimmering statue of Sir R tr Con. 117 

ramble. 
O me, my pleasant r's by the lake, Ed. Morris 1, 13 

rambling. 
oft in rs on the wold, . . . Miller's D. 105 

ramp. 
A lion rs at the top, . . . Maud, I. xiv. 7 
lions, crown'd with gold, R in the Elaine . 661 

ra?nf>art. 
The ranged r's bright . . .Pal. of Art. 6 

rampart-ltnes. 
designs Of his labour'd r-l . . Ode on Well. 105 



Miller's D. 


85 


GEjione 


185 


D.o/FJVom 


171 


: Princess ; i. 


240 


, tr iii. 


329 


" v. 


70 


InMem.xxxi 


13 


The Letters 


19 


Enid . 


457 


11 


535 


11 


[414 


Vivien 


787 


JElauie 


1303 


Guinevere . 


391 


11 


438 


En. Ardcn . 


231 


Sea Dreams 


137 


Princess, Con. 87 


En. Arden . 


175 


Will Water. 


128 



ran. 
R up with golden balustrade, 
did gather thunder as they r, 
With an inner voice the river r, 
in many a wild festoon R riot 
there r a row Of cloisters, 
I r by him without speaking 



. Arabian N^s. 
. The Poet . 
, Dying Swan 
. (Euone 
Pal. of Art . 



May Queen, i. 18 



TEX.VYSO.Y'S WORKS. 



3-1 



.« 



POEM. LINE. 

And r to tell her neighbours : . The Goose . 14 
A' Gaffer, stumbled Gammer. . " .34 

quickly ruse Sir Bedivere, and r, . M.d' Arthur 133 
boated over, r My craft aground Ed. Morris 108 
shrewdest pain A 1 shrivelling thro' StS.Stylites 196 
Then r she, gamesome as the colt, Talking O. . 121 
r itself in golden sands. . . LocksleyH. 32 

Young Nature thro' live cycles r. Two Voices 17 
feet that r, and doors that clapt, . Day- Dm. . 135 
A' forward to his rhyming . . Amphion . 30 
In curves the yellowing river r, . SirL andQ G.\$ 

1 its giddiest whirl of sound . VisionofSin 29 
A petty railway r: . . . Princess, Pro. 74 
so, my mother said, the story r. . 11 i. 11 

double hill r up its furrowy forks . 11 iii. 1 

a murmur r Thro' all the camp . 11 v. 106 

father heard and r In on the lists , » vi. 10 

* how changed from where it r . In Mem. xxiii. 9 
We talk'd : the stream beneath us r, .. Ixxxviii. 43 
and his river billowing r, . . Maud, I. iv. 32 
never yet so warmly r my blood . 11 xviii. 3 
her brother r in his rage to the gate, " Hi. 12 
months r on and rumour of battle " III. vi. 29 

'Run, Katie!' Katie never r: . The Brook . 87 
r thro' all the coltish chronicle, . 11 . 1,9 

in their cloth of gold R to her, . Enid . 
sister pearls R down the silken . Vivien . 305 
r the tale like fire about the court. Elaine . 730 

when the blood r lustier in himagain, n . 877 

in hurry' and fear A' to her, . . 11 1019 

on the butts While the wine r . Guinevere . 267 
whisper thro' the nunnery r 3 . " . 407 

cave rio beneath the cliff: . . En. Ardor: . 23 
merrily r the years, seven happy . 11 .81 

greet ins hc.irtv welcome . 11 . 346 

r Ev'n to the limit of the land, . •» . 578 

where the rivulets of sweet water r; ■> . 643 

all round it r a walk Of shingle . « . 737 

r By sallowy rims, . . . Aylmer's /•". 146 
when they r To loose him at the . n , 125 

Wife-hunting, is the rumour r, . n . 212 

the bright lawns to his brother's r, n . 341 

he r Beside the river bank . . ir . 450 

A* in and out the long sea-framing Sen Dreams ;t 
shrieks A' highest up the gamut, M . 226 

Far r the naked moon across . The Voyage 29 
A' the land with Roman slaughter, Bo&dicea . 84 
and r to greet him with a kiss, . Lucretius . 6 
r in, Beat breast, tore hair, ■• . 272 

rang. 
The bridle bells r merrily . L.o/Shalott,u\. 13 

wild wind r from park .iml plain, TheGoose . 4s 
juts of slippery crag that r . . M.d' 'Arthur 189 
1 two that r With tilt . . Princess, Pro. 121 

with this our banquets r: . . u i. 131 

for still my voice A' false : n iv. 103 

With Ida. Ida, Ida. r the woods ; n . 413 

R ruin, answer'd full of grief . o v. 313 

md the bourn of sunset : . » Con. 100 
round us all the thicket r . . In Mem. xxiii. 33 
echo-like our voices r ; . . 11 xxx. 13 

The hall with harp and carol r. . 11 cii. 9 

r on a sudden te . Maud,\\.\. 33 

r Clear thro* the open casement . Enid . . 327 
■ t the pavement, " . 1442 

R by the white mouth of the violent Elaine . 288 
were wed, and merrily r the bells En. A nrV«8o-507,8 
shrill'd and r, Till this was ended 11 . 175 

all the houses in the haven r. . 11 . 910 

And the ringers r with a will . Grandmotlitr 58 

range b. ) 
B ■ the r of stepping-stones, . Miller's D. 54 
R's of glimmering vaults . . D.o/E.H'om. -,5 
voice, a lyre of widest r . 

the r of lawn and park : . . The Blackbird 6 
over many a r Of waning lime . Gardener 1 
r of prospect had the mother sow, Walk.t0lhtM.Z5 
On a r of lower feelings . I ochsley II. 44 

Soft lustre bathes the r of urns . Day-Dm. . 29 
o'er them many a Bowing r . . u .185 



POEM. LI 

A patient r of pupils : . . . Princess, ii. 
day lied on thro' all Its r of duties " iii. 

Our voices took a higher r; . . InMem.xxx. 
O, therefore from thy sightless r . 11 xcfi. 

who knew the r of all their arts, . Vivien 
impute themselves, Wanting the mental ru 
beneath bis own low r of roofs . Ay-Inter's /•'. 

range [verb.) 
Thro' light and shadow thou dost r, Madeline . 
swine That r on yonder plain. . Pal. 0/ Art 
Forward, forward let us r. . . Locksley II. 
Not less the bee would r her cells, Two I meet 
r above the region of the wind, . Princess, Con 
My love shall now no further r; . InMcm Ixxx. 
r above our mortal stale, . . 11 Ixxxiv. 
To r the woods, to roam the park 11 



KB. 

89 

161 
21 

9 

-i 

676 
47 



4 

TOO 
l8l 

112 



9° 



ranged. 

the solemn palms were r Above . Arabian iVs. 79 

the Gods R in the halls ol I 1 ne . 79 

I r too high : what draws me down Will V. 'ater. 1 53 

terrace r along the Northern front Princess, iii. 102 

1 little ones have r .In Mem.xxi. 26 

A' with the Table Round . . Elaine . 466 

As down the shore he r, . . En. Arden . 589 



. Day-Dm. . ;.|'i 

. in Mem. '■ 



ranging. 
My fancy, r thro' and thro', . 
That sittest r golden hair 

Surprise thee r with thy peers . " xliii. 12 

We r down this lower track, . " xlv. 1 

some low fever r round to spy . Ay liner's E. s r i 

rank line, etc.) 

When the r's are roll'd in vapour . Locksley II. 104 

The linden broke her r's . . Amphion . 33 

tl.i I in iron burst the r's of war, . 1'r: 

Should see lb inr . /// Mem. xiv. 6 

glided winding under r's Of iris, . n cii. 2j 

rank (social position.) 
To all duties of her r: . . . L.tt/SurleigAja 
one whose r exceeds her own. . InMem.\.\. 4 
up or down Along the scale of r's, » ex. 2 

for the high r she had b'rne, . Guinevere . 687 
eldest-born of r or wealth . . Ayhner's F. 484 

rank 'verb.) 

r you nobly, mingled up with me Princess, ii. 32 

j might not r with those detestable 11 v. 448 

ranked. 
j made mc dream I r with him. . In Mem. xli. 4 

rankled. 
I V? in him and ruffled all his heart Guinevere . 50 

ransom'd. 

j richer in his eyes Who r us . . Guinevere . 677 

rapid. 

as the r of life Shoots to the fall — A Dedication 3 

rapine. 

nature is one with r . . . Maud, I. iv. 22 

wing Of that foul bird of r . . Vivien . s?3 

and the ways Were lill'd with r . Guinevere . 4^5 

rapt. 
So tranced, so r in ecstacies . . Eleiinore . 78 
I grunted ' Good ! ' but we Sat r: Mil 'Arthur, Ep. 5 
So r, we ii'j.tr'd the house ; . . Gardener'sD.i^i 
seedsman, rUpon the teeming harvest Golden i 
A' after heaven's starry flight, . Two Voices 
r thro' many a rosy change, . Day-Dm. . 187 

I all r in this, 'Come out,' he said 
peal'd the nightingale A' in her song, 

we gazing, came a voice, 
her, who r in glorious dreams, 
She r upon her subject, he on her : 
A' to the horrible fall : . 
long breezes r from inmost south . 

1 the child. . 
r in nameless reverie . 



• 1 1. 


•>7 


II 11. 


} 


It 


4") 


It 1,1. 


287 


It IV. 


1' -■ 


It 


4" 


f VI. 


203 


11 Con. 





CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

R from the fickle and the frail . In Mem. xxx. 25 
r below Thro' all the dewy-tassell'd 11 lxxxv. 5 
r in matters dark and deep . . ti xcvi. 19 
So r I was, they could not win . u cii. 49 

R in the fear and in the wonder of it; ir Enid . 529 
R in this fancy of his Table Round Elaine . 130 
r By all the sweet and sudden passion n . 281 

R on his face as if it were a God's 11 . 355 

R in sweet talk or lively, . . Guinevere . 383 



Your loss is r; 



To J. S. 



rascal. 
Tumbled the tawny rat his feet, Aylmers F. 230 
Read r in the motions of his hack Sea Dreams 163 

rash. 

R were my judgment then, . . Elaine . 239 

a crew that is neither rude nor r . The Islet . 10 

Stern he was and r; . . . The Captain 10 

rashness. 
if I should do This r, . . . Two Voices 392 

rat. 
tapt at doors. And rummaged like a ri Walk, to theM. 30 
curse me the British vermin, the r; Maud, II. v. 58 

rate. 
all men r as kind and hospitable : P7'incess t 1. 70 
r your chance Almost at naked nothing.' m . 159 

all men grew to rus at our worth, it iv. 127 

did not r him then This red-hot iron 11 v. 199 

rated. 
must have rher Beyond all tolerance Aylmer's F.-$o 

ratify. 
every voice she lalk'd with r it, . Princess, v. 127 

rating. 

like her none the less for r at her ! Princess, v. 451 

ravage. 
from her bath of storm, At random r? Lucretius 176 



rave. 
Let them r. . 

mourn and r On alien shores- 
will not hear the north-wind r s 
Drink, and let the parties r: 
And r at the lie and the liar 



A Dirge 4, et pass. 
. Dotos-E's. . 32 
. Two Voices 259 
. Vision of Sin 123 
. Maud, I. i. 60 



blasts would rise and r and cease The Voyage 85 
My father r's of death and wreck, Sailor Boy . 19 

raven. 

For a r ever croaks at my side . Maud, I. vi. 57 

the R, flying high, Croak'd . . Guitievere . 132 

Bark an answer, Britain's*?'/ . Boddicea . 13 

ravine (mountain-gorge.) 
brook falling thro* the clov'n r . (Enone . 8 
snare him in the white r, . . Princess, vii. 190 
rosy blossom in hot r, . . . The Daisy . 32 
bridge that spann'd a dry r . . Enid . 246-94 

ravine (rapine.) 
red in tooth and claw With r, . In Mem. Iv. 15 

raving. 
The wind is r in turret and tree. . The Sisters 27 

raw. 
R from the prime .... Princess, ii. 106 
one they knew — R from the nursery — AylmersF.264 

ray (s.) 
lashes like to r's Of darkness, B Arabian N's. 136 
Make a carcanet of r's, . . Adeline . 59 

neither hide the r ' Love thou thy land,* etc. 14 

Heaven flash'd a sudden jubilant r Ode on Well. 129 
morning's earliest r Might strike it Elaine . 5 
center'd in a sun Of silver r's, . ti . 296 

Ray (Surname.) 
Philip R the miller's only son . . En. Ardcn . 13 
married her who married Philip R, ir . 861 

ray (verb. ) 
R round with flames her disk of seed In Mem. c. 6 



ray-fringed. poem. line. 

ivy eyelids of the morn l Clear-fteaded friend,* etc. 6 

reach (s.) 
Beside the river's wooded r, . In Mem. Ixx. 13 

reach (verb.) 
example to mankind, Which few can rStS.Stylites 185 

r the law within the law : . . Two Voices 141 

r To each his perfect pint . . Will Water. 114 

r its fatting innocent arms . . Princess, vi. 122 

than those weird doubts could r me, 11 vii. 36 

r a hand thro' time to catch . . In Mem. i. 7 

r the glow of southern skies, . u xii. 10 

When Science res forth her arms it xxi. 18 

R out dead hands to comfort me. if lxxix. 16 

r us out the shining hand, . . it lxxxiii. 43 

Thy spirit up to mine can r; . ir Lxxxiv. 82 

Or even for intellect tor . 11 xciv. 47 

the hands That r thro' nature, . ir cxxiii. 24 

until we pass and r That other . Enid . . 855 

reached. 
music r them on the middle sea . Sea-Fairies 6 
ere she r upon the tide . L.ofShalott,W.23 

r a meadow slanting to the North ; Gardener s D. 10 7 
till I r The wicket-gate . . 11 . 207 

set out, and r the farm. . . Dora . . 126 

we rThe griffin-guarded gates, . Audley Ct. . 13 
till we r The limit of the hills ; . 11 .81 

until she r The gateway ; . . Godiva . 50 
long arms and hands R out, . Princess., i. 29 

we dropt, And flying r the frontier n . 108 

would have r you, had you been . ir iv. 417 

r White hands of farewell to my sire, 11 v. 222 

seem to have r a purer air, . In Mem. xxxiii. 2 
He r the glory of a hand, . . ir lxviii. 17 
ere we r the highest summit . The Daisy . 87 

across the bridge And r the town, Enid . . 384 
when I r this ruin'd hold, it 785 

ra hand, and on his foot . 11 1607 

when they r the camp the King . 11 . 1726 

when they r the lists By Camelot Elaine . 427 
he r the home Where Annie lived En. Arden . 685 
r A mountain, like a Avail of burrs Sea Dreams 114 
Had r a thunderous fullness . u . 207 

r the ship and caught the rope, . Sailor Boy . 3 

reaching. 
r forward drew My burthen . . Princess, iv. 173 
r thro' the night Her other. . . Sea Dreams 275 

read (pres.) 
giving light To r those laws ; . Isabel . . 19 
Oh ! teach the orphan-boy to r, L. C. V. de Vere 69 
tell me, did she r the name . . Talking O. . 153 
That r his spirit blindly wise . Two Voices 287 
They r Botanic Treatises, . . Amphiou . 77 
They r in arbours dipt and cut .11 -85 

Your riddle is hard tor,' . . Lady Clare 76 
stay'd at Christmas up to r; Princess, Pro. 176 

took one tutor as to r; . . n . 177 

r My sickness down to happy dreams r \i ii. 235 

held a volume as to r, . . . 11 . 431 

* can he not r — no books? , . 11 iii. 198 

r and earn our prize, A golden broach n . 283 

on to me, as who should say l R ' n iv. 378 

he may r that binds the sheaf, In Mem. xxxvi. 13 
Her r's the secret of the star, . it xcvi. 22 

( If I r her sweet will right) . . Maitd, I. xxi. 10 
open, find and r the charm . . Vivien . 510 

You r the book, .... it 517-26 

none can r the text, not even I ; . it . 531 

none can r the comment but myself; 11 . 532 

R my little fable: He that runs may r. The Flower 17 

read (pret.) 
round the prow they r her name, L. ofShaloti, W. 44 
A love-song I had somewhere r, . Miller's D. 6$ 
I r, before my eyelids dropt their . D, of F. Worn, x 
R, mouthing out his hollow oes . The Epic . 50 
it was the tone with which he r M. d Arthur, Ep. 5 
laugh'd, asonethatrmy thought Gardeners D. 105 
r me rhymes elaborately good . Ed. Morris 20 
I r, and fled by night 11 • 134 



TEXXYSO.VS WORK'S. 



331 



55 

• 397 
v. 363 
vii. 8 
[60 
176 



POEM. LINE. 

They flapp'd my light out as I r : . St S.Stylites 172 
I r and felt that I was there : . To E. L. . » 
r Of old Sir Ralph a page or two . Pnncess.Pro.xta 
an officer Rose up, and r the statutes 

ing, while she r 
1 r— two letters— one her sire s— 
So far I r; And then stood up and spoke 
I kiss'd it and 1 r. ... 

they talk'd, They sang, they r: . 
1 self, all in low tones, she r. . 

ire, as low, she r : . . ■■ 

fuscan poets on the lawn : lnMetn.VCCCna.a3 
I r Of that glad year ...» «av. =' 
sign your names which shall he r « Con. 57 

something R with a boy's delight, Maud, I. vii. 10 
Sat with her, r to her, night and day n 

rung, not a prayer was r; .1 
i? but one b 1 ik, and ever reading it Vivien 
and r the naked shield, . Elaine 

thinking that he r her meaning there, .1 
Lifted her eyes and r his lineaments n 
r the King's face, some the Queen's " 
Stoopt, took, brake seal, and r it ; 11 
Thus he r, And ever in the reading 11 
looking often from his face who r » 
in their eyes and faces r his doom ; En. Arden . 

lining 'wait.' •.-.," , • 57 ; 
r Writhing a letter from his child Aylmers /■■ $i>> 
r; and tore As if the living passion » -534 

R rascal in the motions of his back Sea Dreams 103 

read. 
a r's wonn sarmin a weeak, . 



all The r's together under me, 
no false passport to that easy r, 



If. LINE. 

Guinevere . a : ) 

Aylmers F. 1^3 



XIX 


75 


11. v 


24 




47^ 




16 




87 




244 




7=3 




1264 




i=73 




1277 


rden 


• 73 



reap. 

Sow the seed, and r the harvest . Lotos-Es. . 166 
To-morrow yet would r to-day 'Lovetkouthyi ■ 

, a harvest in me. . StS.Stylti 
r's not harvest of his youthful joy 
r The flower and quintessence . Day-Dtn 
perhaps might r the applause of . Prti 



r's A truth from one that loves 
r's the labour of his hands . 

reaped. 
the reapers r And the sun fell. 

reaper. 
Only r's. reaping early . 
by the moon the r weary', . 
the r's at their sultry toil, 
the r's reaped And the sun fell, 

reaping: 
Only reapers, r early 



J u Mem. xli. 
11 lx;ii. 



26 



Dora 



76-106 



The Modern Muses r, . 
Read but one book, and ever r 
ever in the r, lords and dames 
Yet bitterer from his r's : 



, L.ofSluilott.x.zi 

■ 33 

Pal. of Art 77 

Dcia . 76-106 

. L.ofShalott.l 23 
men the workers, ever r something Locksley U. 117 

En. Arden . 7=3 



. Princess, v. 472 

. /u.Uem.cxx. 2 
. Maud, 1 



I 'ivien 



. N. Farmer. 28 

reading. 
R her perfect features in the gloom, Gardener' sD. 171 
. Amphion . 76 
. Vivien . tn- 
. Elaine 1276 

. Aylmers F. 553 

ready. 
Make thine heart r with thine eyes : Gardener* sD. 26S 
1 waited long ; My brows are r. . StS.Styhtes 203 
The lists were r . . 
r, thou, to die with him, 
R in heart and r in h iul 
A' to burst in a coloured flame ; 

•: days seen, rto fall. _ . 
while she made her r f ir her ride, Elaine 
and a barge Be r on the river . " 
in a wind, r to break and fly, . Guinevere 

real. 
hated banter, wish'd for something r, Princess.Con.xS 

realist. 
Betwixt the mockers and the r's 

reality. 
Thy pain is a r.' . 

realm. 
A r of pleasancc, . . 

• upland, prodigal in oil, 
shall hold a fretful rin aw 

■liters other r's of love :. 



9 
19 

M5 
775 
1117 
363 



Princess,Con. 24 

, Two roues 387 

, Arabian .Vs. 101 
. Pal. of Art 7) 
. Locksley if. 129 
. In. Mem. xxxix. 1: 
Maud.U.'w. 



from me r j, 01 ngiu .him s.„, , ....... -- 

, g >■' s and kings from shame; Ode on Will. 68 



all wh • Old. "J 1'tytls 11 

• Enid . 39, 1743 

1 ught single 
the trai I le is r's of Lyonnesse, 

in Worth half her r, 
half in , • • " 

:i.;e oi half a r . ■ ." 

mine own r beyond the narrow 
shrine which then ill all tin- r W.i in 



rear(s.) 
from the r of Philip's house . 

rear (verb.) 
She shall r my dusky race. . 
Her office there to r, to teach, 
rear'd. 
Freedom r in that august sunrise 
Who took a wife, who r his race, 
( )ne r a font of stone And drew, . 

itues A", sung to, 
the babe, who r his creasy arms . 

reason (s.) 
He uttcr'd rhyme and r, . _ . 
God knows : he has a mint airs: 
Nor any train of r keep : . 
and the beginning vex His r; 
men, whose r long was blind 
We lack not rhymes and r's 
prophesying change Beyond all r 
' worthy r's why she should Dide 
r's drawn from age and state, 
thcui, that COUntest r ripe 
Thy ransom'd r change replies . 
r why I seem to cast 
The freezing r's O Wer part . 
Albeit I give no r but my wish . 
1 No r given her she could cast . 
no r why we should not wed.' 
when shutting r's up in rhythm, . 
reason (verb.) 
Their's not to r why, . 

rebclCd. 
till the maid R against it, . 

rebloom'd. 
Gathcr'd the blossom that r, 

rebuke. 
eighty winters freeze with one r . 

recall. 
A".t, in change oflight or 

.. mseh es cannot r their gifts 



Locksley H. 168 

In Ml in. xxxix. 13 

The Poet . 37 
Two Voices ■ 3*3 
Princtss,Pro. 59 

11 v. 404 

En. Arden . 752 



Elaine 



Sir Modred ! I 'he , 

and h 1, and r . 

mmon grief of all therr 
what has falln upon the r>' 
the knighthood-errant ol I 



Guinevere 



1765 

• 36 

• 73 

• 954 
ns8 
1313 
J 320 

• 152 

• >95 

• 215 
. 271 

• 453 



receive. 
whoso did r of them 
thy shoulders to r my weight, 
1 love the truth ; R it; 
God accept him, Christ r him. 
A", and yield me sanctuary, . 

received. 
R and gave him welcome there 
R at oni •■ and laid aside the gems. 
like one that had r a blow : . 

reciting. 
One walked r by herself 



The Goose . 6 
The Epic . 33 
T-.uo I 'oices . 50 

. 370 

Will Water. 62 

1'rir.cess, i. 142 

11 v. 315 

•...347 

fnMetn.xxxui.13 

11 by. 2 

11 cxi. 6 

11 exxiii I I 

Enid . . r t 

rden . 504 
Lucretius . 220 

LI. Brigade 14 

Elaine . 64S 

Aylmers F. 142 

e Well. 1 06 

InMetn.lxxxiv.j* 
iiits . .;) 

M.d'Artkti 
Print Mr, ii < • 

Guinevere . 140 



.iV,j Dreams 157 

. Princess, ii. 430 



33 2 



CONCORDANCE TO 



reckling. 
there lay the r, one, But one hour 


POEM. 

Vivien 


LINE. 

• 559 


reckon. 
heart Would r worth the taking . 
I r's I 'annot sa mooch to lam 
summun I rs 'ull 'a to wroite, 


Vivien 
N. Fanner 
11 


. 766 
13 

• 57 


reckoning. 
'Thy r, friend?' and ere helearnt it, 


Enid . 


1257 


reclined. 
On silken cushions half r ; . 
to live and lie r On the hills 
As by the lattice you r . 


Elednore 
Lotos-E's. 
Day -Dm. 


. 126 

• 154 

• 5 


reclining. 
with pain, r on his arm, 

reclothes. 
Clothes and r the happy plains ; . 


M. d'A rtk 
Day- Dm. 


■iri6S 
. 22 


recognise. 
scarce can r the fields I know ; 


St S. Stylites 39 


recollect. 

We do but r the dreams that come Lucretius 


- 35 



reco m m e?iced. 
A little ceased, but r. . 
Poor fellow, could he help it? r, . 
r, and let her tongue Rage . 

reconcile. 

The Gods are hard tor: 

reconciled. 
Nor did mine own now r; . 
friends for her sake, to be r! 



Ttvo Voices 318 
The Brook . 158 
Vivien . 650 

Lotos-E's. . 126 



. Princess, vii. 73 
Maud,!, xviii. 50- 56 

reconcilement, 
difference, r, pledges given, . Gardener' sD. 252 

while I melt ; make r sure . . Princess, vi. 26S 

record. 
Whereof this world holds r. . . M. a" Arthur 16 
What r, or what relic of my lord . 11 .98 

shaping faithful r of the glance Gardener'sD. 173 
Sponged and made blank ofcrimefulr^S'AS' Stylitesi$6 
in division of the rs of the mind ? Lockslcy H. 69 
caught within the r of her wrongs, Princess, v. 137 
There lives no r of reply, . . In Mem. xxxi. 6 
What r? not the sinless years . 11 li. 11 

Whatever r leap to light . . Ode on Well. 190 

recorded. 
each at other's ear What shall not be r Enid 1483 

recovering. 
while he lay r there, . . . En. Arden . 108 

Rector. 
Long since, a bygone R of the place, Aylmer sF. it 

Rectory. 

Averill Averill at the R . . Aylmer's E. 37 
so that R and Hall Bound 11 38 



recurring 



R and suggesting still ! 



Will 



red. 



14 

65 

26 

82 

253 

348 
1S7 
15 

5 

74 

339 

523 

1516 

with graver fits, Turn ror pale . Vivien . 37 

K as the rising sun with heathen blood, Elaine 308 
York's white rose as r as Lancaster's Aylmer's F. 51 
Blues and r's They talk'd of: . 11 . 251 

praised the waning rand told The vintage u . 406 

She blush'd a rosy r, The Ringlet 36 

Paie he turn'd and r, . . . The Captain 62 



all dark and r — a tract of sand, . Pal. of Art 
As I have seen the rosy r flushing Locksley H. 
No pint of white or r . . . Will Water. 
bickers into r and emerald . . Princess, v. 
perforce He yielded, wroth and r, \\ 

r with spirted purple of the vats, 11 vii. 

Nature, r in tooth and claw . In Mem, lv. 

ttfemblest thro' thy darkling r . t xcviii. 
And blossom in purple and r. Maud, 1. xxii. 
coppice gernm'd with green and r, Enid 
r and pale Across the face of Enid 
turn'd all r and paced his hall 



redcap. poem. line. 

The r whistled ; and the nightingale Garde?ier i sD 94 

red-cross. 
A r-c knight for ever kneel'd L. ofShalott, iii. 6 

redden. 
Sad as the last which r's over one Princess, iv. 28 



and his anger r's in the heavens ; 
He r's what he kisses : 
These leaves that r to the fall 
cheek begins to r thro' the gloom, 

redden d. 
this was what had r her cheek 

r with no bandit's blood : 



hi Mem. 3 
Ti thou us 



367 



14 
37 



Maud, I. xix. 65 
Aylmer's F. 597 



reddening, 
r in the furrows of his chin . . Princess, vi. 211 
r in extremity of delight . . Enid . 1068 

Sir Aylmer r from the storm within, Aylmer 's F.^12. 

redder. 
whole hill-side was r than a fox. Walk, to the M. 3 
r than a windy morn ; . . Princess. Con. 91 

When the red rose was r than itself, Aylmer's F. 50 

redeem. 
that From which I would r you ; Princess, iv. 487 

redeemed. 
R it from thechargeof nothingness M.d' Arthur ,Ep, 7 

red-faced, 
r-f war has rods of steel . . Pri?icess, v. 114 

red-hot. 
This r-h iron to be shaped with blows. Princess, v. 200 

redound. 
not without r Of use and glory . Princess, u. 28 

redress. 
What hope of answer, orr? . . In Mem. lv. 27 
Ring in r to all mankind . . » cv. 12 

redress' d. 
prowess done r a random wrong 

redressing. 
glory was, r human wrong ; 
ride abroad r human wrongs ! 
ride abroad r human wrongs, 

red-ribbed. 
The r-r ledges drip . . . Maud, I. i. 



Guinevere . 456 



Ded.oj Idylls 8 
Vivien . 543 

Guinevere . 468 



From the r-r hollow behind the wood 1 



II. i. 



reed, 
r's blown from his silver tongue, . The Poet . 13 
wavy swell of the soughing r's, . DyingSwan 38 
heard the ripple washing in the r's, M.d Arthur 70,117 
What rwas that on which I leant ? In Mem.lxxxiii. 45 
low morass and whispering r, . if xcix. 6 

iris, and the golden r; . . . 11 cii. 24 

and watch'd The high r wave . Elaine 1381 

at twilight in aland of r' s. . . Coquette, i. 14 

reed-tops. 
And took the r-t as it went. . . Dying Swan 10 

reef. 
In roarings round the coral r In Mem. xxxvi. 16 
roller thundering on the r, . . En. Arden . 585 
in the water, a long r of gold, . Sea Dreams 123 
Wreck'd on a r of visionary gold.' 11 . 135 

reel. 

The horse and rider r . . . Sir Galahad 8 
They r, they roll in clanging lists, n . 9 

Earth R's, and the herdsmen cry ; Princess, v. 518 
R's, as thegolden Autumn woodland r J su vii. 336 

When all my spirit r's . . . Maud, II. iv. 20 
We felt the good ship shake and r The Voyage 13 

reeVd. 

part r but kept their seats ; . . Princess, v. 485 

R from the sabre-stroke . . Lt. Brigade 35 

And pale he turn'd, and r, . . Guinevere . 302 

in the middle aisle R, . . . Aylmer's F. S19 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



re-fathor'd. toe:.:. line. 
stoop'd, r o'er my wounds. . . Princess, vi. 113 

reflect. 
love r's the thing beloved ; . . In Mem. li. 2 
each r'j a kindlier day ; . . 11 xcix. iS 

reflex. 

The mcllow'd r of a winter mooR ; Isabel . . 29 

1 'lie r of a beauteous form, . . Miller's D. . 77 

The r of a legend past, . . Day-Din. . 1 1 

The r of a human face . . . InMem.cvW. 12 

Reform. 
R, White Rose, Bellerophon . Tie Brook . 161 

refraction. 
Such r of events .... InMem.xcl. 15 

refrain. 
We revere, and we r . . 0<zV on Well. 24O 

refrained. 
r From cv'n a word, . . Enid . .213 

refresh'd. 
leave thee freer, till thou wake r, Love and Bitty 94 

re//, 
heathen caught and r him of his tongue Elaine 273 

refuse (s. ) 
r patch'd with moss. . . . Vision of Sin 212 

refuse (verb. ) 
nor did mine own R her proffer . Princess, vi. 327 

refused. 
Nor yet 7- the rose, but granted it Gardener's D. 157 
A 5 her to him, then his pride awoke ; Enid . . 44SS 

regard. 

R the weakness of thy peers : 'Love thou thy land, ' 24 
R gradation, lest the soul Of Discord 11 . C7 

ulalaniMagazines.riiic rather— Hendecasyllaiicsi 7 

regarded. 
Remorsefully r thro' his tears, . M.d' Arthur 171 
daughters in the pool : for none R ; Princess, v. 320 
many past, but none r her, . . Enid . 1369 
woman's love. Save one, he not r, Elaine . 837 

regarding. 

Droops both his wings, r thee, . Eleanors . 119 

we with blind surmise R . . Princess, iv. 

anyone. A", well had dcem'd . En. Arden . 712 

Reggie. 

rain at R, rain at Parma ; . . Tlte Daisy . 51 

region. 

Within this r I subsist. ' You ask memhy.' etc. 2 

girt the r with high cliff . . Vision of Sin 47 

range above the r of the wind Princess, Con. 112 

ng of wind the r swept, . InMem. Ixxvii. 6 

/•'i of thy rest'/' . . Maud. II. iv. 88 

the while thro' all the r round . Elaine . 612 

1 rode all round The r: . . 11 . 706 

registered. 

Arc rand calendar'd fur saints. . St S.Stytiles 130 

regret. 

Love is made a vague r. . . Miller's D. 210 

wild with all r ; . . . . Princess, iv. 3; 

So seems it in my deep r, . . In Mem.\u\. 17 

. decease, . . .1 xxix. 3 

aid light r's that come . ir xxxix. 7 

'•, rcandiel ..." Ixxvii. 17 

pure image of r. . . <• ci. 24 

my r Become! an April violet, . " cxiv. 18 

Is it, then, r for buried time . 11 cxv. 1 

r: the face will shine . ir -9 

embalm In dying songs a dead r, » Con. 14 

is more . " -17 

love and reverence and r . . OdeonWtl 

regret (verb.) 
and r Her parting step . . Elaine . 862 

regular. 

Faultily faultless, icily r, . . Maud, I. li. 6 



rehearse. i. line 

This truth within thy mind r, . Two Voices 25 

reign 

lips whereon perpetually did r . Isabel . . 7 

I shall r for ever over all." . Love and Death 15 

'A* thou apart, a quiet king, . Pal. of Art 14 

you shall r The head and heart . Princess, Hi. 146 

Then r the world's great bridals, 11 vii. 278 

the worst were that man he that r's ! Guinevere 510 

reigned. 
A kinder influence r; . . . Princess, vii. 5 

reigning. 
him, that other, r in his place, . En. Arden . 764 

rein. 
sv.ay'd The r with dainty fmger-tips,5;>Z..rtW(p.C7. 41 

reined. 

Edyrn r his charger at her side, . Enid . 1668 

reinsjiired. 
With youthful fancy r, . . Ode to Mem. 114 

reissuing. 

whence r, robed and crown'd . Godiva . 77 

rejected. 
lie should not be r. . . . Aylmer's F. 422 

rejection. 
with hands of wild r ' Go I '— . Ed. Morris 124 

rejoice. 

As when a mighty people r . . Dying Swan 31 
in her place she did r, ' OJ old sat Freedom,' etc. 5 

Than him that said 'Rl rl' . Two Voices 4C2 

Thus her heart r's greatly, . . L. of Burleigh 41 

1 have thee still, and Ir; . In Mem. exxix. 14 

a joy in which I cannot r, . . Maud, I. v n 

A people's voice, when they r . Ode on Well. 146 

Roll and r, jubilant voice, . W.toAlexan. 22 

rejoiced. 

in their common love r Getaint . Enid . . 23 
suddenly she knew it and r, . 11 687 

while the women thus r . , ti . . - | 

Never man r More than Gcraint . 11 . . 771 

rejoicing. 
feel My purpose and r in my joy ' Guinevere . 4S3 
notgrievrngat yonrjoys, Hut not r; " 
R at that answer to This prayer. . En. Arden . 1.7 

relate. 
As old mythologies r, . 

relation. 
That bears r to the mind. 
Her deep r's are the same, . 

relaxed. 

their law R its hold upon us . 

release (s.) 
can't be long before I find r; . May Queen, in. ti 

release (verb. ) 
R me, and restore me to the ground ; Tithonus 72 

released. 
1 arose, and I r The casement, . Two Voices 403 
relent. 

learning this, the bridegroom willr. Guinevere . 170 

reliance. 
Those, in whom he had r . . Tlte Caf tain n 

relic. 
What record, or what r of my lord M. d'Ar!.'. 
I will leave my r's in your land, . StS 
Such precious r's brought by thee ; InMem xvii. i3 
some stolen, some as r's kept. . Vivien . 303 

relief. 

on thy bosom, (deep-desired r!) . I.nvrand Putyta 

That sets the past in this r! . InMem xxiv. 12 

In verse that brings myself r, . 11 body. 2 

Demanding, so to bring r . .11 lx.xx.iv. 6 



. Two Voices 349 
. Two Voices 177 

. In Mint. Ixxvii. 19 
. Guinevere . 454 



334 



CONCORDANCE TO 



relish (s.) poem. line. 

Had r fiery-new, .... Will Water. 98 

re-listen, 
seems, as I r to it, Prattling . The Brook . 18 

relive. 
Can I but r in sadness ? . , Locksley H. 107 

remade. 
R the blood and changed the frame InMem.Con. 11 

remain. 

there like a sun r Fix'd — 
Let what is broken so r. . , 
And what r's to tell. . . > 
of one to me Little r's: . 
Those lonely lights that still r, 
Here all things in their place r, . 
Iron whom to wreak your rage, 
this question of your troth r's : 
r Orb'd in your isolation ; 
One writes, that ' Other friends r,' 
what to me r's of good ? 
what are they when these r, 
My shame is greater who r, . 
R"s the lean P. W. on his tomb : . 
her name will yet r Untarnish'd . 
now r's Bu t little cause for laughter: 
but of others who r, . . 

we must r Sacred to one another.' 

remained. 
ramong us In our young nursery 
I r, whose hopes were dim, . 
-r Apart by all the chamber's width, 
there snapt, and r. 
there that day r, and toward even 
I woke, but still the wish r. . 
Lancelot ever promised, but r 

remaining. 
R utterly confused with fears, 
You love, r peacefully, . 
R betwixt dark and bright : . 
cry for strength, r weak, 
r there Fixt like a beacon-tower 
thou r here wilt learn the event ; 
The two r found a fallen stem ; 

remains. 
"With my lost Arthur's loved r, 



Elednore . 


Q2 


Lotos-E's. . 


12^ 


Tacking O . 


204 


Ulysses 


26 


Two Voices 


83 


Day -Dm. . 


73 


Princess, iv. 


SSi 


ir v. 


269 


IT VI. 


IS2 


In Mem. vi. 


I 


n . 


42 


tf Ixxv. 


15 


II CV11X. 


2S 


The Brook . 


I92 


Enid . 


Soo 


Elaine 


5Q4 


Guinevere . 


320 



Aylmer's F. 425 

Princess* iv. 312 
luMem.lxxxiv . 29 
Enid . 1114 

Elaine . 489 

" . 971 

Tf I042 

Guinevere . 93 

Pal. of Art 269 

Margaret . 21 
n .28 

Two Voices 95 

Princess, iv. 471 

Guinevere . 572 

En. Arden . 568 

In Mem. ix. 3 



rcmaineth. 

The rest r unreveal'd : . . .In Mem. xxxi. 14 

re-make. 

gathering at the base R's itself, . Guinevere . 604 

remand. 

r it thou For calmer hours . . LoveaudDutyB6 

remark. 

least r was worth 'The experience Ed. Morris . 65 

remarked. 

r The lusty mowers labouring . Enid . 1099 

remble. 

a niver r's the stoans . . . N. Parmer . 60 

rembled. 

an raaved an' r un oot. . . N. Farmer . 32 

remedy. 

There is one r for all. . . Two Voices 165,201 

re7nember. 

For you *', you had set . . . Miller's D. . 81 

How sadly, I r, rose the morning MayQueen, iii. 3 

times when I r to have been Joyful D, of F. Worn. 79 

Oh yet but I r, ten years back . XVatk.tothe M.42 

I r one that perish' d : . . . Locksley H. 71 

Such a one do I r, . . . ir . 72 

As one before, r much, . . . Two Voices 356 

I r, when I think That my youth Vision of Sin 77 

We rlove ourselves (v. 198) . . Princess, i. 121 

'Does my old friend r me?' . . fnMem.ixiii. 28 

That yet rs his embrace, . . ti lxxxiv. ui 

I r the time, for the roots of mv . Maud, I. i. 13 



POEM. LINE. 

Maud,l.vi. 88 

it II. ii. 66 

Ode on Well. iyt 

11 . 177 

The Daisy . 50 

. 69 

Enid . . 571 

En. A rdett . 233 

Grandmother 21 

The Epic . 46 

Princess,Pro. 190 

ir iv. 70 

It V. 464 

Enid . 1460 

En. Arden . 382 



She r's it now we meet. 

1 r, I, When he lay dying there . 

R him who led your hosts ; . 

rail He spoke among you 

R what a plague of rain ; 

R how we came at last To Como ; 

R that great insult done the Queen,' 

how should the child R this?' 

I ra quarrel I had with your father, 

remembered. 

I r Everard's college fame . 

She r that : A pleasant game, 

I rone myself had made, 

I r that burnt sorcerer's curse 

he r her, and how she wept 

r one dark hour Here in this wood 

rememberest. 
thou r how In those old days . M..d' Arthur 28 

remembering. 
R the day when first she came, . 
crown of sorrow is r happier things. 
R its ancient heat. 
R how we three presented Maid ♦ 
will beat my girl R her mother 
R his ill-omen'd song ; . 
R all his greatness in the Past 
R all the beauty of that star . 
R when first he came on her 
r her old ruin'd hall, 
r Her thought when first she came, 
r His former talks with Edith, 
R her dear lord who died for all, . 



Dora . . 104 

Locksley H. 76 

Tivo Voices 423 

Princess, i. 193 

11 v. 86 

it vi. 143 

Ode on Well. 20 

Dcd. of Idylls 45 

Enid . 140,842 

1103 

Guinevere . 179 

Aylmer's F. 456 

Sea Dreams 47 



remergzng. 
R in the general Soul . . . In Mem. xlvi. 4 

remiss. 

She had not found me so r; . . Talking O. 193 

remit. 
She takes, when harsher moods r, In Mem. xlvii. 6 

remnant 
a r stays with me. And of this r Guinevere . 440 

remodel. 
why should any man R models ? The Epic . 38 

remorse. 
You held your course without r, L. C. V. de Vcre. 45 



Dora 
Enid . 
Vivien 



In Mem. Pro. 37 
11 xiii. 10 

Gardener's D. 1 59 
Two Voices 82 
Princess, iv. 389 
11 v. 289 

/;/A/W/?.xxxvii.i6 
Maud, I. xx, 48 
Ode on Well. 44 



all the man was broken with r 
without r to strike her dead . 
the one dark hour which brings r, 

removed. 
Forgive my grief for one r, 
An awful thought, a life r, . 

render. 
statue-like, In act to r thanks. 
Will thirty seasons r plain . 
R him up unscath'd 
loth to r up My precontract . 
r human love his dues ; 
?■ All homage to his own darling . 
R thanks to the Giver, (rep.) 
r him to the mould 
gave the diamond : she will r ij; . 

rendered. 

She r answer high : 

Survive in spirits r free, 

in my charge, which was not r to him; Enid 

Arthur's wars were r mystically, . Elaine 

rendering. 
Not r true answer, 

renew. 
Would God r me from my birth . Miller's D 
with the sun and moon r their light Pri?icess, i 
wilt r thy beauty morn by morn . TitJionus 

renewed. 
The maid and page r their strife, . Day-Dm. 



161 
958 
613 



Elaine 



7°9 



D.ofF. Worn. 202 
InMem.xxxviii. 10 

452 

797 

M. d Arthur 74 
. 27 

L 238 
• 74 

- 145 



TEiV.VYSOy'S WORKS. 



335 



POEM. LINE. 

a wi-h r, When two years after . En. Arden . 88 

sad kiss by day by night r . 11 .161 

her new child was as herself r, . •> . 519 

I beating with a heart r. . Titlwnus . 36 

rentrwn. 
Of me you shall not win r: . . L.C.V.deVere 2 
I of just and old r, ' You ask vie ■why,' etc. to 

no more of bis r, . . Ode on Well. 273 

rent (s, ) 
Were living nerves to feel the r; . Ay/liner's F. 536 

rent (verb.) 
who would r the hall. . . . Audley Ct. . 30 

rent 'prct. of rend.) 
An inner impulse r the veil . . Two Voices 10 
woodbine wreaths that bind her, A mpltion . 33 
r The wonder of the loom . . Princess, i. . 60 

rent roll. 
The r Cupid of our rainy isles . Ed Morris 103 

re-orient. 
The life rout of dust . . . InJIfem.cxv. 6 

repaid. 
money can be r; Not kindness . En. Arden . 319 

repiist. 
For brief r or afternoon repose . Guinevere . 392 

repay. 
Why then he shall r me— . . En. Arden . 309 
He will r you: money can be repaid 11 . 319 

repeal. 
naked thro' the town, And I r it' Godiva 



repeat. 
I must needs r for my excuse 



3° 



. Princess, iii. 36 

repeated. 
R, muttering 'cast away and lost En. Arden . 716 

repeating', 

h.ilf the night r, 'must I die?' . Elaine . 895 
R, till the word we know so well . 11 1022 

eyes upon her A' all be wish'd, . En. Arden . 905 

repent. 

1 r me of all I did . . . . Ed. Gray . 23 

world will not believe a man r*s : . Enid . 1748 

Full seldom does a man r, . .11 . 17SO 

hthadwe: fir that we dor; Guinevere . 169 

;, heaven, for surely I r . •• . 370 
or in the waste • R ! ' . . . Ay liner's F. 742 

repentance. 
what is true r but in thought . Guinevere . 371 

replied. 

: his song, and I rwith mine:/! udley Ct. . 55 

and in low tones n Vision o/Sin 20 

her duty was to speak, . Princess, iii. 135 

1 I ollow'd : the king r not : , n vi. 292 

replieth. 
The hollow grot r. Clarilel , 20 

reply (s.) 

waiting decision, made r. . . Q7.none . J41 

'1 > no murmur of r. . Pal. of Art. 286 

my disdain is my r. . . . L.C.V.deVereai 

sweet eyes, your low replies: ■ •• .29 

I heard him make r . . Talking 0. . 25 

I irteous words return'd r: . llay-Dm. . 162 

irdofr, . In A/cm. xxxi. 6 

Thy ran • replies 11 Ix. 2 

ight of low replies. . . Maud, II. iv, 30 

not to make r, . . . /./. Brigade 1 s 

1 in r, . Enid . 

I the heaving shoulder Vivien 144 

in her moan'd r . . En. Arden . 285 

reply (verb.) 

my Melpomene replies , /uMentxxwU. 9 

I t thou to r; . , . Maud, II. iii. 7 

the brook, why not ? replies. , The llreol. . 22 



replying. 
let us hear the purple glens r: 



I'OKM LINE 

. Princess, iii. 358 

report (s.) 
In this r, this answer of a king . Princess, i. (•) 
If one should bring me this r, . InMeiu.xw. 1 
Vniol made r Of that good mother Enid . . 756 

reported. 
R who he was, and on what quest Elaine . 625 

reporting. 
R of his vessel China-bound, . En. Arden . 122 

repa, 
sick man's room when hetaketh r' A spirit 'haunts 1 14 
Her manners had not that r E. C. V. de Vere 39 
brief repast or afternoon r . . Guinevere . 392 

reposed. 

God gave her peace ; her land r; To the Queen 26 

like a fruitful laud r; . . . Locksley H. 13 

A void where heart on heart r; , in Mem. xiii. 6 



reposing. 

His state the king r keeps. . 



Day-Din. . 59 



repression. 
what sublime r of himself, . . Ded. of Idylls i3 

reproach (s.) 
may worship me without r ; . . SIS. Stylites 190 
Thro' light res, half exprest In Mem. Ixxxiv. 15 
never spake word of r to me, . Elaine . 125 

name shames me, seeming a r, 11 1394 

fell on her Sharp as r. . . . En. Arden 

reproach verb.) 
the poor cause that men A' you . Enid . . £8 

reproof. 
Presses bis without r . . L.oJ Burleigh to 

[ was prick'd with some r, . . Enid . 1738 
I have not lack'd thy mild >; ' My li/e tsjull,' eh . 4 

refrove. 

Was it gentle to r her . . , Maud, I. xx. 8 

republic. 

The vast R's that may grow, . Day-Din. . 227 

Revolts, r*s, revolutions . Princess, Con. < ^ 

the black r on his elms . , Aylmer's !•'. 529 

repulsed. 
being r Ey Yniol and yourself. 



1670 



Enid 
repute. 
bore a knight of old r to the earth, Elaine .41 

repuU d. 

R the best knight and goodliest man, Guinevere 37 ) 

request. 

at my r He brought it : . . The Epic . 47 

' To what r for what strange boon Vivien . 113 

required. 

Heroic seems our Princess as r Princess, Pro. 223 

public use r she should be known ; " iv. 317 

men r that 1 should give throughout 11 Con. 10 

requiring, 

R, tho' I knew it was my own Gardener's D. 222 
A' at her hand the greatest gift, . 11 . 214 

re-reiterated. 
grant my r-r wish, . . . Vivien . 203 

Re-risen. 

content R-r in Katie's eyes . . The Brook . if) 

>. . :te. 
Flights, terrors, sudden r't, . 

rest 
thou r in thy place of light . 

resemlles. 
And so my wealth r's thine, 



. Aylmer's /•'. pg 
. Guinevere . 521 
Tn .l/V/K.lxxviii. 17 



not to pry and peer on your r . Princess, i. 
Such flue r, and noble retieence . Enid . 



336 



CONCORDANCE TO 



reserved. poem. line. 

in my grief a strength r. . InMemAxxxw, 52 

resigned. 
pray'd for both, and so I felt r, May Queen, in. 31 
Asks what thou lackest, thought r, Two Voices 98 

resmooth. 
wavLi of prejudice R to nothing : Princess, ill. 225 

resolderd. 
r peace, whereon Follow'd his tale. Princess, v. 45 

resolution. 
Dispersed his r like a cloud. 

resolve (s.) 
'Hard task, to pluck r,' I cried, , 
Assurance only breeds r.' 
many a holy vow and pure r. 
Ji is r Upbore him, and firm faith, 
His gazing in on Annie, his r 

resolve (verb.) 
turn thee round, r the doubt ; 
Nor can my dream r the doubt : . 

resolved. 
start in pain R on noble things, . 
Here she woke, R, sent for him . 

resort. 

The Cock, To which I most r, 
resound. 
solemn chaunts r between. . 
Milton, a name to r forages ; 

respect. 

some r, however slight, was paid . Princess, ii. 120 



Elaine 



Two Voices 118 

" * 315 

Elaine . 875 

En. Arden . 800 

11 . 864 

In Mem. xlni. 14 
ti lxvii. 12 

D. ofF. Worn. 42 
En. Arden 503 



Will Water. 2,210 

. Sir Galahad 36 
. Milton . 4 



response. 
Then did my rclearer fall . 



Two Voices 34 



responsive. 

Queenly r when the loyal hand . Aylmer's F. 169 

rest (repose.) 
dreams softer than unbroken r . Ode to Mem. 29 
Nor unhappy, nor at r, . . Adeline . 4 

Fold thine arms, turn to thy r. . A Dirge . 3 
There is no r for me below . ^ . Oriana . 3 
beat against me, In sorrow and in r; Aimer's D. 178 
seem'd to float in r . . . CEnone . 18 
have attain' d R in a happy place . n . 129 

and the weary are at r. . . May Queen, iii. Co 

All things else have r(rep.) . . Eotos-E's . 59 
Give us long r or death, if .98 

Sleep full of r from head to feet : . To y. S. . 75 
caught me up into thyr, . . StS.Stylites 18 
And shadow'd all her r — . . Talking O. 226 
get thee to thy r again. . . Locksley H. 86 

my latest rival brings" thee r. . 11 . 89 

toward the stillness of his r. . ir . 144 

long disquiet merged in r. . . Two Voices 249 
A perfect form in perfect r. . . Day-Dm. . 100 
That her spirit might have r. E. of Burleigh 100 
Nor any want-begotten r. . InMem.xxy'u. 12 
surely r is meet ... 11 xxx. 18 

I know that in thy place of r . n lxvi. 2 
wakens at this hour of r . . i» ciii. 6 
To the regions of thy rV . Maud, II. iv. 88 

dear soul, let trouble have r, . n. III. vi. 12 
nation weeping, and breaking on my r? Ode on Well.82 
Go thou to thy r, but ere thou go to rEnid . . 512 
Half disarray'd as toherr, . . 11 . . 516 
without answer to herr She found no r t \\ . . 530 
will charm us both tor . . Vivien . 181 

Love Should have some r . . n . 335 

small r or pleasure in herself, . 11 . 340 

R must you have.' ' No r for me,' Elaine . 828 

near you, fair lord, I am at r.' . it . 829 

found no ease in turning or in r.' . if . 897 

that's all, and long for r . . Grandmother 99 
nobler yearning never broke her r Coquette, ii. 2 
Had r by stony hills of Crete . On a Mourner 35 



rest (remainder. ) poem. line. 
* These words,' I said, ' are like the r, Two Voices 334 
' He began, The r would follow, Princess, Pro. 197 
So I be^an And the r followed . 11 . 236 

beckon'd us : the r Parted ; . n ii. 165 

mix not with the r; 11 . 339 

rest (verb.) 
on the stone, R's like a shadow, . CEnone . 27 
r thee sure That I shall love thee it . 156 

Oh r ye, brother mariners, . . Eotos-E's. . 173 
came To r beneath thy boughs. . Talking 0.36,156 
fairer fruit of Love may r tt . 251 

no more shall rin mounded heaps, Golden Year 32 
I cannot r from travel : . . Ulysses . 6 

Thedoubt would r, I dare not solve. Two Voices 313 
Passing the place where each must r. tr .410 

Here r's the sap within the leaf, . Day-Dm. . 23 
will not let his ashes r! ' You might have won, 1 etc. 28 
sleep and r, sleep and r, . . Princess, ii. 464 
R, r, on mother's breast 11 . 466 

Said Ida ; 'let us down and r; 1 . if iv. 3 

this proud watchword r Of equal ; tt vii. 282 

To r beneath the clover sod . . In Mem. x. 13 
Among familiar names to r . . 11 xviii. 7 
I sing to him that r's below, . tr xxi. 1 

'They r,* we said, 'their sleep is . tt xxx. 19 
r's upon the Life indeed. . . tt xxxii. 8 

It r's with God 11 Jxxii. 12 

My heart, tho' widow d, may not r 11 lxxxiv. 113 
Who r to-night beside the sea . 11 Con. 76 
the happy shores By which they r u . 121 

There he shall rfor ever . . Ode on Well. 51 
rove in following or r On Enid . Enid . . 399 
I could r, a rock in ebbs and flows 11 . . £12 
therefore, I do r, A prophet . .it . .813 
to r awhile within her court, . 11 . '7°3 

Should rand let you r . . . Vivien . 184 

I love you somewhat ; r: . it . 334 

after my long voyage I shall rV Elai7ie . 1055 

sighing ' let me r* she said : . En. Arden . 372 

a name ! r, rot in that ! . . Aylmer's F. 385 

Birdie, r a little longer (rep.) . Sea Dreams 285 
To r in a golden grove, . . Wages . 9 

rested. 
And r from her labours. . . The Goose . 16 

gain'd the hall, and there R : . Princess, vi. 333 
r with her sweet face satisfied ; . Enid . . 776 
r, and her desolation came Upon 11 . 1367 

r well content that all was well . 11 . 1800 

But r in her fealty " 1815 

Nor rthuscontent, but day by day Elaine . 13 

Philip r with her well-content ; . En. Arden . 373 
Enoch r silent many days. 11 . 700 

resting. 
R weary limbs at last . . . Eotos-E's. . 170 
Porch-pillars on the lion r; . . The Daisy . 55 

resting-place. 
come again, mother, from out myr-fi May Queen, n. 37 

restless. 
Passionately rcame and went . Aylmer's F. 546 

restore. 
Release me, and rme to the ground Tilhonus __ . 72 
ghost of passion that no smiles r — Coquette, ii. 11 

restored 
tho' he built upon the babe r; . Princess, vii. 60 

restraint. 
I spoke without r, Talking O. 14 

result (s.) 

Deep-chested music, and to this r. The Epic . 51 

age to age With much the same r. Walk, totheM.yz 

and the long r of Time ; . . Eocksley H. 12 

The slow r of winter showers. . Two Voices 452 

But for some true r of good . . Will Water. 55 

r.corn The long r of love . . In Mem. i. 14 

self-infolds the large r's . . 11 Ixxii. 15 

that serene r of all.' . . . tr lxxxiv. 92 

old r's that look like new: . . 11 exxvii. n 

O, the r's are simple : . . . Vivien . 534 



TENiVYSOX'S WORKS. 



337 



fnMem. lxxxix. 6 



In Mem. xli. 5 



Enid . 
Vivien 



1708 

. 1S6 



result verb.) 
R in man, be bom and think, 
resume. 
r their life, They would but find 

retain. 
And so may Place r us still . 

reticence. 
Such fine reserve and noble r, 
muffled round with selfish r 

retinue. 
and so Went forth in long r . 
ahead Of his and her r . 
The dark r reverencing death 
retire. 
last the dance : till I r : 

ft we saw the Sun r, . 
retired. 
in after life r From brawling storms, Ode to Mem. 1 1 1 



POEM. LINE. , , rOtM UWW. 

fnMem.C0n.126 And last, r from afar, . . /nMem.\xxx*w.46 

c:i r found Not two but three . Vivien .558 

A' broughttheyet-unblazon'dshield Elaine . 378 

>Ut r rode the three . . oo« 

oft r with the tide. ..." 1035 

As oft as needed— last, rrich . En. Arden . i« 
fled before the lazy wind R, . " ' " < 

still to that tf, as the bird returns Sea Dreams 43 
great wave K, while none marked ■• . 227 

thee r on thy silver wheels . . Tithonus . V 



Princess, iii. 
, Guinevere 
Aylmer's F. 842 

fn.1fem.Con. 105 
The Voyage 17 



1 saw the snare, 1 r : 

retiring. 
Ever r thou dost gaze . 

retreat. 
Ah, for some r Deep in yonder 
to him in this r, . 

retreated. 
Leolin still R half-aghast . 

retrospect. 
Not such as moans about the r, 
return fs.) 
Then she went back some paces of r,Enid . 
had no r: . ■ ■ Elaine 
I loved you, and my love had no r 11 

return (verb.) 
I may r with others there . Pal. 0/ Art 

some one said, 'We will r no more;' Lotos-Es. 



reveal. 
Princess, m. 179 gorges .opening wide apart, r Troas CEnone . 12 
Guinevere ^. 382 all die past of Time r>t Love thou thy land,' tic. 50 
words, like Nature, half r . .In Mem. v. 3 
A late-lost form that sleep r's, . 11 xni. 2 

any vision should r thy likeness . •■ xci. 1 

Not to r it, till you see mc dead.' En. Arden . 840 

revealed. 
first r themselves to English air . Eieanore . 2 
. L.C.V.deVere 6 part by part to men r ' O/oldsal freedom,' etc. 11 
1 R their shining windows : . Gardener's I). 215 

„, . ,, I comfort clasp'd in truth r; . fn Mem. xxxvn. 22 

■Ode to Mem. 93 A life | ong tI £ ct r ,f time r ; . „ x(v. 9 

dusk r The knolls once more 11 xciv ii 

. Locksley ff. 133 A whisper half r her to herself . Aylmer's E. 14+ 
fnMemAxxx-. revealing. 

■ R's deep and clear arc thine . Madeline . 10 

reveillle. 

blew R to the breaking morn. . fn Mem. Ixvii. 8 

revel. 

fiven to starts and bursts Of r ; . Princess, i. 54 
n babble and rand wine . Meatd,\.XXO. ai 



Aylmer's F. 329 
Princess, iv. C7 



9»9 
■088 

'-' y 



»95 

43 

■' 
3' 



.1 I r: I would I were . AudleyCt. . 
tain to his place r's . Day-Dm. . 

back r To where the body sits, . fn Mem. xii. 

e herself r xxxix. 24 

Death r's an answer sweet : . ■> Ixxx. 9 

r's the dark With no more hope . Maud, I. ix. 15 
r, and fetch Fresh victual . . AW . 1073-88 
,ve once gone never r's . ,, 
•.ill r And slay you 
the cagcling newly flown r's, 
win and r.' . . . Elaine 

1, and deliver it, and r, ■■ 

r's his love in open shame " 

to r When others had been toted) Aylmer's F. 218 
ferity ■• . 420 

as the bird r's, at night, . . Sea Dreams 43 
his foot A' from pacings in the field Lucretius . 6 

ret n r 
One went, who never hath r. 
.nfarrow'd t<> her sty. . 
itself r; 
I la r reply : . 

half-sick at heart, r. 
home to Mary's house r, 
amends For a courtesy not r. 
she r Indignant to the Ouecn 

1 them of a chamber 

:md r: 

loorm ■• 

I r a little, and r . •■ . 
riance there, r. / 
maying and r, . Guusevm 

beaut' le A' upon him. En. Arden 

■iay When Fnoch had r, 11 

'uteri 1 . , ,.■ 

;htly hurt, Racing r: . •• 

wing r fruin out the 



1596 

• 75° 

545 

1077 



. To J. S. . so 

. Walk, to IX 

. Talking O. . 12 

. Da;. 

. Princess, iv. 204 

. fnMem xxxL 2 

. Maud, 1. vi. 14 

. Etr.d . . 

1253 

568 

-1 

'.1 



. Ode on Well. 243 

. TotlwQueen 1 
. Aylmer's I. 170 

. Tot lie Queen 27 
ne . 108 



At civic r and pomp and game. Ode on Well. 147,227 

rez'enge. 
Therefore r became me well . The Sisters. 5 

Womanlike, taking r too deep . Maud, Ln 5 

rvzwrncr. 

overflowing r Wherewith to embellish CEnone .111 

rrrrrr. 
Whom we see not we r [rep.) 
revered. 
R, beloved, — O you that hold 
the poor roofs R oj theirs, 

reverence. 
A thousand claims to r t. 
the Gods Rise up for r 
let her herald, AT, fly ' /-<w '■'«'" thy land,' etc. 18 
To all the people, winnu la d Arthur 108 

some cold r worse than she were dead Princess, v. 89 
mask 'd thee from men's ri.;, " vii. 3:2 

r for the laws ourselves have made •• Con. 55 

more of r in us dwell : . 
1 had such r for his blame, . 
To r and the silver hair : 
In rand in charity 
debt Of boundless love and r 
As if in deepest r and in love. 
no more sign of r than a beard. 

1 Lavaine, whose instant r Elaine 
Meet for the r of the hearth . Aylmer's . 

our love and r left them bare? . 11 ■ 7 J 

r.-rrence 'verb ) 
rthc King as ifhe were Thcirconscicnce Cwi'nrxrrr^Cs 

rnerenced. 
he. he r his liege-lady there : 
r his conscience as his king ; 
tho' he loved and r her 100 much 



fn Mem. 1 rj 




11 1. 


6 


11 lxxxiii. 


■- 


ir arm. 


18 


Ode on Hell. 


157 


■ 




Elaine 


i'7 



Princess, i. 186 
f)ed 0/ Idylls 7 
Enid . ■ H'i 



The Victim 43 



ret:: ■ 
human things r on themselves 
A' like the pewit, . 



. WillWa: 



reverencing. 
Self-reverent each and r each, 
r the custom of the house 
r ling's blood in a bad man . 
'Ihe dark retinue r death . 
reierie. 
rapt in nameless r, 



Princess, vii. 274 

. 380 

. Cm im ven . 38 

■ t-r's F. 84a 

Princess, Cow.ioC 
V 



338 



CONCORDANCE TO 



reverse. poem. line. 

To pine in that r of doom, . . In Mem. lxxi. 6 

reversed. 
I sit (my empty glass r), . . Will Water. 159 
And now, the bloodless point r, . TJie Voyage 71 

revert. 
Perforce will still r to you ; . Day-Dm. . 248 

reverting. 
Change, r to the years, . . Vision of Sin 159 

reviewer. 

yon chorus of indolent r's, Hendecasyllabics 1-12 
Irresponsible, indolent rs . 11 .2 
Waking laughter in indolent r's n . 8 
Too presumptuous, indolent rs n . 16 

revolt. 

arose The women up in wild r, . Princess, vii. 108 

It's, republics, revolutions, . . ir Con. 65 

many more when Modred raised r. Guinevere . 438 

revolution. 
Revolts, republics, rs, . . Princess, Con. 65 

revolve. 

In the same circle we r. . . Two Voices . 314 

revolving; 
stood Sir Bedivere R many memories./!/, a" A rthur 270 
to rise again R toward fulfilment Ed. Morris 39 
My mother went ron the word) . Princess, iii. 38 
tho' the months, r near, . . InMem.xci. n 

rewaken. 
R with the dawning soul. . . In Mem. xlii. 16 

reward, 

God bless you for it, God r you . En. Arden . 421 

-Rhine. 
You leave us : you will see the R In Mem. xcvii. 1 

RJwdope. 
The Rj that built the pyramid, . Princess, ii. 68 

rhyme. 
To make demand of modern r . To Hie Queen 11 
weary sameness in the r's, . . Miller's D. 70 
He utter* d rand reason, . . The Goose . 6 
read me r's elaborately good, . Ed. Morris 20 

1 will work in prose and r, . . Talking O. 289 
The r's are dazzled from their place Day-Dm. . 19 
To make me write my random r's Will Water. 13 
Let raffs be rife in prose and r, . it . 61 
We lack not r's and reasons, .11 .62 
and r's And dismal lyrics, . . Princess, i. 140 
What hope is here for modern r In Mem. lxxvi. 1 
Ring out, ring out my mournful rs u cv. 19 
half but idle brawling r's , . 11 Con. 23 
lucky r's to him were scrip and share The Brook 4 
says Edmund in his r, . 11 .21 
rolling in his mind Old waifs of r, n . 199 
you hardly know the tender r . Vivien . 233 
do you love my tender rV 11 . 249 
when you sang me that sweet r, . it . 284 
this r Is like the fair pearl necklace 11 . 300 
so is it with this r: 11 . 306 
legend as in guerdon for your r ? 11 . 404 
My r's may have been the stronger Spiteful Let. 10 
For it's easy to find a r. . . The Window 149 

rhyme. 
force to make me r in youth, . Miller's D. 193 

rhyming. 
R forward to his r, . . . Aniphion . 30 

rhyt/mz. 
into r have dash'd The passion . Princess, iv. 121 
shutting reasons up in r, . . Lucretius . 220 

rib. 
sawn In twain beneath the rs ; . StS. Stylites 52 
Stuff his rs with mouldy hay. . Vision of Sin 66 
some wild shore with r's of wreck Princess, v. 141 
belabour'd him on rand cheek . n . 331 

clangs Its leafless r's and iron horns In Mem. cvi. 12 



POEM. 

Vivien 

Sailor Boy 



LINE. 

• 475 



crate and basket, r's and spine, 
on thy rs the limpet sticks, . 

riband. 
She takes a r or a rose : . . In Mem. vi. 32 

ribbed. 
long dun wolds are r with snow, . Oriana . 5 

ribbon. 
Dangled a length of r . . . En. Arden . 751 
blots of it about them, r, glove . Aylt?ier's E. 620 



rice. 
many a tract of palm and r, . 

rich. 
midway down Hang r in flowers, 
slumbrous light is r and warm, 
This earth is r in man and maid ; 
many a slope was r in bloom 
move as r as Emperor-mothSj 



Pal. of Art 114 



CEnone 
. Day-Dm. 

Will Water. 
. To £. L. . 20 
Princess, Pro. 144 



7 
65 



dark shore just seen that it was r. 

r as moths from dusk cocoons, 

But he was r where I was poor, In Mem. Ixxviii. 



1. 245 

5 

t8 



civ. 



Maud, 1. x. 

Ode on We'll. 
Enid . 



Elaine 
Guinevere 



13 

6 

32 

302 

660 

1114 



554 



1223 
. 676 



1321 



InMem.lxxiv. 7 



Elaine 



J"3 



lead The closing cycle r in good 

Ring out the feud of r and poor 

R in the grace all women desire, 

So r in atonement as this 

R in saving common-sense . 

a house Once r, now poor, . 

all the turf was r in plots n 

like the Queen In all I have of r, Elaine 

last, returningr, Become the master En. Arden 143 

for I am rand well-to-do. . . ir . -qio 

R, but the loneliest in a lonely sea. 

richer. 
Was r than these diamonds . 
r in his eyes Who ransom' d us, 

richest. 
shrine which then in all the realm Was r, Elaine 

richest-toned. 
voice the r-t that sings, 

richness. 
deck it like the Queen's For r 

rick. 
A jackass heehaws from the r, 

the r Flames and his anger reddens Princess, iv. 366 
The moon like a r on fire was rising Grandmother 39 

ridden. 
you had gone, R to the hills, . Princess^ 
Half r off with by the thing he rode, Enid 
wound to wound, And r away to die? 1 Elaine 
had r wildly round To seek him, . n 

riddle. 

the r of the painful earth 
Dissolved the r of the earth, 
in seeking to undo One r, 
' Your r is hard to read.' 
Charades and rs as at Christmas 

ride fs. ) 
while she made her ready for her r, Elaine . 775 

'Alas,' he said, *yourr has wearied you. n . 827 

ride (verb.) 
His son and heir doth r post-haste, D. of the O. YearyL 
1 R you naked thro' the town . Godiva . 29 
Then by some secret shrine I r; . Sir Galahad 29 
R on ! the prize is near.' . 11 .80 

All-arm'd I r, whate'er betide, . n -83 

love us for it, and we r them down Princess, v. 150 
r with us to our lines, And speak . » . 216 

Down by the hill I saw them r, . Maud, I. ix. 11 
r with him to battle and stand by, Enid 
1 1 will r forth into the wilderness ir 
meanest dress And r with me.' . 11 
tho' I r unarmed, I do not doubt u 
late I saw R into that new fortress m 
Shalt r to Arthur's court, . . 11 
r with him this morning to the court, ti 



Amphio7t . 71 



iv. 324 

1309 
• 567 
. 627 



Pal. of Art 213 
Two Voices 170 
•r - 233 

Lady Clare 76 
Princess, Pro. 187 



. 94 
. 127 
■ 131 
. 218 
. 407 
. 582 
. 606 



T£.VXYSO-V'S WORK'S. 



339 



POEM. LINE. 

I can scarcely r with you to court, Enid . • 749 
r with me in her faded silk.'. . ir . . 762 
I charge you r before 11 863 

when she saw him r More near . n . 1290 

Then, Enid, shall your Behind me." ■■ . 1598 

d redressing human wrongs 1 Vwien . 543 
he will r, Joust for it, and win, . Elaine . 203 
r to Camclot with this noUe knight 11 . 220 

you r with Lancelot of the Lake.' 11 .416 

rise, My nephew, and r forth . u • 536 

nger wildly, noble Prince ! 11 . 630 

the King A' toward her from the city Guinevere . 401 
r abroad redressing human wrongs 11 .468 

rider. 
The horse and r reel : . . . Sir Galahad 8 

■vy r kept him down. . . Visiono/Sm 4 
r'i front to front, until they closed Princess, v. 479 

ridge. 
sand-built r Of heaped hills . .Ode to Mem. 97 
A faint-blue r upon the right, Mariana in tlieS. 5 

the r, and paced beside the M. d'A rthur 83 
leaping down the r's lightly, . " • '34 

swiftly strode from r to r, . . 11 . 181 

hoofs bare on the r of spears . Princess, v. 478 

tress, and the mountain r, InMem.lxx. 14 
Or slip between the r'i, . . The Brook . 28 

Close to the r of a noble down. Top. D. Maurice 16 
climb'd upon a fair and even r, . Enid . . 239 
ar Of breaker issued from the belt Sea Dreams 204 
and then the great r drew, . . " . 213 

ridged. 
R the smooth level, . . . ArabianN's. 33 

ridging. 
The Biscay, roughly r eastward . En. Arden . 523 

riding. 
The knights come r two and two : L. ofShalott,il2S 
came r toward a palace-gate. . Vision of Sin 2 
r in, we call'd ; . . . . Princess, i. 222 

t of day .... Maud, I. ix. 5 

Rapidly r far .tw.iv, .7 

found the bailiff r by the farm . The Brook . 13-, 

1 he Ion,' street r wearily, . Enid . 
r close behind an ancient churl, o . 261 

r further past -in armourer's, 11 266 

r first, I hear the violent threats . ■> . 1268 

Came r with a hundred lances up ; it . 1388 

riding whip. 
Stopt and then with a r m . . Maud, I. xiii. 18 

rife. 
With dinning sound my cars are r, Eleanor,- 

r in prose and rhyme U 'ill Water. 61 
language r With rugged maxims Ode on Well. xi% 

rift verb.) 
K the hills, and roll the waters, . Locksley II. 1E6 

rift (s.) 
cleave the r of difference deeper yet Princess, v. 291 
It is the little r within the lute, . Vivien 240-3 

right 'adj.) 

m I r, or am I wrong, . Pay-Din. 24t-s 

They worth ltt . Princess, v. 180 

wise world of ours is mainly r. . Enid . 1749 

I s.) 

because r is r. to follow r Were wisdom CEnone 147 
I r of full-accomplUh'd Fate; Pal. of Art 207 
1 1: n the r Au.l did it : LoveandDuty so 

we, that prate Of r** and wrongs, (iulroa . 8 

r'j that name m.iv give, . Day-Din. . 266 
The man will cleave unto his r.' . I.adv (tare 40 
A talk of college and of ladies' r's, Prmcessfro. 226 

rved from r to save A pri , 11 ii. 270 

greai - I mights and r'j m 1 

unfurl the maiden banner of our r 1 . 482 

bawl for civil med: n v. 377 

tim on 1 laim from r to r , m . 407 

r's or wrongs like pullietbo iu the 11 . 44^ 



1. LINE. 

liberal, since our r's are won. . Princess, vi. 52 

scorn'd to help their equal r"j . " vii. 21 i 

King in the love of truth and r . In Mem. cv. 23 

mine by a r, from birth till death, Maiui\. xix. 42 
a war would arise in defence of the r .. Ill 

self-seekers trampling on the r : . Ode on Well. 187 

only thirsting For the r . . 11 . 20+ 
At you, so careful of the r, . To E.D.Man, 
reigning in his place, Lord of his r's En. Ar.i 

right (verb.) 
When the wild peasant r's himself, Princess, a 
to fight, to struggle, to r the wrong— H ages . 3 

> ■'. .',-nnsiiess. 
yonder shines The bun of R, . En. Arden . 500 

rill. 
old well-heads of haunted r's, . Eleanore . 16 
song of bird or sound of r; . . D.r/E.ll'oiu. 66 
Go down beside thy native r In Mem. xxxvii. 5 
From hidden summits fed with r's 11 cii. 7 

1 he white-faced hails, the glancing r's, 11 Con. 113 

rillets. 
fall Of diamond r'i musical, . Arabian .\"s. 48 

rim. 
ragged r's of thunder brooding low, Pal. of Art 75 
Beyond their utmost purple r, . Day-Din. 170-94 
,cing mute by ocean's r . The Daisy . 2t 
Koll'd into light, and turning on its r's Elaine . 52 
ran By sallowy rs. . . . Aylmefi /•'. 147 
the r Changed every moment . The Voyage -7 

rime. 

Unnaturally hoar with r . . StS. Stylites 163 
Make thy grass hoar w ith early r Two I 'ones 66 
lawn as yet Is boar with r, . To E. D. Maurice 42 

rim in' d. 
length of bright horizon r the dark. Gardener's D.itj 

rind. 
gleaming r ingrav'n ' For the most fair CEnone 70 
Hard wood 1 am, and wrinkled r, Talking O. 171 

ring (s.) 
Round thy neck in subtle r . . Adeline . 58 
Sleeps on his luminous r.' . . Pal. of Art 16 
drew into two burning rp . '"-174 

Five hundred r's of years— . . Talking O. . 84 
And even into my inmost r . . i> .17: 

Grave faces gather'd in a r. . . Day-Din. . 58 

! in a golden r. . . Sir L. and I 

I'll strike my ruby r upon it . . Princess,l 
a thousand r'i of Spring In every bole 11 

old pierce an outer r . . InMeni I x v: svi .7 
The rison, The 'wilt thou' answer'd, " Con. 53 
sapphire-spangled marriage r of the Maud,\.\y. 6 
I noticed one of bis many r's . •> ll.il. 68 
bindweed-bells and briony r's . The Brook . 203 
And gave the trinkets and the r's The Letters 21 

neath her marriage r . . Enid . 1108 
Enoch'sgoldcnrhadgirt Hcrfingcr, En. Arden 157 
a length of ribbon and a r. . 11 751 

deeper than to wear it as his r— . Aylmer's 1 . 1 » 
nor by plight or broken r Hound, 11 . 13S 

dim curls kindle into sunny r'i; . Titi-.on-.is . 54 

ring (to resound, etc.) 
How the merry bluebell r's . . Adeline 1 

1 R's ever in her ears . . (J-.none 

-hells rill the Christmas morn. M.d 'Arthur. 

K's in mine ears. The steer forgot Gardener 1 

did we hear the copses r, . . Eookslcy : 

The shrill bell r's, the censer swings. Sir GaiaA 
all the glimmering moorland r's Mr 1.. audi,' 
.■.■way bell, . /« Mem vi 
Snail r with music all the same : . •• burvi. 14 
R out wQd bells to the wild sky, rep.) n 1 

Now r's the woodland loud and long, n cxiv. 5 
the yell of the trampled wife, Maud, I i. 38 
in dreamt to the 1 hink . n x. 42 

It will rin in'. y ears. 11 II 

And the wouuland echo r's; . n iv. 38 



34° 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Enid 



Talking O, . 293 



POEM. LINE. 

r's on a sudden a passionate cry, . Maud, II. iv. 47 
the world should r of him . . Aylmer's F. 395 
R's to the roar of an angel onset . Milton . 8 

ring (to encircle.) 
my followers r him round : . 

ringdove. 
In which the swarthy r sat, . 

ringed. 

R with the azure world, he stands. The Eagle . 3 

ringer, 
the rs rang with a will, and he gave 

the r's a crown .... Grandmother 58 

ringing. 
midnight bells cease r suddenly. . D. of F. Worn. 247 
when the bells were r, Allan call'd Dora . . 39 
in the r of thine ears ; . . . Locksley H. 84 
r, springs from brand and mail ; . Sir Galahad 54 
With blissful treble r clear. . SirL.andQ.G. 22 
R thro' the vallies, . . . Maud, I. xii. 10 
Clamour and rumble, and rand clatter, i« II. v. 13 
r with their serpent hands . . Vivien . 428 

Once likewise, in the r of his ears, En. Arden . 614 
R like proven golden coinage . Aylmer's F. 182 1 
he must — the land was r of it — . 11 . 262 

His message r in thine ears, . ir . 666 

ringlet. 
comb my hair till my r's would fall The Mermaid 14 
hid in r's day and night . . Aimer's D. 173 
Tie up the r's on your cheek : . Margaret . 57 
The r's waving balm — , . . Talking O. . 178 
showered the rippled r's to her knee; Godiva . 47 
full black r's downward roll'd, . Day-Dm. . 88 
Blowing the r from the braid SirL. andQ. G. 39 
lengths of yellow r's, like a girl, . Pri?icess, i._. 3 
Once more to set a r right ; . .In Mem. vi. 36 
Ere childhood's flaxen rturn'd . 11 lxxviii 15 
Your r's, your r's, That look so 

golden gay . . . The Ringlet 1, etpass. 

ringlet-snake . 
numbs the Fury's r-s, . . . Lucretius . 258 

riot. 
in many a wild festoon, Ran r . CEnone . 99 

a noiseless r underneath . , Litcretitis . 185 

rioted. 
r his life out, and made an end. . Aylmer's F. 391 
r in the city of Cunobeline ! . Boadicea 



ripple (s.) POEM. LINE, 

watch the crisping rs on the beach Lotos-E's. . 106 
I heard the r washing in the reeds M.d' Arthur 70,117 



The seeming- wanton r break 
down the horned flood In r's 
the r feathering from her bows : 

ripple (verb.) 
That r round the lonely grange : 
the rivulet at her feet R'sqtl 

rise (s.) 



InMem.xlviii. 11 
11 lxxxv. 8 
. En. Arden . 540 

In Mem. xc. 12 
Maud, II. iv. 41 

D. o/F. Worn. 12s 
. Aylmer's F. 474 



57 
382 
108 
257 

44 



There they dwelt and there they r; n . 63 

ripe. 

when time was r, The still affection Miller s D. 224 



D.ofF. Wom.20% 
Talking O. . 40 
Will Water. 16 



" -..74 

InMem.xxxm. 13 

11 Con. 139 
Maud, I. ii. 9 

» iv. 34 

En. Arden . 456 



1 was r for death 

Made r in Sumner-chace : . 

Till all be r and rotten. 

Half-mused, or reeling r, 

thou, that countest reason r . 

Appearing ere the times were r f 

you may call it a little too r 

shaping an infant r for his birth 

if the nuts ' he said ' be r again : 

Too r, too late ! they come too late Sea Dreams 67 

makes the purple lilac r, „ . On a Mourner 7 

ripen. 
flower rs in its place, R's and fades, Lotos-E's. . 81 
r toward the grave In silence . it .96 

r, fall, and cease : . tr -97 

The unnetted black-hearts rdark. The Blackbird 7 
watch her harvest r, her herd . Maud,lll. vi. 25 

ripen 7 d. 
woman r earlier, and her life . Princess, ii. 138 

ripeness. 
but, when love is grown To r 
gave all r to the grain, . 

riper. 
first, and third, which are a r first ? Sea Dreams 66 



ToJ.S. . 15 
InMe?n.\xxx. 11 



throned on a flowery r . 

and prophesied his r: 

the r, and long roll of the Hexameter Lucretius 10 

rise (verb.) 
How could I r and come away . Oriajia 
fall and r Upon her balmy bosom, Miller's D. 
the Gods R up for reverence . CEnone 

I will rand go Down into Troy, . 11 
And that sweet incense rV . . Pal. of Art 

For I would see the sun r . . MayQueeu t u.2 t $x 
lamb's voice to me that cannot r, . tr iii. 6 

O look ! the sun begins to r, . n . 49 

threshold of the sun, Never to r . D.ofF.Wom. 64 
large white stars r one by one, . it . 223 

R from the feast of sorrow, lady, Margaret . 62 
if some dreadful need should r Love thou thy land' 91 
let thy voice R like a fountain for M. d' Arthur 249 
to r again Revolving toward . Ed. Morris 38 

and the shadows r and fall. . . Locksley H. 80 
Pain r's up, old pleasures pall. . Two Voices 164 
every hundred years tor . . Day-Dm. . 219 
Are but dust that r's up, . Vision of Sin 133-69 
Till thy drooping courage r, . it .152 

r To glass herself in dewy eyes ' Move eastward' 6 
The Samian Here r's and she speaks Princess, iii. 99 
R in the heart, and gather to the eyes » iv. 23 

R !' and stoop'd to updrag Melissa : 11 . 347 

they r or sink Together. . . it vii. 243 

men may r on stepping-stones . In Mem. i. 3 
see the sails at distance r, . . 11 xii. 11 

To-night the winds begin to r . 11 xv. 1 

r's upward always higher . . it . 17 

R happy morn, r, holy morn . 11 xxx. 29 

crown'd with blessings she doth r 1? xxxix. 5 

Did ever r from high to higher ; . 11 xl. 2 

if any vague desire should r, . 11 lxxix. 1 

An iron welcome when they r; . 11 lxxxix. 8 
of events As often r's ere they r. . n xci. 16 

served the seasons that may r ; " cxii. 4 

R in the spiritual rock 11 cxxx. 3 

They r, but linger : it is late ; . n Con. 91 
And r, O moon, from yonder down, n . 109 

and thought he would rand speak Maud, I. i. 59 
there r's ever a passionate cry . 11 II. i. 5 

Then I r, the eavedrops fall, . 11 iv. 62 

if he r no more, I will not look on wine Enid 1514 
R therefore ; robe yourself in this: it 1533 

Rose when they saw the dead man r, it 1580 

Gawain, r, My nephew, and ride forth Elaine . 535 
To r hereafter in a stiller flame . n *3°9 

but r, And fly to my strong castle Guinevere . 11 1 
yet r now, and let us fly, 11 . 119 

Let me r and fly away. . . Sea Dreams 292 

blasts would r and rave and cease, Tfie Voyage %$ 
A devil r's in my heart, . . Sailor Boy . 23 

risen. 
Nilus would have r before his time D. ofF. Worn. 143 
Dora would have r and gone to him, Dora . 75 
thus early r she goes to inform . Princess, iii. 46 
Has r and cleft the soil, . . 11 vi. 19 

those twin brothers, r again and whole; it vii. 74 

risest. 
R thou thus, dim dawn, again (xcviii.i.)/»JI/£?/;.lxxi. 1 

rising. 

r, from her bosom drew . Mariana in tlieS. 61 
angels rand descending met • Pal. of Art 143 

And of the r from the dead, . ■■ . 206 

r bore him thro' the place of tombs. M.d' Arthur i-j$ 



TENNYSON'S JVORKS. 



341 



I'OEM. LINE. 

Locksley H. o 
Vision of Sin 102 

_ . I2S 

Princess, iv. 469 
11 vi 135 
" Con. 116 

Enid . . 591 j 
11 . 1462 

Guinevere . 47 

Grandmother 39 



Princess, v. 397 
Sea Dreams 10 



r thro' the mellow shade, 

A* to no fancy-flies. 

A", falling, like a wave, 

r up Robed in the long night 

I 1 up, and r slowly from me, 

Last little Lilia, r quietly, . 

r up, he rode to Arthur's court, . 

r on the sudden he said, ' Eat ! . 

the Prince, who r twice or thrice . 

'1 he moon like a rick on fire was r 

risk'd. 
he r it for my own 
(for the man Had r his little) 

risking. 

some knight of mine, r his life . Enid . J763 

rite. 
r's and forms before his burning eyes The Poet . 39 
with solemn r's by candle-light — . Princess, v. 282 
Worthy of our gorgeous r*.r . . Odeon Well. 93 
mingle with your r's; Pray . . Guinevere . 672 
The r's prepared, the victim bared, The Victim 70 

ritual. 
And hear the ritual of the dead. . In litem, xviii. 12 

rivage. 
From the green r many a fall . A rabian .Vs. 47 

rival. 

my latest r brings thee rest. . Locksley If. £9 

'In push my rout of place . . Princess, iv. 316 

f in a losing game, . . In Mem. ci. ig 
the maid in Astulat. Her guiltless r t Elaine . 742 

s rejected r's from their suit Aylmer's F 493 
Leolin's one strong r upon earth : ■■ . 557 

wrathful, petulant, Dreaming some r, Lucretiut is 

rivalries. 
fruitful strifes and r of peace— . Ded. oj Idylls 37 

river. 
canal From the main r sluiced, . Arabian IPs. 26 
A motion from the r won . n -34 

Flowing like a crystal r; . . Poet's Mind 6 
With an inner voice the r ran, . Dying Stvan 5 
One willow over the r wept, . • • .14 

On either sidethc r lie . L.ofShalott,' 1 

By the island in the r . t - 13 

I m the r winding clearly, . 11 .31 

There the r eddy whirls, . . 1, 11. 15 

he bank and from the r . 11 in, 33 

by th Lancelot. . 11 .35 

down the r'jdim expanse — . 11 iv. 10 

the full-flowing r of speech . . (F.none . 67 

one, a full-fed r winding slow . Pal. of Art . 73 
drew R's of melodies. ... n . 172 

saw the gleaming r seaward flow . Lotos-Es. . 14 
lone brigntr draw waters 1. . 137 

fresh the meadows look Above the r. Walk to the M. -.■ 
l'.y r's gallopaded. . . . Ainphwn . 40 

In curves the yellowingr ran Sir I.. andQ C.15 

A rivulet then a r: ... A Famuli 6 

in a gleaming r's crescent-curve . Princess, i 169 
"We follow'd up the r as we rode . h 

the r made a tall Out yonder: 1 . ■■ 1 

r as it n.irrow'd 10 the lulls ,, , 180 
up we came to where the r sloped 

They faint on hill or field or r: . n 

the plank, and roll'd In the r. 11 iv. 160 

black hair Damp from the river ; . » . 258 

1 r level With the dun 11 . 452 

I.et the great r take me to the main : .• 

1 le the r's wooded reach, . luAfem.btx. i) 

mil; by the wall . . ., cii. 8 

. Maud, I. iv. 33 

1 the brimming r, (rep.) . Th* Brook . 32 

there the rt and there Stands Philip'a una 11 . 37 

where brook and r meet . . h . 38 

over city and r . . . Ode on Well. 50 

O'er the four r'j the lint roses blew, Lmd 



1 LINE. 

holding then his court Hard on the r Elaine . 76 
By the great r in a boatman's hut 11 278,1032 

a chariot-bier To take me to the r, u mo 

and a barge lie ready on the r, . 11 1117 

in a r of blood to the sick sea . Ay liner's F ■jii 
Flash, ye cities, in r's of fire ! W. to Alexan, 19 

river-bank. 
he ran Beside the r-b: . . . Ay Inter's F. 451 

river-bed. 

An empty r-b before, . Mariana in the S. 6 

The r-b was dusty-white ; . . 11 - 54 

river-breeze. 
the soft r-b, Which funn'd the gardens Ay liner's I'. 4^4 

River-God. 
I am the daughter of a R-G. . CEnone . 37 

river-rain. 
Snapt in the rushing of the r-r . Vivien . 807 

river-shore. 
Spread the light haze along the r-s's Gardenei'sD. 259 

river-sunder d. 
r-s champaign cloth'd with corn . CEnone . 112 

river-tide. 
On the misty r-t .... Maud, 1 1, iv. C-j 

riz'cting. 
Sat r a helmet on his knee, . . Enid . . ?C3 

riving. 
r the spirit of man, . . . The Poet . 51 

rivulet. 
the r in the flowery dale . . May Queen, 1. 29 
liy dancing r's fed his flocks, . ToE.L. . ta 
1 Now by some tinkling r, . Sir L and Q. G 29 
Flow down, cold r, to the sea, . A Farewell 1 
A r then a river : .... ■■ 6 

Myriadsofr'shurryingthro' the lawn Princess,\\\ 205 
Nor pastoral r that swerves />.' Mem. xcix. 14 

But the ron from the lawn . . Maud, 1. xiv. 29 
A' crossing my ground, . . 11 xxi. 1 

O A", born at the hall .8 

For I heard your r fall . . 11 xxii. 36 

the r at her feet Ripples on . . 11 II. iv. 41 
Fled like a glittering r to the tarn : Elaine 
sweep Of some precipitous r . En. Arden . 588 

where the r's of sweet waters ran ; 11 . 643 

many a r high against the Sun . The Islet . 21 

road. 
thro' the field the r runs by . . L.ofSltalott, i. 4 
cold and starless r of Death. . CEnone . 255 
In ruin, by the mountain r; . The Daisy . 6 

at a sudden swerving of the r, . Enid . 1355 

and stood by the r at the gate. . Grandmother ^8 
Out into the r I started, and spoke 11 -43 

roam. 
at night I would r abroad and play The Merman 1 1 
r, with tresses unconlincd . . Elednore . 122 
we will no longer r. . . . Eotos-E's. . 4^ 
Henceforth, wherever thou may'st r, InMem.xvW. 9 
All winds that r the twilight 11 lxxviii. u 

To range the woods, to r the park, « Con. 96 

r the goodly places that she knew : Enid . . 646 
those that stay and those that >, . Sailor Boy . 14 

roaming. 
always r with a hungry heart . Ulysses . 1 2 
A white-h.iir'd shadow r like a dream Titlwnus 8 



three pycbalds and a r. . II'alk.totheM. 104 

roar 
The panther's r came muffled . (T.noiie . 210 

such a r that Earth Reds, . . Princess, v. 517 
r that breaks the Pharos from bis base o vi. 319 
in ita brnail-flung ship-wrecking r, Maud, 1 u'\. u 
in streaming London s central r. . Ode on Well 9 
Heard thro' die living r. . Sea /'reams 56 

'but this tide'* r, and his. . . 242 

Rings to the r of an uu^el onset— Milton . 8 



342 



CONCORDANCE TO 



roar (verb.) poem. line. 
below them r's The long brook . CEnone . 7 
r rock-thwarted under bellowing caves Pal. of Art. 71 
He that r's for liberty . . . Vision of Sin 127 
once or twice I thought to r, , Princess, ii. 401 

?' from yonder dropping day : , In Mem. xv. 2 
There where the long street r's, . n cxxii. 3 
Well r's the storm to those that hear ir cxxvi. 3 
And molten up, and rin flood ; . ?r . 13 

the sea r's Ruin : a fearful night ! ' Sea Dreams 80 
R as the sea when he welcomes . IV. toAlexan, 24 

roared. 
'Nol'i? the rough king, . . Pri?icess, i. 86 
some vast bulk that lived and r . n iii. 277 

(thus the King R). - . . it v. 34 

lake whiten'd and the pinewood r Vivien . 487 

and above them r the pine . . Aylmer's F. 431 
R as when the rolling; bieakers . Boadicea . 76 
Hector said, and sea-like r his host; Spec. of Iliad x 

roaring: 
I hear the r of the sea, . 
The wind is r in turret and tree. . 
heard the hen rfrom his den ; 
ocean-ridges r into cataracts, 
mighty wind arises, r seaward, 
In r's round the coral reef . 
And the r of the wheels 
R to make a third : 
R out their doom . 
winds were r and blowing r (rep.) 

rob. 
once had powei to r it of content . 

robbed. 

r the farmer of his bowl of cream: 

■robber. 
onslaught single on a realm Of r's 
There the horde of Roman r's 



Onana . gj 

The Sisters 15 
D, of F. Worn. 222 
Locksley H. 6 
tr . 194 

In Mem. xxxvi. 16 
MaudflX.iv. 22 
Aylmer's F. 128 
The Captain 42 
1865-1866 « 3 

Coquette, ii. 8 

Princess, v. 214 

Enid . 7766 

. Boadicea . 18 

robe (s.) 
no blood upon her maiden r's , The Poet . 41 
She threw her royal -r's away. . Pal. of Art 290 
With that she tore her r apart, . D. ofF. Worn. T57 
the white r and the palm. . . StS. Stylites 20 
Asthesewhiter saresoil'danddark, St Agues' Evei-$ 
In r and crown the king stept down, Beggar Maid 5 
white r like a blossom'd branch . Princess, iv. 161 
r's, and gems and gemlike eyes, . m . 450, 

drew Her r to meet his lips, c 11 vi. 140 

falser self slipt from her like a r, . it vii. 146 

Till slowly worn her earthly r, In Mem. \xxxni. -53 
In a cold white r before me . . Maud,\\. iv. 19 
a r Of samite without price. . . Vivien . 70 

down his r the dragon writhed . Elaine . 434 

' If I be loved, these are my festal f*s t u , 905 

In hanging r or vacant ornament, Guinevere . 502 
A close-set r of jasmine . . Aylmer's F. 758 

How oft the purple-skirted r . The Voyage 21 

robe (verb.) 
Rise therefore ; r yourself in this : Enid . 1533 

robed. 
r m sof'ten'd light Of orient state. Ode to Mem., to 
Lying, rin snowy white . J^.of Shaloit, iv.19 

lying r and crown'd, . . . D. of F.Wom. 163 
reissuing, r and crown'd, To meet Godiva . 77 
r the shoulders in a rosy silk . Princess, Pro 103 

R in the long night of her deep hair n iv. 470 

r herself, Help'd by the mother's . Enid . . 737 
r them in her ancient suit again it 770 

R in red samite, easily to be known Elaine . 432 

r your cottage-walls with flowers. Aylmer's F. 698 
Loosely rin flying raiment, . . Boadicea . 37 

Robert. 
old Sir R's pride, His books— _ . Audley Ct. . 57 
slight Sir R with his watery smile Ed. Morns 128 

robin. 
crimson comes upon the r's breast Locksley If. 17 
careful r's eye the delver's toil, . E?iid . 774,1280 
On the nigh-naked tree the R piped En. Arden , 677 



Robin. 
R leaning on the bridge 
And say to R a kind word, . 

Robins. 
Or a mowt J a taaken R 
Noither a moant to R . 



POEM. LIKE. 

. MayQuee?i,\. 14 
11 iii. 44 

. N. Farmer. 50 
h . 60 



rock {s. ) 
the mermaids in and out of the r's The Merman 12 
the mermen in and out of the r's . The Mermaid 34 
Of ledge or shelf The rrosc clear, Pal. of Art 10 
or a sound of rs thrown down, . 11 . 282 

zig-zag paths, and juts of pointed r, M a" Arthur 50 
and leveret lay, Like fossils of the r, A udleyCt. . 24 
as we sank From r to r . . n 83 

upon a rWith turrets lichen-gilded 

like a r: Ed. Morris 7 

forged a thousand theories of the r* s, n . iS 

struck his staff against the rs . Golden Year 59 
lights begin to twinkle from the rs: Ulysses . 54 
His mantle glitters, on the r's — . Day-Dm. . 106 
To him who sat upon the r's, . To E. L. . 23 
push'd with lances from the r, . Princess, Pro. 46 
something of the frame, the r . n ii. 360 

No r so hard but that a little wave i» iii. 138 
like a touch of sunshine on the r's, m . 339 

Each was like a Druid r; . . 11 iv. 261 

Part sat like r s: ... . it v. 485 

Pharos from his base Had left us r. if vi. 320 

M y love has talk'd with r's and trees \InMem xevi 1 
Nor runlet tinkling from the' r; . n xcix. 73 
Rise in the spiritual r, . . .it exxx. 3 
There yet lies the r that fell with him Maud, I. \. 8 
by a red r, glimmers the Hall ; . if iv jo 

Athwart the ledges of r . . if II. ii. 28 
seems a promontory of r, . . Will. , 

r in ebbs and flows, Fixt on her faith. Enid . . 812 
wholly arm'd behind a y In shadow u , . 906 
I saw three bandits by the r v 921 

town with towers, upon a r, , . .* 11 . 1046 

errant eyes home irom the r, . »t . 1096 

In the white ra chapel and a hall Elaine . 404 

to their fancy's eye from broken r's n 1245 

no stoning save with flint and r? . Aylmer's F. 746 
on the foremost r's Touching, upjetted SeaDreams^i 
for Willy stood like a r. , . Grandmother 10 

nutmeg r's and isles of clove. . The Voyage 40 
by r and cave and tree. . . V. ofCauteretz 9 

rock (verb.) 
r upon thy towery top . . Talking O. . 265 
r the snowy ciadle till I died. . Princess, iv. 86 
The blind wall r's, and on the trees InMem.Con, 63 

rocked. 

R the full-foliaged elms, 

rocket. 
The r molten into flakes 
Rush to the roof, sudden r, . 

rocking. 
Then lightly r baby's cradle 



_ InMem.xcW. 58 

. I?iMe?n xcvii. 3T 
. W. to Alex an. 20 



En. Arden . 194 

rock- thwa rted. 
r-t under bellowing caves . . Pal. of Art 71 

rod. 
red-faced war has r's of steel and lire; Princess, v. 114 
be ruled with r or with knout ? . Maud, I. iv. 47 
war's avenging r Shall lash all 

Europe .... To F.D. Maurice 33 

rode. 

Ere I r into the fight, . . . Oriana. . 21 
He r between the barley-sheaves, E.ofS/ialott/ul. 2 
As he r down to Camelot : (rep.) . if .14 

as he r his armour rung, . . ir . 17 

my lover, with whom I r sublime D.ofF.Wo?n,i^z 
And r his hunter down. . . Talking O. . T04 

far below the Roundhead r, . if . 299 

she r forth, cloth'd on with chastity. Godiva 53,65 
deep air hsten'd round her as she r, ir . 54 

R thro' the coverts of the deer Sir L. andQ. G. 21 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



343 






POEM. LINE. 

r a horse with wings, that would . Vision of Sin 3 

r across a wither'd heath . " .61 
They r.they betted ; made a hundred Princess,Pro.j62 

Wc r many a long league back . "i i. 165 
follow'd up the river as we r. And 

r till midnight .... " ... 203 

'That aft c-rnoon the Princess r . 11 iii. 133 

I r beside her and to me she said tr . 181 

we r a league beyond, ... 11 . 316 

Then r we with the old Icing . " v. 226 

with honcy'd answer as we r . 11 .232 

Back r we to my father's camp . " . 321 

everywhere He r the melhy, . n .49' 

but Arac rhim down: ... 11 . 5 21 

as she r by on the moor ; . . Maud, I. iv. 15 

one of the two that r at her side . " x. 24 
R the six-hundred (rep.) . . Lt. Erigade 4 

Boldly they r and well, . . " -23 

Then thev r back, but not . . " -37 

r And fifty knights r with them, . Enid . 43,1801 

there r Full slowly by a knight, . » . . 186 

r, By ups and downs 1 . . 235 

onward t> the fortress r the three 11 . . 251 

lint, a little spleenful yet, . ir . . 293 

r Geraint into the castle court, . •< . . 312 

all unarm' d 1 r, and thought to find 11 . . 4'7 

), he r to Anhur's court, ti . 591 

kiss'd her, and they r away. ir . 825 

forth they r, but scarce three paces 11 . . 868 

wlyand they look 'd so pale, 11 . . 884 

<■ As if he heard not ti 1300 

ridden off with by the thing he r, <i . 1309 

so r on, nor told his gentle wife . ir . J352 

R on a mission to the bandit earl . 11 . 1376 

poor gown I rwith him to court, . it . 1548 

this fatal quest Of honour . ■■ 

and at once they raway. . 11 . 1610 

1 ho' thence I r all-shamed . . " . 1700 

all day lone we r Thro' the dim land Vivien . 274 

left it with her, when he r to tilt . Elaine . 30 

heard mass, broke fast, and r away: 11 . 414 

all the region round A' with lus tliamond>i . 613 

A true-love ballad, lightly raway. 11 . 701 

ill round The region : . 11 . 705 

R o'er the long backs of the bushless 11 . 785 

it returning r the three. 11 . 901 

Nor bad farewell, but sadly r away 11 . 981 
then they r to the divided way, . Guinevere . 123 

Ami r thereto from Lyonnessc, . 11 . 234 
as he r, an hour or maybe twain . 11 

A' under groves that look'd a paradise u . 386 

There ran armed warrior to the doors, it . 406 
A' upon his father's shield— 'Home tlieybrought him' 8 

rogue. 

one the Master, as a r in grain Princess, Pro. 1 16 

A r of canzonets and serenades. . 11 iv. 117 

the smooth-faced snubnoscd r . Maud, I. i. 51 

some meddling > has tamperM with him — Elaine 129 

unctuous mouth which lured him, r, Sea Dreams 14 

before you prove him, r, 11 . 167 

roisterer. 
midmost of a rout of r's . . Enid . 1123 

roll's.) 

t> the r of muffled drums . OdeonH'ell. 87 

A* of cannon and clash of arms, . 11 . 116 

1 hear the r of the ages . . Spiteful Let. 8 

Hexameter Lucretius . 11 

ever lowest r of thunder moans 11 . 108 

roll (verb.) 
they r a prurient skin, . . . Pal. of Art 201 
and the wind began to r, . . May (Jut-en, iii. 27 

... 2 
Andthi onward r. . To y. S, . 72 

■/car. Golden YettVAl 

r the ktlty H. 186 

the gates R back, and far within . St Agnei Eve y> 
They reel, they r in ;., 6ir Lui/almd 9 



POEM. LINE. 

Our echoes r from soul to soul, . Princess, iii. 362 
r The torrents, dash d to the vale : 11 v. 339 

r the torrent out of dusky doors : . it vii. 193 

down r's the world In mock heroics •' Con. 63 
I hear a wizard music r, . . In Mem.Ww. 14 
And r it in another course, . . 11 cxii. 16 

The strong imagination r . .11 cx.\i. 6 

r's the deep where grew the tree. 11 exxir. 1 

have her lion r in a silken net . Maud, I. vi. 29 
long waves that r in yonder hay ? 11 ' xviii. 63 
and the war r down like a wind . 11 III. vi. 54 
world on world in myriad myriads r Ode on Well. 262 
years will r into the centuries . Guinevere . 619 
a thousand memories r upon him. En. Arden . 723 
were a mist that r's away : . . V o/Cauferetz 6 
R and rejoice, jubilant voice, . W. toAlexan. 22 
R as .1 ground-swell dash'd . 11 .23 

r thy lender arms Round him . Lucretius . 82 
You r up away from the light . Tlte Window 50 

roWd. 
tumult of their acclaim is r . . Dying Swan 33 
about him r his lustrous eyes ; Love and Death 3 
1 r among the tender flowers : . Fatima . 1 r 
A* round by one fixed law. . . Pal. of Art 256 
A' to starboard, r to larboard, . Lotos-Es. . 151 
A' on each other, rounded, smooth'd, D. ofE. Worn. 5 1 
had r me deep below, . . . 11 ,119 

next moon was r into the sky, . it . 229 

all day long the noise of battle r . M. d 'Arthur 1 
R in one another's arms, . . Locksley //. 58 
When the ranks are r in vapour, . 11 .104 

all the war is > in smoke.' . . Two Voices 156 
full black ringlets downwaid r, . Day-Dm . 88 
r about Like tumbled fruit Princess, Pro. 82 
Kitten-like he r And pa wM . . ■■ iii. if$ 
rniss'd the plank, and rlu the river 11 iv. 159 

r the gilded Squire ... 11 v. 21 

rhimseli Thrice in the saddle, . 11 .1 

Part ron the earth and rose again o . 486 

r With music in the growing breeze 11 vi. 40 
her eye with slow dilation r . m . 172 

r the psalm to wintry skies, . In Mem. Iv. it 

r the floods in grander space, . 11 cii. 26 

And a sullen thunder is r . . Maiid,\\.\v. 49 
sound of the sorrowing anthem r Ode on Well. 60 
down his enemy r, And there lay still; Enid 1009 

He r his eyes about the hall, . 11 145^ 

russct-bearded head r on the floor. " J577 

forethought r about his brain . Vivien . 71 

r Ins enemy down, And saved him Elaine , 26 
from the skull the crown A* into light 11 53 

r his eyes Yet blank from sleep, . 11 . 815 

R a sea-haze and whclm'd the world En. Arden 673 
the year A' itself round again . 11 . 823 

once again he rhU eyes upon her 11 . 904 

r His hoop to pleasure Edith, . A rimer's E. 84 
R the rich vapour far into the heaven S/ec. of Iliad 8 

roller. 
league-long r thundering on the reef En. Arden 5S5 

tallest. 
r from the gorgeous gloom . . InMem. Ixxxv. 2 

rolling. 
up a quiet cove A" slide, . . Elcanore . 109 
r to and fro 1'hc heads and crowns Pal. of Art 151 
R a slumbrous sheet of foam . Lotot-Et. . 13 
holy organ r waves Of sound . D.ofF.Wom.igx 
Came r on the wind. ' Of old sat Freedom,' etc. 8 
r as 111 sleep, Ix>w thunders . . Talkme O. 278 
r thro' the court A long melodious Pnneeu.U. 451 
thunder-music, r, shake . In Mem. lxxxvi. 7 
Let her great Danube r fair . 11 xcvii. 9 

star and system r past, . , 11 Con. 122 

r in his mind Old waifs of rhyme The IWojk . X98 
Bound cm a foray, r eyes of prey, Enid . 1387 
moony vapour r round the King, Guinevere . 59s 
Enoch r his gray eyes upon hei, . En Arden . 845 
r as it were the substance of it . Aylmer's . 
r o'er the palaces o( the proud, . 11 

A' on their purple couches . . BoSdii ca . in 



344 



CONCORDANCE 70 



Princess, ii. 
Ma?td t \. xix. 

Boddicea 
Lucretius . 

Lady Clare 



66 



84 



73 



Roman. poem. line. 

My Hercules, my R Antony, . D.ofF.Wom. 150 
The R soldier found Me lying dead, w . 161 

Worthy a R spouse.' ... if 164 

and the R brows Of Agrippina . Princess, ii. 70 
the Persian, Grecian, R lines . it . 114 

foreheads drawn in R scowls . »m vii. 114 
What R strength Turbia show'd . The Daisy . 5 
for whose love the R Caesar first . Enid . . 745 
■when the R left us, and their law . Guinevere . 453 
Blacken round the R carrion . Boddicea . 14 
There the horde of R robbers .if .18 

There the hive of R liars it . 19 

Lo their precious R bantling, n . 31 

Shall we teach it a R lesson it -32 

Tho' the R eagle shadow thee . n . 39 

Take the hoary R head and. shatter it n . 65 

Cut the R boy to pieces u .66 

Ran the land with R slaughter 11 .84 

Whati? would be dragg'dm triumph Lucretius . 231 

Rome. 
The fading politics of mortal R, 
Abroad, at Florence, at R, . 
Such is R, and this her deity : 
a steaming slaughter-house of R, 

Ronald. 
Lord R brought a lily-white doe 

Lord R is heir of all your lands, . n 

all you have will be Lord R's, . n 

lily-white doe Lord A' had brought u 

Down stept Lord R from his tower n 

She look'd into Lord R's eyes, . n 

-rood. 
' By holy r, a royal beard ! . . Day-Dm. 
by God's r is the one maid for me* Enid . 
by God's?-, I trusted you too much/ Vivien 

roof. 
The sparrow's chirrup on the r, . Mariana 
Hundreds of descents on the r . Arabian N's. 129 

togetherunderthesame?", To . WithPal.ofArti2 

round the r's a gilded gallery . Pal. of Art 29 
the rand crown of things. . . Lotos-E's. . 69 
and on r's Of marble palaces. . L). ofE. Worn. 23 
waves Of sound on r and floor . u . 192 

House in the shade of comfortable r's StS.Stylites 105 
The r's of Sumner-place! . Talking O. 32,95,152 
And on the r she went, 11 . 114 

when the rain is on the r . . Locksley H. 78 
Flew over rand casement : . . Will Water. 134 
And they leave her father's r . L. of Burleigh 12 
When beneath his r they come. . 11 .40 

Flaying the r's and sucking up the Princess, v. 514 
thereon the r's Like that great dame ti vi. 15 

shape it plank and beam for r and floor •» . 30 

Clomb to the r's, and gazed alone . ir vii. 17 
The r's, that heard our earliest cry In Mem. ci. 3 
With tender gloom the r, the wall ; n Con. 118 
in session on their r\sApprov'd him The Brook . 127 
I climb'd the rs at break of day ; The Daisy . 61 
Garrulous under a r of pine : To F. D. Maurice2o 
lived along the milky r's ; . . Elaine . 408 
red r's about a narrow wharf . En. A rden . 3 
beneath his own low range of r's, Aylmer's F. 47 
presence flattering the poor r's . it . 175 

every r Sent out a listener : it . 613 

The r so lowly but that beam of Heaven n . 684 

Rush to the r, sudden rocket, . W. to A lex an. 20 

roof {verb.) 
R not a glance so keen l Clear Steaded fr tend, 1, etc. 7 

roofed. 
R the world with doubt and fear . Eleanore . 99 

roofh a un ting. 
R -h martins warm their eggs : . Day-Dm. . 37 

■roof- tree. 
now for me the r-t fall. . . Locksley IT. 190 

rook 
The building r 'ill caw . . . May Queen,\\. 17 



POEM. LINE. 

r's are blown about the skies In Mem. xv. 4 

Autumn, with a noise of r's . . n lxxxiv. 17 
a clamour of the r's At distance . Enid . . 249 

rookery. 
leads the clanging r home. . . Locksley H. 68 
line of the approaching r swerve. . Pri?icess,Con. 97 

room (apartment.) 
close, As a sick man's r ' A spirit haunts] etc. ^ 14 
She made three paces thro' the r, L. ofShalott, hi. 38 
pass, Well-pleased, from r to r. . Pal. of Art . 56 
Full of great r's and small the palace it . 57 

There was silence in the r . . Dora . . 154 
not a r For love or money. . . A udley Ct. . 1 
r's which gave Upon a pillar'd porch Princess, i. 226 
shuddering fled from r to r, . 11 vi. 350 

To see the r's in which he dwelt In Mem. Ixxxvi. 16 
thro' the bhndless casement of the r, Enid . 71 
'Your leave, my lord, to cross the r 3 11 . i*47 

glimmer'd on his armour in the r. . 11 . 1235 

] shadow still would glide from rto r, Guinevere . 500 
! Past thro' the solitary r in front, . En. Ardm . 276 
jests,that flash'd about the pleader's r, Aylmer's F. 440 
from this r into the next ; . . Grandmother 103 

room (space.) 
seem'd no r for sense of wrong. . Tzuo Voices 456 
fillest all the r Of all my love . In Mem. cxi. 5 
What r is here for a hater ? . . Spiteful Let. 14 

root. 
Cleaving, took r, and springing forth The Poet 21 
at the r thro' lush green grasses D. o/F. Worn. 71 
r Creeps to the garden water-pipes 11 . 205 

The fat earth feed thy branchy r, Talking O. 273 
tho' my heart be at the r. . . Locksley II. 66 
And schirrhous r's and tendons. . Amphion . 64 
fixt As are the r's of earth . . Princess, v. 436 
Thy rs are wrapt about the bones. In Mem. ii. 4 
By ashen r's the violets blow. . it cxiv. 4 
for the r's of my hair were stirr'd . Maud, I. i. 13 
mighty nuts, and nourishing r's ; . En. Arden . 556 

rooted. 
When r in the garden of the mind, Ode to Mem. 26 
I, r here among the groves, . . Talking O. . 181 
He rout the slothful officer . . Enid . 1786 

His honour r in dishonour stood, . Elaine . 872 

rope. 
With hand and r we haled the Walk, to the M. 83 
I wore The r that haled the buckets St S. Stylites 63 
reach'd the ship and caught the r, Sailor Boy . 3 

Rosamond. 
that R, whom men call fair, . D. o/F. Wom.2$x 

rosary (rose-garden.) 
rosaries of the scented thorn, . Arabian N's. 106 

rosary (string of beads.) 
amber, ancient rosaries, . . Princess, Pro. 19 

rose (adj.) 
the lights, r, amber, emerald, blue, Pal. of Art 169 

rose (s.) 
plaited alleys of the trailing r . Ode to Mem. 106 
And the year's last r. . ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 20 
Some spirit of a crimson r . . Adeline . 41 
Her cheek had lost the r . . (Enone . 17 
her hair Wound with white r's, . Pal. of Art 99 
petals from blown rs on the grass Lotos-E's. . 47 
up theporch there grew an Eastern r,Gardener'sD. 122 
but she, a Rose In r's, ir . 141 

' Ah, one r, One r, but one . - it 347 

Nor yet refused the r, but granted it, ir . 157 

Kissing the r she gave me o'er and o'er,it . 172 

then for r's, moss or musk, it * 189 

Wearing the r of womanhood. . Two Voices 417 
Within the bosom of the r ? . Day-Dm. . 204 

With a single r in her hair. . . Lady Clare 60 
God made himself an awful r of VisiouofSin 50, 224 
meshes of the jasmime and the r: Prmcess t i. 216 
as tho' theie were Oner inall the world n ii. 37 



TEAWYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



345 



sated with the innumerable r 



FOEM LINK. 

. .Princess, iii. 106 






any rofGulistan Shall burst her veil: m iv. 104 
Before me shower' d the r in flakes " . 245 

there 's no r that's half so dear to them " v. 152 

She takes a riband ora/, 1 . . In Mem. vi. 32 
make the r Pull sideways, . . ti lxxi. 10 

May breathe, with many r's sweet, 11 xc. 10 
and swung The heavy-folded r, . 11 xciv. 59 

every thought breaks out a r. . 11 exxi. 20 

He too foretold the perfect r. . <• Con. 34 ; 

An hour's defect of the r . . Maud, I. ii. 8 1 
You have but fed on the r' j . .11 iv. 60 ' 

Maud has a garden of r s . . n xiv. 1 J 

R'saie her cheeks, And a r her mouth 11 xvii. 7,27 | 
'.Ah, be Among the r's to-night . 11 xxi. 13 

And the musk of the r's blown . 11 xxii. 6 
All night have the >'s heaid 11 . 13 

1 said to the r ' The brief night goes .1 . 27 

but mine,' so I sware to the r . n . 31 

soul of the r went into my blood .11 .33 

the r was awake all night for your sake. 1 . 49 

lilies and r's were all awake, .11 - 51 

Queen rof the rosebud garden of girls, >i . 53 

Queen lily and r in one ; . . ti . 56 

'1 he red r cries ' She is near . ir .63 

The white r weeps, ' she is late .11 .64 

All made up of the lily and r . 11 II. v. 74 
fear they arc not r's, but blood : . 11 -78 

O'er the four rivers the fir-st r's blew, Enid 1612 
make her paler with a poisou'd r > Vivien . 461 
p Ins own sweet r . . 11 . 575 

high dawn piercing the royal r . 11 . 589 

lie and early rs from his wall En. Ardeu 336 
red r was redder thai: itself . Aylmer's F. 50 

York's white r as red as Lancaster s, 11 . 51 

fann'd the gardens of that rival r 11 . 455 

Secm'd hope's returning r: . . 11 .559 

wilderness shall blossom as the r. n 

ne rare little r . . ffendecasy Rabies 19 

11 a r, were offer'd to thee? Lucretius . 69 

X, r and clematis . . The Window 23, 30 

Rose. 
Of R, the Gardener's daughter? Gardener's D. 51 
but she, a A' in roses, . . . ,, .141 

rose (pret. of rise. ) 
Some blue peaks in the distance r. Dying Swan 11 
Heaven over Heaven r the night. Mariana in the S. 92 
At last you rand moved ihc light Miller's D. 125 
r, and, with a silent grace ti . 159 

»ly to a music slowly breath'd CEnone . 40 
R lend, with question unto whom 'i . 80 

1 r up in the silent night : . . The Sisters 25 
Of ledge or shelf The rock r clear. Pal. 0/ Art 10 
that sweet incense rand never fail'd 11 . 45 

Here r, an athlete, strong to break 11 . 153 

r the morning of the year I . Afar Queen. Si. 3 
A' with you thro' a little arc . ToJ.S. . 20 

• .111 out tin: bosom of the lake, M. d' Arthur y, 
Then quickly r Sir Bedivere, . 11 . 1 

r an arm Ooth'd in white samite, 11 . 143 

from the pavement he half r, . u . 167 

from them r A cry that shiverM . " . 198 

she, that r the mall ■■ . 207 

up we r, and on the spur we went. Car dener's D. 32 
but I rup Full of his bliss,. . . 11 . 205 

■ thro' circumstantial gradi , 235 

she r and took The child once more, Dora . 78 
ere the night wcr And sauntcr'd home AudleyCt, 78 
ie lull music r and sank . Ed. Morris 34 
one that r Twenty by measuie j . st s. Sty/ites 87 
When his man-minded offset r . Talking O. 51 
-. she touch'd on, dipt and r, „ . 131 

we two r. There— closing . LovtandDuty 76 
e of striking clocks, . . Day^Dm. . 134 

K again from where it seem d to fail. Vision of Sin 24 
11 like up Princess, Pro. 75 

I r and past Thro' the wild woods 11 1 

a woman-statue r with wings . ■> . 207 

She r her height, and said : . . 11 ii. 27 
an officer A' up, and read the statutes, 11 . 55 I 



roEM. 
Princess, 



LINE. 

ii. 154 

11. 3 



Con. 



She r upon a wind of prophecy 

We r, and each by other drest 

a sudden transport r and fell . n 

in the midst A fragrant flame r, . ■■ 

r a shriek as of a city sack'd ; . 1, 

there r A hubbub in the court . 11 

beheld her, when she r The yesternight 

r a cry As if to greet the king ; . » 

On his haunches r the steed, . u 

roll'd on the earth and r again . >, 

A' a nurse of ninety years, . . ,, 

a day R from the distance . . n 

soon He r up whole, ... f , 

from mine arms she r Glowing . „ 

random scheme as wildly as it r : n 

r a little feud betwixt the two . 11 

yet to give the story as it r, . . n 

llut that there r a shout : . . it 

shout r again, and made The long line << 

While I r up against my doom, . InMem.cxxi. 

The love that r on stronger wings, 11 exxvii. 

full willingly he r: . . . The £ rook . 

So fresh they r in shadow'd swells ; The Letters 

Again their ravening eagle r . Odeou 11 'ell. 

when a rumour r about the Oueen Enid . 

rat last, a single maiden with her, 11 

from the mason's hand, a fortress r; 11 

r a cry That Edyrn's men were on 11 

the maiden r And left her maiden \\ 

r I.imours and looking at his feet, 11 

Anon she r, and stepping lightly . 11 

once again she r to look at it, 1, 

R when they saw the dead man rise .. 

I rand fled from Arthur's com 1 . Vivien 

the time when first the q' ^stion r 11 

r without a word and parted from her: .1 

She dislink[d herself at once and r, 

some light jest among them r, . Elaine 

r And drove him into wastes . .. 

rathe she r, half-cheated in the thought 11 

They r, heard mass, broke fast, . 11 

flash'd into wild tears, and r again, 11 

1 and glided thro' the fields, ■■ 

full meekly r the maid, . ,, 

Then r the dumb old servitor . 11 

and r And pointed to the damsel, •■ 

the maiden r, White as her veil, . Guinevere 

K tin- pale Queen, and in her anguish 11 

rand past Hearing a lifelong hunger /■.'«. Arden . 

She r, and lixt her swimming eyes 11 

He woke, he r, he spread his arms .. 

A' from the clay it work'd in . Ayhuer's F. 

Darkly that day r: . . .. 

Her at daw 11 and, fired with hope, Sailor flvy . 

so that he r Willi sacrifice . . On a Mourner 21 

rosebud. 
Whcie on the double r droops . Dav-Dni. 
A r set with little wilful thorns, . Princess, Pro. 15 j 
Queen rose of the r garden of girls Maud, l.xxu. 33 

rose-bush. 
And a r-b leans upon, . . . Adeline . 74 
to train the r-b that I set . , May Queen, \i. 47 

rose-carnation. 
And many a r< feed . . .In Mem. c. 7 

rosed. 
white neck Was rwith indignation Princess, vi. 334 
darken'd in the west, And r in 1 lie east: .V.-.i I 'reams 40 



16 
'47 
i=A 
167 
238 
482 
486 
544 
96 
5° 
144 
2 
23 
26 

96 



121 
46 
119 

• 24 

. 160 

• 244 
. 638 

• 736 
1151 
1222 
1236 
1580 

. 146 
. 260 

■ 593 
. 758 
. 178 

• 339 

• 414 
. 610 

• 839 

■ 972 
"17 

• 360 

. 5E0 

• 78 

• 3" 
911 
170 
609 



rose-garden. 
For I know her own r-g- 

rose-liued. 
Flowing beneath her r-h zone : 

rose-lea/. 
Letting the rose-leaves fall : . 
Like .1 r-l 1 will crush thee, . 

rose-li/s. 
Thy rl and full blue eyes . 



Maud, \. xx. 41 
Arabians'!. 140 



Clarilel 
Lilian 



el deline 



346 



CONCORDANCE TO 



rose-red. poem. line. 

From thy r-r lips my name Floweth Elednore . 133 

rosetree. 
One look'd all r, and another wore Aylmer's F. 157 



rosin. 
sweating r, plump'd the pine 



Amphiou . 47 



rosy. 
And left the daisies r. . . . Maud, I. xii. 24 
R is the West, R is the South, . ir xvii. 5,25 
r, with his babe across his knees ; En. A rden . 747 

rosy-bright. 
all in spaces r-b . . . Mariana in ike S. 89 

rosy-kindled. 

r-k with her brother's kiss — . . Elaine . 392 

rosy-tinted. 
In tufts of r-t snow; . . . Two Voices 60 

rosy-white. 
her light foot Shone r-w . . CEnone . 3 76 

rot. 
if man r in dreamless ease, . . Two Voices 280 
upon a name ! rest, r in that ! . Aylmer's F. 385 

rotted. 
my thighs are r with the dew ; . StS.Stylites 40 

rotten. 
Till all be ripe and r. . . . Will Water. 16 

rotting. 

At least, not r like a weed, . . Two Voices 142 

R on some wild shore . . . Princess, v. 141 

r inward slowly moulders all, . Vivien . 245 

rough. 
says he is r but kind, . . Maud, f . xix. 70-9, 83 
and r the ways and wild ; . . Enid . . 750 

rough-reddened. 
R-r with a thousand winter gales, En. Arden . 95 

round (adj.) 
o'er it many, r and small, . . Mariana . 39 
knew the merry world was r. , The Voyage 7,95 

round (s.) 
runs the r of life from hour to hour. Circumstance 9 
The dark r of the dripping wheel, Miller s D. 102 
Like the tender amber r, . . Margaret . 19 
in the r of Time Still father Truth ? Love andDuty 4 
To yonder argent r . . . St Agues' Eve 16 
Comes out, a perfect r. . . Will Water. 68 

This r of green, this orb of flame, In Mem. xxxiv. 5 
Should move his r's, and fusing all tr xlvi. 2 

slowly breathing bare The r of space, it lxxxv. 5 

round (verb. ) 

Should slowly r his orb, . . Elednore . 91 

So r's he to a separate mind . In Mem. xliv. 9 

r A higher height, ... 11 lxii. 11 

rounded. 
canal Is r to as clear a lake. . Arabian N's. 46 

slowly r to the east . . Mariana in the S. 79 
Roll'd on each other, r, smooth'd D. ofF. Worn. 51 
rby the stillness of the beach . Audley Ct. . 9 
circle r under female hands . . Princess, ii. 350 
O'er ocean-mirrors r large, . . In Mem. xii. 9 

roundel. 
glorious r echoing in our ears, . Vivien . 276 

roundelay. 
Twice or thrice his r, . . . The Owl, i. 11 

rounder. 
softer all her shape And r seem'd : Princess, vii. 122 

Roundhead. 
And far below the R rode, . . Talking O. 299 

rouse (s.) 
Have a r before the morn : . Vision of Sin 96, 120 

rouse (verb.) 
From deep thought himself he r's, L. 0/ Burleigh 21 



roused. poem. line. 

has r the child again. . . . Sea Dreams 270 

rout (s. ) 

a r of saucy boys Brake on us . Princess, v. 384 

midmost of a r of roisterers, . Enid . 1123 

all his r of random followers, . u . 1231 

blindly rush'd on all the r behind. 11 . 1315 
rout (verb.) 

sound to r the brood of cares, InMem. Ixxxviii. 17 

rove. 
R's from the living brother's face, In Mem. xxxii. 7 
How young Columbus seem'd to r, The Daisy . 17 
Let his eye r in following . . Enid . . 399 

roved. 

1 rat random thro' the town, In Mem.\xxxvl. 3 
While I r about the forest . . Boddicea . 35 

roving. 
after r in the woods . . . Miller s D 58 
R the trackless realms of Lyonnesse Elaine . 36 

row (s.) 
there ran a r Of cloisters, . . Pal. of Art 25 

row (verb.) 
taught me how to skate, to r, . Ed. Morris 10 
he can steer and r, and he Will guide me Elaine 1122 

rowed. 
and how I r across And took it, . M. d Arthur 32 

rowing. 
Who, r hard against the stream . Two Voices 211 

royal. 
Break not, for thou art R, . 



So r-r and wide. 



royal-rich. 



rub. 



Ded, of Idylls 44 
Pal. of Art m, 191 



We r each other's angles down, In Mem. Ixxxviii 40 

rubbed. 
And yawn'd, and r his face, . Day-Dm. . 153 

rubbish. 
Or cast as r to the void, . . In Mem. liii. 7 
in the jumbled r of a dream . . Vivien . 197 

rubric. 
set your thoughts in r thus . . Princess, iri. 34 

ruby-budded. 
break from the r-b lime. . . Maud, I. iv. r 

ruddy. 
R and white and strong on his legs Grandmother 2 
His face was r, his hair was gold, T/ie Viciwi 36 

rude. 
a crew that is neither r nor rash, . The Islet . 10 

rue. 

Old year, we'll dearly ?-foryou:Z>. oftheO. Year 43 
could not ever r his marrying me Dora , . 143 
May r the bargain made. ' . . Princess, 1. 73 

rued. 
the hunter r His rash intrusion . Princess, iv. 185 

ruffian. 
flushes up in the r's head, . . Maud, I. i. 37 
so the r's growl'd, Fearing to lose, Enid . 1411 

ruffle. 
R 's her pure cold plume, . . M. d Arthur 268 
R thy mirror'd mast, . . .In Mem. ix. 7 
I swear it would not r me so much Enid . . 999 
sharp wind that r's all day long . Guinevere . 51 

ruffled. 
Rankled in him and rail his heart Guinevere . 50 
not a hair R upon the scarfskin . Aylmer's F. 660 

ruin. 
Boat, island, r's of a castle, . . Ed. Morris 6 
Sit brooding in the r's of a life, Love and Duty 12 
satiated at length Came to the r's . Princess, Pro. 91 



TEXXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



347 



ghostly woodpecker, Hid in the r's ; Pnncess,Pro.2i2 
.ic rand a Grecian house . r 225 

the crimson-rolling eye Glares r, . 11 iv. 474 

Rang r, answer'd full of grief and scorn 11 vi. 313 
old bridge which, half in r's then, The Brook . 79 
strength Turbia show'd In r 
And placed them in this r; . 
men may fear Fresh fire and r. 
ending in a ) — nothing left . 
Red r, and the breaking up of \avis Guinevere 
wrought the r of my lord the King.* m 
The crash of r and the loss of all . En. Arden 
Hurt in that night of sudden r 
shuddering at the r of a world ; 
a gulf of r, swallowing gold, 
the sea roars R : . 
gaps and chasms of r left 

ruin 
t, a plot, to rail ! 
fear This whole foundation r, . 11 

heiress of your plan, And takes and r'jalljii 

ruined. 
the good house, tho' r, O my Son, Enid 
j- man Thro' woman the first hour ; Vivien 
R ! r .' the sea roars Ruin : 



The Daisy 
Enid . 

Vivien 



Sea Dreams 



6 
643 
1671 
732 

423 
681 
530 
565 
30 
79 
ti 
218 



Princess, ii. 175 
320 
222 

378 

213 

. Sea Dreams 80 

ruining. 
In twelve great battles r overthrown Guinevere 420 
R along the illimitable inane . Lucretius . 40 



ruinous. 
He look'd and saw that all was r. 



Enid 



3>5 



rule fs.) 
royal power, ample r Unquestion'd CF.none . 109 
Phantoms of other forms of r, ' Love thouthy land 1 59 
obedience is the bond of r. . . M. d 'Arthur 94 
all men's good lie each man'* r, . Golden Year 48 
err fn.m honest Nature's rl . Locksley //. 6i 

Averring it was clear against all r's Princess, i. 176 
' itc is out of r's. . . 11 iv. 200 

I beimt a-gooin' t'j break my r. . A 7 ". Parmer . 4 
I wcaiil break r*M for lector, . 11 . 67 

rule I verb.) 

May you r us long, . . . TotheQueen 20 

cornea :emorc — . M.d' Arthur 24 

That taught the Sabine how to r, Princess, ii. 65 

wish'd to marry: they could ra house: 11 . 441 

y my troubled spirit r, . /uMetu.xxv'm. 17 

Ut thou r my blood . n lviii. 5 

in rand dare not lie . . Maud, I. x. 66 

Heathen, wh hall r the Elaine . 66 

child without the craft to r 11 . 146 

as Arthur's queen I move and r: , n 1215 

know-, lake, abide and rthe house: Guinevere . 511 
He that only r's by terror . . The Captain 1 

ruled. 
R in the eastern sky. . . . D.o/F. Wom.264 
grim Earl, who r In Coventry : . Goiiiva 12 

A nation yet, the rulers and the r — Princess,Con. 53 
be r with rod or with knout? . Maud, 1. iv. 47 

listen to me, and by me be r, . Enid . 1472 

■ie that r the hour, . . Aylmer's F. 194 
There they r, and thence they wasted Boiidicea . 54 

r/</t*r. 
leave us r"j of your blood . . TotheQueen 21 
A nation yet, the r's and the ruled Prima.-:. 1 
deathless r of thy dying house . Aylmer's F. 661 

ruiu/'le. 
Clamour and r, and ringing and clatter, Maud, 1 1 . v. 1 3 

rumbled. 
And round the attics r . . . The Goose . 46 



rummaged. 
tapt at doors, And r like a r.it : 



Walk, to the M. 30 



rumour. 
hrcath And r's of a doubt . M.d' Arthur 100 
r 01 Prince Arac hard at hand . Princess, v. 108 
mouths ran on and r of battle grew Maud.iW 



Enid . 


?4 


Elaine 

. 11 

Guinevere . 


10 

521 
1 1 - 4 
MS7 

>5i 


Aylmer's F. 


337 
212 
496 


Aylmer's F. 

The I 


849 
14 



POEM. LIKE, 

let the turbid streams of r (low . Ode on Well. 181 
when a r rose about the Queen 
Vest at a r rife about the Queen 
Hid from the wide world's r. 
I hear of r's flying thro' your court, 
let r's be : When did not r's fly ': 
a r wildly blown about Came 
Less noble, being, as all r runs, 
Wife-hunting, as the r ran, . 
down the wind With r . 

run fs.) 
the mole has made his r. 
so quick the r We felt the good sh 
run verb.) 
When cats r home . . . The Owl, i. I 

trenched waters r from sky to sky, Ode to Mem. 104 
R's up the ridged sea . . . Sea-J-'airies 39 
Thro' the wave that r's for ever . L. </Shalott,i.i2 
'while the world r's round and round'./W. 0/ Art 13 
r before the fluttering tongues of fire ; D.o/F. Worn. 30 
where the bay r's up its latest horn Audley Ct. . 10 
can r My faith beyond my practice Ed. Morris 53 
The Sun will r his orbit, . . Love and 'Duly 22 
one increasing purpose r's, . . Locksley J/. 137 
they shall dive, and they shall r, . 11 . 169 

The vilest herb that r's to seed 
Again.st its fountain upward r's 
To make my blood r quicker 
Where the bloody conduit r's: 
' The stars,' she whimpers, ' blindly r; /// Mem. iii. 
Till all my widow'drace be r- 117-20) it 
So rs my dream : but what am 1 '/ 11 
R out your measured arcs . . 11 
every grain of sand that r's . . 11 
I hear thee where the waters r • . 11 
clamour'd from a casement ' r' 
'A', Katie I' Katie never r: 
He that r's may read. . 

Cataract brooks to the ocean r, . 1 he Islet . 17 
an Oread, and this way she r's . Lucretius . 188 



Am/>hion . 95 

Wilt Water. 35 

<• . 110 

Vision of Sin 144 

S 

18 

17 

27 

9 



l.ii. 

11 civ. 

11 ocvi. 

■ 1 exxix. 

The Brook . 

<> 
The J 

The Islet . 
Lucretius . 



rung. 
Loud, loud rout the bugle's brays, Oriana . 48 
as he rode his armour r, . L.o/Shalott,\nn 

The dUtant battle llash'd and r. . . 126 

Nut a bell was r, not a prayer was read; Maud, 11 v. 24 

ruf. 
r's babbling down the glen. . Mariana in the S. 44 
Nor r tinkling from the rock ; . In Mem. xcix. ij 

runnel. 
The babbling r crispcth, . . Clanicl . 1 ; 

running. 
stable wench Came r at the call . Princess, i. 224 
second was my father's r thus : . 11 iv. 387 

R down to my own dark wood : . Maud, I. xiv. 30 
R too vehemently to break upon it Enid . . 78 
r on thus hopefully ihe heard, . En, Arden. 201 
While you were r down the sands, Sea Drtanu 256 
You are all r on one way, (rep.) . Tlie Window 8 

rush (s ) 
the shrieking rof the wainscot mouse, Maud, I.vi. 71 
r of the air in tho prone swing . Aylmer's F. 86 

rush (verb.) 
those, who clench their nerves to r LoreandDuty 75 
A thousand arms and r's to the Sun. Princess, vi. 21 
r abroad all round the little haven P.n. Arden . 868 
A' to the roof, sudden rocket, /('. toAlejcan. 20 

rushed. 
And our spirits r together . . Locksley H. 38 
A wind arose and r upon the South. Princess, i. 96 



on a sudden r Among us. 
We r into each other's arms, 
blindly r on all the rout behind. 
/ am his dearest ! ' r on the knife 

rushing. 
The milldam r down with 1 
whisper of the south-wind r warm, Loikslcy II. 1. j 



11 iv. 35s 

The Letters 40 

Enid . 1 31 5 

.':;« 77 



Miller's />. JO 



348 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Snapt in the r of the river-rain 
r outward honlike Leapt on him, 
Far purelier in his r's to and fro, 
My lady's Indian kinsman r in, 
thrice I heard the rain R ; . 

russct-bea rded. 
The r-b head roll'd on the floor. . 

R ussiapi. 
Cossack and R Reel'd . 



POEM. LINE. 

Vivien . S07 

Guinevere . 106 
Aylmers F. 458 
" - 593 

Lucretius . 27 

Enid , 1577 

Lt. Brigade 34 



rust (s.) 
fearing r or soilure fashioned for it Elaine 
keeps the r of murder on the walls — Gui?tevere 

rust. 
lest we r in ease. . * Love t)tou thy land,' etc. 
To r unburnish'd, not to shine in use ! Ulysses . 
cannon-bullet ron a slothful shore Maud, Ill.vi 

rusted. 
when the braken r on their crags, Ed. Morris 100 

rusting. 
r on his iron hills, 

rustle. 
Sweet-Gale r round the shelving keel; Ed. Morris no 
papers that she held R : . . Princess, iv. 372 

rustled. 
in maiden plumes We r: . . Princess, i. 200 

rustling. 
Tthro' The low and bloomed foliage, ArabianN* s.ii 
r once at night about the place, . Aylmers F. 547 

rusty. 
1 Arms indeed, but old And r, (rep.] 



Princess, v. 140 



Enid 



All 



rut. 



The same old r would deepen . Aylmers F. 34 

ruth. 

r began to work Against his anger Enid . . 950 

Had r again on Enid looking pale it . 1052 

with another humorous r remark'd ir . 1099 

Ruth, 

R among the fields of corn, . 



ruthless. 
As r as a baby with a worm, 

rye. 

Long fields of barley and of r, 



. Ay Inter's F. 68 
Walk.iotheM. 5 
. L.ofShalott.l. 



saay. 
use to s the things that a do 
I thowt a 'ad summut to s, . 
I weant s men be loiars . . 

Sabbath. 
Half God's good s, 
Behold, it is the S morn/ 
The .y's of Eternity, Onesdeepand 
On that loud s shook the spoiler . 
fixt the .$". Darkly that day rose : . 
woke, and went the next, The .S", . 

sabba th-dravuler. 
no s-d of old saws, 

Sabine. 
taught the £" how to rule, 

Sabcean. 
Dripping with £ spice . . . 

sabre. 
Flash'd all their s'sbare, 

sabre-stroke. 
Reel'd from the s-s . . . 

sabring. 

£ the gunners there, 



A 7 ". Farmer 6 
.1 . 19 

?i . 27 

To J. M. A", n 
Two Voices 402 
St Agnes' Eve 33 
Ode on Well. 123 
Aylmers F. 609 
Sea Dreams 19 

To J. M. K. 5 

Princess, ii. 65 

Adeline . 53 

Lt. Brigade 27 

Lt. Brigade 35 

Lt. Brigade 29 



sack (bag.) poem. line. 

sweating underneath a s of corn, . Enid . . 263 
With bag and 5 and basket, . . En. Arden . 63 
Cling together in the ghastly .? — . Ay Inter's F. 764 

sock (pillage.) 
the s and plunder of our house . Enid . . 694 

sock'd. 

rose a shriek as of a city s 

my Enid's birthday, s my house ; 



Pnncess,iv. 147 

Enid . .453 

. 634 



night of fire, when Edyrn 5 their house, \\ 

sacrament. 
Deliver me the blessed s ; . StS. Stylites 215 

sacred. 
And either s unto you. . . . Day-Dm. . 280 
Keep nothing ^ .* * You might have won,' etc. 19 
5 from the blight Ofancient influence Princess, 11. 152 
Oh, 5 be the flesh and blood . InMem. xxxiii.n 

we must remain S to one another.' Aylmers F. 426 

sacrifice (s. ) 
Have we not made ourself the s '? Princess, iii. 232 
To blow these j*j thro' the world— Ay Inter's F. 758 
so that he rose With s, . . On a Mourner 34 

sacrifice (verb. ) 
to thy worst self 5 thyself, . . Ay Inter's F. 645 

sad. 
The broken sheds look'd s and strange Mariana 5 
Madonna, 5 is night and morn Mariana in the S. 22 
His memory scarce can make me 5. Miller's D. 16 
I am s and glad To see yon, Florian. Princess, ii. 286 
made me sick, and almost sV . 11 . 372 

6" as the last which reddens over one 11 iv. 28 
So s, so fresh, the days that are no more, n 30-5 



31 
27 



j and strange as in dark summer 
one is s ; her note is changed, . In Mem.xxi. 
makes me 5 I know not why, . n lxvii. 

To a life that has been so s, . . Maud, I. xi. 13 
no peace in the grave, is that not s ? 11 II. v. 16 
stern and s (so rare the smiles . The Daisy . 53 
knew her sitting ^ and solitary. . Enid . 1131 

Because I saw you s, to comfort you Vivien . 291 
rather think How s it were for Arthur, Guinevere 492 
Favour from one so 5 . . . En. Arden. 286 
your dream,' she said, 'Not.?, but. Sea Dreams 103 
saySj our sins should make us 5 ; . Grandmother 93 

sadden. 
He s's, all the magic light. . . In Mem. viii. 5 
The gloom that ■s\? Heaven and Earth, The Datsyioi 
While he that watch' d her s, . Enid . . 67 

sadden d. 
Told Enid, and they s her the more : Enid . 64 
^ all her heart again ... n 1294 

She fail'd and s knowing it ; . En. Arden 256 

sadder. 
as her carol s grew, . . Mariana in ike S. 13 

saddle. 
Arac, roll'd himselfThrice in the s, Princess, v. 265 
lets me from the s;* . . . Elai?ie . 95 

saddle-bow. 
A cavalier from off his s-b, . . D.ofF.lVotn. 46 

saddle-lea titer. 
Thick jewell'd shone the s-l, L. o/Shatott, iii. 20 

sadness. 
Can I but relive in 5 ? . . . Locksley H. 107 
5 on the soul of Ida fell, . . Princess, vii. 14 
Or s in the summer moons ? . . lnMem.\xxs£K.. 8 
j flings Her shadow on the blaze . 11 xcvii. 18 
roll upon him, Unspeakable for s. En. Arden . 726 

safe. 
(royal word upon it, He comes back s) Princess, v. 216 

safer. 
the rougher hand Is s ; . 

sagest. 
some were left of those Held s, 



Princess, vL 262 



Princess, 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



349 



Sagramore. poem. line. 
What say ye then to sweet Sir S, . Vivien . ST- 

Sahib. 
At once the costly .S yielded to her. Aylmer's F. 233 

said. 

have s goodnight for evermore . MayQueen,\i. 41 

I know not what was s ; . , it lii 34 
He thought that nothing new was s, The Epic . - y o 

Something so s 'twas nothing — .11 .31 

Cruel, cruel the words 1st, . Ed. Gray . 17 

I s no, Yet being an easy man, . Princess, i. J47 

on all the wrathful king had s, . it v. 462 

so it seem'd, or so they s to me, . 11 vi 6 

She s you had a heart — 11 . 217 

The lesser griefs that may be s- . In Mem. xx 1 

all he s of things divine, . . 11 xxxvn. iS 

To dying lips is all he j . . i> . *o 

Whatever 1 have j or sung, . . 11 exxiv. 1 

how she look'd, and what he s, . » Con. 99 

How strange was what she s. . Maua,\.x\x. 34 

so like her? so they s on board. . The Brook . 223 

told me all her friends had s : . The Letters 25 

all that Earl Limours had s, . . Enid . 1240 

What s the happy sire ? . . . Vivien . 560 

we hear it s That men go down . Elaine . 148 

being weak in body s no more ; . 11 . S35 

smy father, and himself was knight Cmnezcre . 232 

for he seldom s me nay . . . Grandmotlier 09 

I thowt a s whot a owt to a 1 . N. Farmer . 20 

thof summun s it in aastc : . ,1 -27 

sail (s.) 
And the whirring f goes round ; rep.'/ The 0;ut, i. 4 
In the silken s of infancy . . Arabian N't. 2 
come hither and furl your is, . Sea-Fairus 10 
Mariner, mariner, furl your s's, . 11 .21 

wind-scatter'd over s's and masts . D. o/F. Wont. 31 
the barge with oar and J .Moved . M .d' Arthur 265 
happy s's and bear the Press; . Golden i'ear 42 
the vessel puffs her s : . . . Ulysses . 44 
ies of magic s's. . . . Locksley H. 121 
boat Tacks, and the slacken'd s flaps Princess, ii. 169 
Silver s's all out of the west 11 . 469 

the first beam glittering on a s, . 11 iv. 26 

trim our s's, and let old bygones be, " . 51 

the seas : A red s, or a white ; . m Con. 47 

see the s's at distance rise . . In A/em. xii. 11 
glance about the approaching s's. . 11 xiii. 18 

milkier every milky j ... 11 cxiv. 11 
far-off s is blown by the breeze . Maud, I. iv. 4 
white s's flying on the yellow sea ; Enid . . 829 
She took the helm and he the s, ' . Vivien . 49 

to the last dip of the vanishing j . En. Arden . 244 
waiting for a s : No s from day to day, 11 . 591 

scarlet shafts of sunrise— but no s. . n . 600 

Crying with a loud voice 'a s I a s f 11 . 912 

all the s's were darken'd in the west, Sea Dreams 39 
Dry sang the tackle, sang the s . The Voyage 10 
never s of ours was iurl'd, . . 11 .81 

whence were those that drove the s n .86 

With a satin j of a ruby glow, . The Islet , 13 

sail [verb. ) 
s with Arthur under looming M. d" Arthur, E/>. 17 
To s beyond the sunset Ulysses . 60 
ping wings they s . . Sir Galahad 44 
Abiding with me till Is . . I/iMem. cxx'iv. 13 
ht the shining vapour s . 11 Con. in 
The ship I 1 in passes here . . En. Arden . 214 
we might s for evermore. . . 'The Voyage 8,96 
V> lem'd to s into the Sun ! . 11 .16 

sail'd. 
Slow s the weary mariners . Sea- fairies 1 

throne of Indian Cania slowly s , Pal. 0/ Art 115 
s. Full-blown before us into rooms Princess, i. . 226 
' lair hills I J below, . . JuMem . xcvii. 2 

weeks before she s, S from this port En. Arden . 124 
erously s The ship 'Good Fortune, '11 . 523 

thai harbour whence he s before. . " . 667 

sailest. 
S the placid ocean-plains . . In Mem. ix. 2 



sailing. i-OEM. line. 

With here a blossom s, . . 7 he Brook . 56 

.f along before a gloomy cloud . Sea Dreams 120 

6' under palmy highlands . . The Captain 23 

sailor. 

praying God will save Thy s, — . hi Mem. vi 13 

I see the s at the wheel ■• x. 4 

Thou bnngest the s to his wife .11 .5 

greatest s since our world begat: . Ode on Well. 86 

Enoch Arden, a rough s's lad . En Arden . 14 

and made himself Full s ; . u -54 

A shipwreck s, waiting foi* 3 sail • 11 . 591 

S's bold and true. . . . The Captain 8 

saint (s.) 
The meed of s's. the white robe . St S. Sty tiles 20 
Who may be made a s, if 1 fail here? 1, . 47 

thou and all the s's Enjoy themselves 1. . 103 

the Virgin Mother, and the S's,- . " . 110 

silly people take me for a s, . . t. . 125 

register'd and calendar'd for s's. . 11 . r 30 

no one. even among the s . 11 . 1 36 

not told ol any. They were s's. . 1, . 149 

Yea.ciown das. They shout, 'beholdaj.'' n . 151 

gather'd to the glorious s's . . 11 194 

All! let me not De lbol'd, sweet j'j : u . 209 

Than Papist unto S . . . TalkingO . 16 
mother was as mild as any s, . Princess, 1. 22 
Swear by St something - 11 V. 283 

Like a .S"* glory up in heaver. : . ir . 503 

but she No s— inexorable— 1, . 504 

your mother now a s with s's. . » vi. 216 

the hands of Dilbric, the high s. . Enid . . 838 
oft I talk'd with Dubric. the high s, 11 1713 

1 thank the s's, I am not great. . Guinevere . 197 
Who wast, as is the conscience of a s 11 . 632 

king 01 j, 01 founder fell : . . Sea Dreams 217 

saint Iverb.J 
lower voices s* me from above. . StS. Stylttes 152 

samtdom. 
grasp the hope I hold Ol r. . . StS.Stylites 6 

sake. 
' Yet must I love her for your i; . Miller's D 142 
Nor would I break for your sweets L.C. V.deVere 13 
for the s of him that's gone, . . Dora . 60-8,92 
for her own dear s but this, . . Ed. Morris 141 
How prettily for his own sweet s . Maud, I. vi. 51 
And for your sweet s to yours ; . 11 xix. 91 

foi Cod's s.' he answer'd, 'both our s's En. Arden 505 

Satiquc. 
(ulmincd out her scorn of laws S . Princess, ii 117 

sallow. 
satin-shining palm On s's . . Vivien . 74 

satlo-ji-rifted. 
the s-r glooms Of evening . . Elaine . 996 

sally (s. ) 
I make a sudden s The Brook . 24 

all at once should f out upon me, . Enid . . 998 

Salty. 
to 's choorch afoor my ^ wur dciid N. Farmer 1 7 

sally (verb.) 
the king's command to s forth . Elaine . 559 

sallying, 
s thro' the gate. Had beat her foes Princess, Pro. 33 
s thro' the gates, and caught his hair, 11 v. 330 

saloon. 
Or, in a shadowy s, . . . Eleiinore . 125 

salt. 
stony drought and steaming s ; Ufariana in IheS. 40 
By snards and scurf of*, . . VuitmofSu* an 
she has neither savour nor * . ■ Maud, 1. ii. 1 
urkles like a grain of *. • Will . 20 

Caught the shrill 1, andshcer'd the gale The Voyage 12 

salute 

Take my s,' unknightly with flat hand Enid 



>5 r 5 



35° 



CONCORDANCE TO 



salttte (verb.) poem. line. 
Many a merry face S's them— . In Mem. Con. 67 

salver. 
fruitage golden-rinded On golden s's, Elednore . 34 

sameness. 
With weary s in the rhymes, . Miller s D. . 70 

welcome at the Hall, On whose dull s Ay liner's F.115 

Sam l an. 
whene'er she moves The S Here* rises Princess t ii\.gg 

samite. 
Clothed in white s, mystic M.d y Arthur 31, 144-59 
a robe Of S without price . . Vivien . 71 

King, who sat Robed in red s, . Elaine . 431 

Palled all its length in blackest s, if U36 

sanctities. 
darken'd s with song.' . . In Mem. xxxvh. 24 

sanctuary. 
crowds in column'd sajictitaries . D.of F.Wom. 22 
behold our j Is violate, . . Pripicess, vi. 43 

So was their ^ violated, . . 11 vii. 1 

I will draw me into s, . . . Guinevere . 120 
yield me s, nor ask Her name, . if . 140 

sand, 
purl o'er matted cress and ribbed 5 Ode to Mem. 59 
rainbow lives in the curve of the ^ ,• Sea-Fairies 27 
In glaring ^ and inlets bright. Mariana in the S. 8 
Dipt down to sea and s's. . . Pal, of Art . 32 
seem'd all dark and red — a tract of s, if . 65 

salt pool, lock'd in with bars of s . ir . 249 

sat them down upon the yellow s, Lotos-E's. . 37 
roaring deeps and fiery s's, n . 160 

foam-flakes scud along the level s, D. of F. Worn. 39 
almost choke with golden s — ' You ask me ivhy,'etc.2^ 
might as well have traced it in the s's Audley Ct. 49 
ran itself in golden s's . . . Locksley H. 32 
only make that footprint upon 5 . Princess, iii. 223 
as a figure lengthen'don the s . ir vi. 145 

suck the blinding splendour from the 5, ti vii. 24 
every grain of ^ that runs . . hi Mem. cxvi. 9 
Low on the 5 and loud on the stone Maud, I.xxii. 25 
a tap Of my finger-nail on the 5 . 11 II. ii. 22 
Tumbles a breaker on chalk and 5 ; To F.D. Maurice^ 
Toiling in immeasurable s, . . Will . . 16 
slipping o'er their shadows on the 5 Enid . 1320 

touching Breton s's, they disembark'd Vivien „ 51 
in the slippery ^ before it breaks r if . 142 

a naked child upon the is . . Gui?zevere . 291 
in the chasm are foam and yellow s'.? ; En. A rden 2 
built their castles of dissolving .? . 11 . 19 

All 5 and cliffand deep-inrunning cave Sea Dreams 1 7 
now on .? they walk ; d, and now on cliff ti . 37 
While you were running down the s's, 11 . 256 
By ^V and steaming flats, and floods The Voyage 45 
The s's and yeasty surges mix. . Sailor Boy . 9 

saudal {shoe.) 
he roll'd And paw'd about her s . Princess, iii. 166 

sandal (wood, ) 
toys in lava, fans Oi s . . . Princess, Pro. 29 

saud-htilt. 
Or even a s-l> ridge . . . Ode to Mem. 97 

sand-shore. 
The waste s-s's of Trath Treroit, . Elaine . 301 

sane. 
I woke s, but well-nigh close to death Priucess,-v'ii. 104 
Till crowds at length bes . Ode on Well. 169 

sanest. 
valorous, S and most obedient . Enid . 1759 

sang. 
by the river S Sir Lancelot . E.ofShalott, iii. 35 
^ to the stillness, .... (E?ione . 20 

S looking thro' his prison bars? . Margaret . 35 
over them the sea-wind .? . . M, a" Arthur 48 
and the nightingale .S" loud, . . Gardener s D. 95 
He s his song, and I replied with mine : Audley Ct. 55 
So $ we each to either ... 11 . 73 



POEM. LINE. 

angel stand and watch me, as I 5 StS. Stylites 34 
5 to me the whole Of those three . Talking O. . 134 
5 the gallant glorious chronicle ; . Princess* Pro. 49 
the women 5 Between the rougher voices 11 . 236 

Beyond all reason : these the women 5 if i. 142 

porch that 5 All round with laurel, . if ii. 8 

With whom I 5 about the morning hills if . 229 

smote her harp, and s. ... if iv. 20 

the tear, She 5 of, shook and fell, 11 . 42 

part Now while Is,... if .73 

So Lilian; we thought her . . 11 . 562 

Violet, she that s the mournful song if vi. 298 

maidens came, they talk'd, They s, v vii. 8 
lives in height (the shepherd s) . if . 178 

something in the ballads which they s, 11 Con. 14 
On Argive heights divinely s, In Mem. xxiii. 22 
A merry song we $ with him . 11 xxx. 15 

impetuously we s: n .16 

Once more we J : 'They do not die 11 . 22 

While now we s old songs that peal'dtr xciv. 13 
They .y of what is wise and good n cii. 10 

A statue veil'd, to which they s- . n .12 

5 froni the three-decker out of the foam, Maud } \,\. 50 
Birds in our wood J ... 11 xii. 9 

the song that Enid S was one . Enid . . 345 
when you 5 me that sweet rhyme Vivien . 284 
And s it : sweetly could she make Elaine 1000 

full willingly s the little maid . Gjtiuevcre . 165 
So j the novice, while full passionately if . 178 

S Arthur's glorious wars, and s the King 11 . 284 

then, he s, The twain together . if . 298 

ever painter painted, poet s, . Aylmer's F. 106 

while she s this baby song. . . Sea Dreams 280 
Dry s the tackle, 5 the sail . . T/ie Voyage 10 
So s the terrible prophetesses. . Boddicea . 37 

sa?tg?nne. 
S he was : a but less vivid hue . Ayljner's F. 64 

sank. 
I j In cool soft turf . . . Arabian N's. 96 
while day s or mounted higher . Pal. oj A rt 46 
full words j thro' the silence drear, D. o/F. Worn. 121 
as we s From rock to rock . . A udley Ct. 82 
full music rose and 5 the sun, . Ed. Morris 34 
She s her head upon hei arm . Talking O. 207 
Tho' at times her spirit s : . . L. of Burleigh 70 
deep in broider'd down we s . Princess, iv. 14 

veil'd her brows, and prone she s, if v. 104 

down dead-heavy 5 her curls, . 11 vi. 131 

after s and j And, into mournful twilight if . 173 

I 5 and slept, Fill'd thro' and thro' if vii. 156 

her forehead 5 upon her hands, . n . 231 

A bitter day that early 5 . .In Mem. cvi. 2 
show'd themselves against the sky, ands Enid 240 
5" her sweet head upon her gentle breast ; if . 527 
down he 5 For the pure pain . Elaine . 516 

s As into sleep again. . . . Ayhne^s F. 591 
^ down shamed At all that beauty Lticretitis . 63 

sap (s.) 
But yet my £ was stirr'd . . Talking O. 172 
The s dries up : the plant declines : Two Voices 268 
Here rests the s within the leaf . Day-Dm. . 23 

sap (verb. ) 
Ring out the grief that is the mind, In Mem. cv. 9 
j'j The fealty of our friends, . Guinevere . 516 

sapience. 
And glean your scatter'd s. . . Princess, ii. 241 

sapling. 
had a s growing on it, . . . Enid . 1012 

lie still, and yet the 5 grew : ti 1014 

sapphire. 
A purer 5 melts into the sea . Maud,J. xv'ul. 52 

sapph ire-spangled. 
The silent s-s marriage ring . . Maud, I. iv. 6 

Sappho. 
arts of grace S and others . . Princess, ii. 148 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



sappy. poem. LINE. 

Are neither green nor J. ■ . . Amfhum . <fi 

sardonyx. 
Beneath branch-work of costly s . Pal. of Art 95 

sarmitt. 
But a reads wonn s a weeak . N. Farmer 28 

sat. 
I came and s Below the chesnuts, Miller's D. 59 
near this door you s apart, . . " • J S 

With down-dropt eyes I s alone : CLnone . 50 
while I s Low in the valley. . » • «° 

.V smiling, babe in arm. . . Pal. of Art 96 

j betwixt the shining Onels, . 11 • >59 

Flash'd thro' her as she s alone, . 11 • 2'4 

i them down upon the yellow sand. Lotos-*, s. . 37 
we s as God by God : . . D.ofF.lVom 1^2 
Ofold s Freedom on the heights, 'Of old sat Freedom 1 
and 1 s round the wassail-bowl, The Epic . 5 
grunted « Good ! ' but we Srapt : *.«f Arthur,!-?. 6 
Lustace might have * for Hercules Gardener's D. 7 
j we down upon a garden mound, 11 • 2°9 

Mary t And look'd with tears . Dora . . 54 
s upon a mound That was unsown, 11 . - . 7° 
once more, and s upon the mound ; 11 . ■ 70 
so we J and eat And talk'd old matters A udleyCt. 27 
In which the swarthy ringdove s, Jalkmg O. =93 
night In which we s together Love and Duty 59 

He s upon the knees of men . Two Voices 323 
I ceased, and s as one forlorn. ■ . ".. ' 4 °° 
Wherever he J down and sung . Amphion . 19 
To-day I s for an hour and wept, Ed. Gray . II 
To him who r upon the rocks . '/<» f . L. . 23 
, a company with heated eyes . Viswnq/Sin 7 
Narrowing in to where they J assembled " . 10 
j him down in a lonely place . / oet s Song, 5 
I s down and wrote, In such a hand Princess, 1. 232 
at a board by tome and paper s . « U. «» 

t along the forms, like morning doves .1 . »7 

V. 1 : the Lady glanced : . . " -9° 

while you J beside the well? . " • 2 5 2 

In each we s, we heard The grave " • 34» 

S compass' d with professors : . " • 421 

we three 5 muffled like the fates . " . • 443 

haled us to the Princess where she s >i iv. 252 
up she i. And raised the cloak . » v - °9 
Part I like rocks : part recl'd . " ..• 4 a 3 

1 lay Still, and with me oft she s . 11 vn. 70 

by axe and eagle *, With all their n ■ "3 

palm to palm she i : . ■ • " • ,2 ° 

111 their silent influence as they s, " ton. 15 

and she s. she pluck'd the grass, .11 .31 

went back to the Abbey, and s on, 11 . 100 

we s But spoke not, rapt . . « -.. ,0 7 

There s the Shadow fear'd of man ; In Mem. xxu.12 
who s apart And watch'd them, .11 en. 29 

And s by a pillar alone : . . Maud,l.vm. 2 
S « ith her, read to her, night and day, 11 xix. 75 
[ woke and * beside the couch, Entd . ■ 79 
S riveting a helmet on his knee. . 11 268 

musing s the hoary-headed Earl . 11 295 

1, - hours r Enid by her Lord, » . i4-'» 

pake word.but alii down at once. . 1452 

glided up his knee and *, . • Vivien . 88 
•1 fail young squire who s alone, . 11 ■ 3" 

while she s, half-falling from his knees, „ . 753 

King, who .1 Robed in red samite . Elaine . 431 
down he slid, and *, . • ■ " -509 

, „ where he s At Arthur's right 11 . 5SO 

Queen who s With lips severely placid 11 . 735 

.V .,11 his knee, stroked his j^r.iy face » . 745 

r lower alone the maiden s : 11 . 9 8 3 

.V the lifelong creature of the house, .. 1137 

S by the river in a cove ■ ■ ". 'B 80 

s There in the holy house . . Guinevere . 1 
the < lueen who s betwixt her best " ■ 28 

on ,;. 1 1 cr couch they J 11 • «oo 

, Stiff-stricken, listening : . " • 49» 

r ! 11 . 583 

l.n.Arden 590 
he I down gating on all below ; r 



POEM. LINE. 

.9 anger-charm'd from sorrow, . Ay Intel's / 7- 5 
.Sat his table ; drank his costly wines .SeaDreams 74 
near the light a giant woman *»■_," • 9 6 
Turn'd as he s and struck the keys The Islet . 7 
upon the bridge of war S glorying ; Spec, of Iliad 10 
$ fifty in the blaze of burning tire • 11 . 20 

Fancy came and at her pillow s, . Coquette, 1. 5 



Satan. 
•S take The old women . . Princess, v. 32 
some black wether of St SS fold. Vivien . too 

one of Ss shepherdesses caught . " • ooa 

sate (to satisfy.) 
things fair to $ my various eyes ! . Pal. of Art 193 

sate (pret. of sat.) 
Round the hall where \s . . Pit Mermaid 26 



sated, 
s with the innumerable rose . 



Princess, iii. 106 
Princess, vit. 75 



Princess, Pro. 90 
Boddicea . 52 



satiate. 
Nor Arac, s with his victory. 

satiated. 
s at length Came to the ruins 
not by blood to be s. 

satin. 
A tent of s, elaborately wrought . Princess, 111. 330 
In gloss of s and glimmer of pearls, Maud, I.xxu. 55 

satin-shining. 
In colour like the s-s palm . . I 'ivien . 73 

satin-zuood. 
Erect behind a desk of fw, . .Princess, it. 90 

satire. 
shafts Of gentle s, kin to charity, . Princess, 11. 445 
How like you this old J ? • Sea Dreams 194 

first wrote s, with no pity in it. . 11 . '97 

satisfied. 
rested with her sweet face s ; . Enid . ■ 770 

Geraint look'd and was not * '284 

s With what himself had done . 11 . M9 a 

satisfy. 
And s my soul with kissing her : . Princess, v. 100 

saturate. 
soak'd and s, out and out, . . Will Water. 87 
adulteries That s soul with body. . Aylmer s !■ . 377 

Saturn. 
while s? whirls, his stedfast shade . Pal. of A rt 13 



Glorifying clown and s ; 
Ai,ai, see— Follows ; 



satyr. 



. Princess, V. 179 
. Lucretius . 189 



Satyr-shape. 
Or in his coarsest 5-j . . .InMem.JSOM.Vi 

saunter. 
to those that s in the broad . . Aylmer's F. 744 

saunter 'd. 
s home beneath a moon, . . Audley Ct. . 79 

savage. 
Mated with a squalid *- • . Locksley H. in 

you young s of the Northern wild I Princess, 111. 230 



7-4 



save. 
And s me lest I die?' . 
died To t her father's vow ; . 
stored what little she could s, 
s her little finger from a scratch 
if thou wilt not S my soul, 
To s from shame and thrall : 

.11 wouldst not s 'Come 
to * A prince, a brother? . 
praying God will s Thy sailor,— 

1 and s, 
If lowliness could 1 her. 

I . yet young life . 
To s from some slight shame 



. Pal. of Art 288 

. D.ofF. Worn. 196 

. Vera . . 5° 

. Jul Morris 63 

Stylites 4S 

. Sir Galah a d 16 

not, -when,' etc. 4 

. J'nuccss, ii. 270 

. In Mem. vi. 13 

11 Ixxix. 14 

. Maud, I. xii. 20 

11 xvi. 21 

11 xviii. 45 



352 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

s the one true seed of freedom ' . Ode on Well. 162 
saving that, ye help to s mankind ir . 166 

But as he s's or serves the state. . ?t . 200 

s her dear lord whole from any . Enid . . 894 
5- a life dearer to me than mine.* it 987 

Tho'you donot love me, s, Yetsme!' Vivien . 793 
And .? it even in extremes, . . Guijievere . 67 
To s his blood from scandal, . . n . 510 

5 all earnings to the uttermost . En. Arden . 86 
then he pray'd f S them from this ti .118 

To 5 1 the offence of charitable, . ti . 339 

To s the life despair'd of, tr . 832 

I could have died to s it) . . Sea Dreams 130 
her father was not the man to s, . Grandmother 5 

saved. 
Who may be s? who is it may be s? StS. Stylites 46 
work miracles and not be j ? . . tt . 148 

cannot be but that I shall be s ? . 11 . 150 

is s From that eternal silence, . Ulysses . 26 
Thou shalt not be s by works : . Vision of Sin 91 
you may yet be S, and therefore fly : Princess, lii. 48 
You sour life: weoweyoubitterthanks: n iv. 510 

' He ^ my life : my brother slew him it " vi. 92 
whose hearths he 5 from shame . Ode on Well. 225 
was I broken down : there was I s: Enid . 1699 

roll'd his enemy down, And s him : Elaine . 27 

her fine care had s his life. 11 . 859 

a sail ! a sail i I am 5' . . En. Arden . 913 

saving, 
s that, ye help to save mankind . Ode on Well. 166 

savings. 
hoard all 5 to the uttermost . . En. Arden . 46 

Saviour. 
She bows, she bathes the S's feet. In3fem.xxxn. 11 
O s of the silver-coasted isle, . Odeon Well. 136 

God Almighty, blessed S, . En. Arden . 783 

savour (s.) 
she has neither 5 nor salt, . . Maud, I. ii. 2 

savour (verb.) 
S's well to thee and me. . . Vision of Sin 158 

saw (maxim.) 
sabbath-drawl er of old s's, . . To J. M. K. 5 
clinging to some ancient s; ' Love thou thy land 1 29 

saw (tool.) 
May never 5 dismember thee, . Talking O. . 261 
hammer and axe, Auger and s, . En. Ardeti . 174 

saw (verb.) 

1 5 him— in his golden prime . ArabianJSTs. 153 
the dull 6* no divinity in grass . A Character 8 
He ^ thro' life and death, . . The Poet . 5 
He ^ thro' his own soul. " .6 
ere I s your eyes, my love, . . Millers D. 43 
I ^ the village lights below ; . 11 . 108 
Sometimes I ,? you sit and spin : . n . 121 
afoot-fall, ere he s The wood-nymph Pal. of Art no 
nothing s, for her despair 11 . 266 
I s the snare, and I retired : . . L.C. V.de Vere 6 
To-night I s the sun set: . . MayQueen,\\. 5 
I j you sitting in the house . . 11 iii. 30 
5 the gleaming river seaward flow Lotos-E's. . 14 
I s, wherever light illumineth, . D.ofF.Wom. 14 
s crowds in column'd sanctuaries ; ir . 22 
At length I s a lady within call, _ . 11 .85 
turning s, throned on a flowery rise, 11 . 125 
s the large white stars rise one by one, *i . 223 
S God divide the night ... 11 .225 
Ere I 5 her, who clasp'd »r . 266 
when he s the wonder of the hilt . M.d' Arthtir 85 
never s, Nor shall see, here or elsewhere 11 . 153 
out of everything I heard and s, . Gardener sD. 65 
I, that whole day S her no more, . ir . 160 
s the boy Was not with Dora. . Dora . . 109 
You s the man — on Monday, . Walk. toiheM.12. 
I s Your own Olivia blow, . . Talking O. . 75 
Many a night I s the Pleiads . Locksley H. 9 
.5" the Vision of the world, . . ir 16,120 
S the heavens fill with commerce, if . 121 



To-day I s the dragon-fly 

To search thro' all 1 felt and s t 

And see the vision that I s, . 

Till in a court he s 

Than all those she 5 before : 



POEM. LINE. 

. Two Voices 8 

11 . 139 

. Day-D?n. . 14 

. Will Water. 130 

L. of Burleigh 46 



I s that every morning, far withdrawn Vision of Sin 48 
I s within my head ... u . 59 

^ The feudal warrior lady-clad . Princess, Pro.nS 
they s the king ; he took the gifts ; tr i. 45 

I ^ my father's face Grow long . 11 - 57 

life ! he never j the like ; . . tf . 184 

5 you not the inscription on the gate, ir ii. 177 

we j The Lady Blanche's daughter ti . 299 

Melissa hitting all we ^ with shafts 1, . 444 

'Who ever ^ such wild barbarians? it iii. 26 

5 The soft white vapour streak , ?r . 325 

began to change — I 5 it and grieved — ir iv. 280 
S that they kept apart, . . . u . 321 

5 the lights and heard The voices . 11 . 536 

when we s the embattled squares, . ir v. 236 

Seeing I s not, hearing not I heard : ir vi. 3 
if I 5 not, yet they told me all .if -4 

when she 5 me lying stark . . ir .84 

when she s The haggard father's face 11 . 86 

she 5- them, and a day Rose from the if . 95 

I 5 the forms : I knew not where I was 11 vii. 118 
5 Thee woman thro* the crust . 11 . 320 

turning 5 The happy valleys, . ir Con. 40 

5 Sir Walter where he stood, . 11 .81 

I in spirit 5 thee move . . In Mem. xvii. g 
We .? not, when we moved therein? 11 xxiv. 16 
And 5 the tumult of the halls ; . 11 Ixxxvi. 4 
brought an eye for all he s ; . . tr Ixxxviii. 9 
s thro' all the Muses' walk : . .11 cviii. 4 
Wrapt in a cloak, as I s him, . Maud, I. i. 59 
Down by the hill 1 5 them ride, . ir ix. ir 

Yet I thought I s- her stand, . 11 II. i. 38 

I s where James Made toward us, The Brook . 116 
j the altar cold and bare . . The Letters 4 
I 5 with half-unconscious eye . 11 . 15 

oft we s the glisten Of ice, . . The Daisy . 35 
look'd and 5 that all was ruinous. E?iid . . 315 
if he be the knight whom late Is tt . . 406 
3- you moving by me on the bridge, it . . 429 
this dear child, because I never s, 11 . . 497 
looking round he S not Enid there, n . . 506 
men 5 the goodly hills of Somerset, if . . 828 
the flat meadow till she s them come; it . . 832 
I .? three bandits by the rock if 921 

now they s their bulwark fall'n, . ir . 1017 

In former days you s me favourably tr . 1164 

when she 5 him ride More near . it . 1290 

turning round she 5 Dust, ir i 2 97 

s the chargers of the two that fell 11 . 1330 

Rose when they 5 the dead man rise, h . 1580 

5 me not, or mark'd not if you s ; . ir . 1718 

for a minute till he s her Pass into it ;»r _ . 1734 

5 the little elf-god eyeless once . Vivien . 98 
look'd, and s you following still, . ir . 148 

fancy, when you .? me following you, 11 . 175 

Because I s you sad, to comfort you 11 . 291 

s two cities in a thousand boats . it .41c 

a crystal, and he j them thro' it, . » . 480 

Nor .y she save the King, . . tt 493 

5 The knights, the court, the king ir . 723 

since he 5 The slow tear creep . tr . 754 

5 The tree that shone white-listed ir . 787 

5 Fired from the west, far on a hill, Elaine , 168 
I s him, after, stand High on a heap it . 306 

I never s his like : it . 3 I( 5 

.T The maiden standing . ir . 35° 

till he s Which were the weaker ; it . 461 

when he s the Queen, embracing ask'd 11 . 569 

'Whom when she s, " Lavaine " she 11 . 790 

there first she j the casque Of Lancelot tr . Sor 

5 him lying unsleek, unshorn, . t ( . 81 r 

Lancelot 5 that she withheld her wish n . 916 

s One of her own house, and sent him 11 1161 

wild Queen, who s not, burst away 11 * 2 37 

5 the barge that brought her moving it 1382 

s the Queen who sat betwixt . Guinevere . 28 



TJsXXVSOX'S WORKS. 



353 



rOEM. LINE. 

more than this He J not. . . Guinevere . 31 
golden days In which she s him first, 11 . 378 

that point, when first she s the King ir , 400 

but she s Wet with the mists . 11 . 590 

she look'd and s The novice, weeping 11 . 655 

s the pair, Enoch and Annie, . En. Arden . 63 
She s him not : and while he stood 11 . 242 

All these he s : but what he fain . 11 , 581 

have worse and better, Enoch s. . 11 . 742 

s the babe Hers, yet not his, . 11 . 760 

than he s Death dawning on him, 11 . 832 

my daughter Annie, whom Is. u . 883 

grizzled cripple, whom I; . . Aylmer's F. 8 
m his windows nothing save his 11 . 21 

thro' every labyrinth till he 5 An end, 11 , 479 

into nature's music when they s her n . 694 

s No pale sheet-lightnings from afar, ir . 725 

I s it in him at once . . . Sea Dreams 64 
then I j one lovely star . . 11 . 91 

He s not far : his eyes were dim : The Voyage 75 
never s so fierce a fork . . . Lucretius . 8 
I s the flaring atom-streams . . 11 . 3S 

saw (sow.) 
s's ere a bean an' yonder a pea, . A r . Farmer 46 

sawdust. 
Or, elbow-deep in s, slept, . . Will Water. 99 

sau>n. 
s In twain beneath the ribs; , StS. Stylites 51 

Saxon. 
S and Norman and Dane are we, W. to Alejcan.3, 31 

say (s.) 
Give me my fling and let me say my s.' Aylmer's F. 399 
And a fool may say his s . . The Kinglet j3 

say (verb.) 
What they say betwixt their wings? Adeline . 29 
I care not what they j . . May Queen, i. 1 ) 
I shall hearken what you s, . . n 11. 39 

s to Robin a kind word, . . 11 iii. 45 

something 1 did wish to s : . .To J. S. . 60 
Is this enough to s That my desire Gardener s D. 231 
scarce hear other music : yet s on. Ed. Morris . 57 
I do not j lint that a time may come SlS.Stylites 186 
S thou, whereon I carved her name, Talking O, 33 
How_->oti: we have slept, my lords. Day-Dm, 153 
As who snail s me nay : . . Will Water. 92 

more fair than words can s : . . Beggar Maid 2 
we will s whatever comes. . Prmeess, JPtv. 232 

I. \\ ho am not mine, s, live : . 11 ii. 205 

the second place, Some J the third n iii. 142 

might have seem'd the thing you s. 11 . 186 

•V to her, I do but wanton . . »i iv. 91 

to shame That which he s's he loves if . 230 

neither scem'd there more to s : . 11 v. 320 

•S" one soft word and let me part . 11 vi. 202 

said you had a heart— I heard her .s it — 
As pure and perfect as I s f . 

rvcr fickle tongues may s 
So methinks the dead would s; 
Whate'er tbc faithless people s. 

then, what then shall 1 sf 

But what will the old man s ? . 11 II. v. 83-7 
what I think and what they s. . Enid . 
look so scared at what Is:. 11 

what 5 you, shall we strip him . 11 
Enid could not s one tender word, 11 

ve most, s least,' . Vivien 
Yet you arc wise who s it : . . n 
S's she not well ? and there is more — 11 
Of him you $ you love: . . >» 
dare the full-fed liars s of me? . •> 

1 might (that I . . Elaine 

licve the things you s . 11 

pie s wild things of thee . t. 
still foreb iding 'what would Enoch s 9 ' En. Arden 252 
Him and his children not to* me nay — »» . 307 
s to Philip tl 1 1 bl 1 him too ; . .. . 887 

jvusIulU that having spoken with Aylmer's F. 311 



Primes 


-, i. rss 


11 




Enid . 




11 


. 106 



In Mem. xxiv. 
11 xxvi. 

»i lxxxiv. 
11 xcvi. 

Maud, I. xix. 



217 

2 
4 

<>\ 

.'- 



• 9° 

1188 

>337 
»594 

• 97 
. 101 
. 300 

338-75 

• 54* 
. 426 

J091 
1356 



TOEM. LINE. 

Jilted I was : I s it for your peace Aylmer's F. 354 
my fling, and let me s my say ,11 

How many will j 'forgive, . . Sea Dreams 'to 

an a ii it easy an' freea , . N. Farmer . 25 

And a fool may s his say ; . . The Kinglet \i 

saying (part.) 
and I (Pardon me s \\) . 
knowing, s not she knew 
Reproach you, s all your force 
s all his force Is melted 

.J which she seized, And thro' the casement Elaine 1226 
ev'n in ^ this, Her memory . . Guinez'ere . 375 
s that which pleased him, for he smiled En. A rden 758 

saying (s.) 
A s, hard to shape in act ; ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 49 
What is their pretty 1 > Jilted, isit? Aylmer's F. 353 
a s learnt, In days far-off . . Tithonus , 47 

scabbard. 
when she show'd the wealthy s, . Aylmer's F. 236 

scaffold. 
S's, still sheets of water, . . D. o/F. Worn. 34 

scald. 
That let the baatling s at home, . Princess, v. 448 

scale (series.) 
Because the s is infinite . . Two Voices 93 
Along the s of ranks, . . .In Mem. ex. 2 

scale (dish, etc.) 

fortunes, justlicr balanced, s with s.' Princess, ii. 52 

and the golden s Of harness . 11 v. 39 

takes it up, And topples down the s's ; <» . 435 

slowly falling as a s that falls, . Enid . . 525 

scale (verb.) 
she that out of Lethe s's with man Princess, vii. 243 
To s the heaven's highest height, . InMem.Q\\i. 7 

scaled. 

I Suddenly s the light. . . . Pal. 0/ Art 8 

j the toppling crags of Duty s . . Ode on Well. 215 

High with the last line s her voice Elaine 101 j 

s in sheets of wasteful foam, . . Sea Dreams 53 

scaling, 
s slow from grade to grade ; . . Two Voices 174 
after s half the weary down . . En. Arden . yj 

scalp. 
From s to sole one slough and crust St S. Stylites 2 
Beat into my s and my brain, . Maud, I. v. 10 

scan. 
I i him now Beastlier than any . Lucretius . 192 

scandal. 
Begins the s and the cry : ' You might havewon' 16 
like a city, with gossip, s, and spite: Maud, I. iv. 8 
You'll have no s while you dine, To F. D.Mauriceij 
spy some secret s if he might . Guinevere . 27 
make the smouldering s break . 11 , 91 

To save his blood from s, . 11 . 510 

Old s's buried now seven decads . Aylmer's F. 442 
other s's that have lived and died . 11 -443 

lull the living i that shall die — . 11 . 444 

leant. 

'Tis life, whereof our nerves arc s. Two Voices 



397 



s'ape. 
that he s the doom of fire, 

'scaped. 
by this way I 's them. . 

scapegoat. 
On that huge s of the race . 



Guinevere . 345 
SlS.Stylites 176 
Maud.l.s'm. 42 



O sweet and far from cliff and * . Princess, iii. 350 
AudleyCt. . 31 



scarce. 
upon the game, how s it was 

sea rce-bcliezable. 
many a s-b excuse, . . . En. Arden. <C5 

Z 



354 



CONCORDANCE TO 



scarce-credited, poem. line. 
S-c at first but more and more . En. Arden . 649 

sea rce-rocking. 
S-r, her full-busted figure head . En. Arden . 539 

scare, 
s church-harpies from the master's feast To f. M. K. 3 
To s the fowl from fruit . . Princess, ii. 210 

biting laws to 5 the beasts of prey h v. 383 

wilt thou ever s me with thy tears, Tithonus . 46 

scarecrow. 
Empty s's, I and you ! . . . Vision of Sin 94 

scared. 

he heard her speak : She s him : . Princess, i. 
5 by the cry they made, . . 11 v. 

The king is s, the soldier will not fight, n Con. 
. Enid . 



184 

60 
1025 



Vivien 
En. Arden , 



Ayhners E. 520 



169 
208 
377 



Aylmer's F. 660 



Elaine 



The Voyage 47 



foemeil s, like that false pair 
Nor need you look so s . 
s but at the motion of the man, 
beauteous beast S by the noise 
* O ' she cried 6" as it were . 
5 with threats of jail and halter 

scarf. 
One sitting on a crimson 5 unroll'd: D.o/F. Worn. 126 
Dark as a funeral s from stem . M.d' Arthur 194 
A 5 of orange round the stony helm, Princess, Pro. 102 
fluttering s's and ladies' eyes . 11 

A purple s, at either end whereof. Enid 
Prince's blood spirted upon the s, . 11 
Yniol caught His purple s, and held, u 

scarfskin. 
not a hair Ruffled upon the 5 

scarlet. 

who wore the sleeve Of s, 
upon his helm A sleeve of s, . 

sea rlet-mingled. 
hills and s-m woods 

scathe. 
as God's high gift from s and wrong Guinevere . 490 

scathed. 
down in a furrow s with flame : . The Victim 22 

scatter. 
we will s all our maids . . . Princess, vi. 283 
Disband himself, and s all his powers, Enid 1646 
S the blossom under her feet ! . IV. to Alexan. 9 

scattered. 
twinkling laurel s silver lights. 
' Tho* thou wert s to the wind, 
Or j blanching on the grass, 
s all they had to all the winds : 
All s thro* the houses of the town ; 
lo, the powers of Doorm Are s,' . 
One from the bandit s in the field, 
5- theirs and brought her off, 
huts At random s, each a nest 
•5" all over the vocabulary 
were s Blood and brains of men. . 

scattering. 
Time, a maniac s dust, 

scaur. 
down the shingly s he plunged, 

sceptre. 
A crown, a s, and a throne ! . . Ode toMem. 
To whom I leave the s and the isle— Ulysses 
held his s like a pedant's wand . Princess, J. 
would I had his s for one hour ! . tr iv. 



Gardener sD. 117 
Two Voices 32 



Day -Dm. . 


112 


Enid . 


63s 


ii 


6Q5 


ir 


1650 


it 


1666 


Vivien 


414 


Ayhners F 


150 


n 


540 


The Captain 47 



In Mem. xlix. 7 



. Elaine 



sceptre-staff. 
till thy hand Fail from the s-s 

sclievie. 
a noble s Grew up from seed 
space and fairplay for her s ; 
I give you all The random 5 
how to bind the scatter'd s of seven 
s that had left us flaccid and drain' d. Maud, I 



CEnone „ 124 

Princess, iv. 290 

11 v. 272 

Con. 2 



schemed. poem. line. 

S and wrought Until I overturn'd him ; Enid 1677 
if I s against your peace in this, . Vivien . 779 

schism. 
hawking at Geology and s ; . . The Epic . 16 

school. 
Completioninapainfuls; 'Love thou thy land' etc. 58 
I was at j — a college in the South : Walk, to the M. 75 
in the Latin song I learnt at s, . Ed. Morris 79 
Thro' the courts, the camps, thes's, Vision of Sinio^ 
For there are s's for all.' . . Princess, iii. 288 
From art, from nature, from the s's In Mem. xlviii. 1 
The flippant put himself to 5. . 11 cix. 10 

smile at one That is not of his s . Vivien . 513 

put the boy and girl to s; . En. Arden 311-28 

Philip put her little ones to s, . u . joy 

schoolbooks. 
In our s we say .... The Brook . 9 

schoolboy. 
a J ere he grows To Pity — . Walk.totheM. 99 

No graver than a s's 1 barring out, Princess, Con. 66 

science. 

truths of S waiting to be caught — Golden Year 17 

With the fairy-tales of s, . . Eocksley H. 12 

S moves, but slowly slowly, . t« . 134 

wake on s grown to more, . . Day~Dm. . 222 
sport Went hand in hand with S ; Princess, Pro. 80 

to sound the abyss Of s, . . u ii. 160 

every Muse tumbled a s in. . . it . 377 

inmost terms Of art and s: . . 11 . 424 

Two great statues, Art And S, . 11 iv. 183 

When S reaches forth her arms . In Mem. xxi. 18 
Let S prove we are, and then What 

matters S unto men, 11 cxix. 6 

man of S himself is fonder of glory Maud, I. iv. 37 
dear to S, dear to Art, . . Ded. of Idylls 39 

The simples and the s of that time Elaine . 85S 

Mastering the lawless 5 of our law Aylmer's F. 435 . 

S enough and exploring, . . 1865 — 1866 . "0 

scion. 

Nor cared for seed or s ! . . Amphion . 12 

scoff (s.) 
I met with s's, I met with scorns In Mem. lxviii. 9 

scoff (verb.) 
to 5 and jeer and babble of him . Enid . . 58 

scooped. 
ever labouring had s himself . Elaine . 403 

scope. 
shall have 5 and breathing-space ; Eocksley H. 167 

scorched. 
Shot out of them, and 5 me . . Lucretius . 66 

scorn (s. ) 
friend, whose joyful J ' C I ear-headed friend' etc. 1 
the hate of hate, the 5 of s . . The Poet . 3 
cruel love, whose end is s, . Maria?ia in the S. 70 
Were wisdom in the s of consequence (Enone . 148 
from which mood was born S o(hQTse\i'Pal.qfArt2^j. 
grief became A solemn S of ills D. o/F. Worn. 228 
Turning to 5 withlips divine ' Of old sat Freedom' 23 
Ere yet, ins of Peter's Pence, . TalkingO. . 45 
passion were a target for their s : . Eocksley H. 146 
Shall it not be s to me tr . 147 

nodding, as in s, He parted, . Godiva . 30 

Then said the voice, in quiet s, . Two Voices 401 
I trow they did not part in s: . Lady Clare 5 
He laugh'd a laugh of merry S .* . 11 .81 

Mingle madness, mingle s ! . . Vision of Sin 204 
fulmin'd out hers of laws Salique . Princess, ii. 117 
blight Of ancient influence and s. 11 . 153 

classic Angel speak In s of us, . 11 iii. 54 

lightens At him that mars her plan n v. 125 

but brooding turn The bo©k of s . 11 . 136 

king in bitter s Drew from my neck. 11 vi. 93 
answer'd full of grief ands m . 313 

shroud me from my proper s. In Mem. xxvi. 16 
I met with scoffs, I met with s's . if Lxviii. 9 



TEXXYSO.Y'S IVOR AS. 



335 



l"iEM. LINE. 

You say, but with no touch of s, . InMem. xcv. 1 
(then my s might well descend . •■ cxxvii. 21 
With a glassy smile his brutal s— Maud, I. vi. 49 

fut your beauty to this flout and* Enid . I5 2 3 

nstead of scornful pity or pure s . " . 1707 

Full knightly without s ; . . Guinevere . 40 
of Arthur's noblest dealt in j; . 11 . 41 

.9 was allow'd as part of his defect 11 . 44 

be for evermore a name of J . t, . 61,620 

To make disproof of s, . . Aylmer's F. 446 

striking on huge stumbling-blocks of s 11 . 538 

I nature were our s ; . . The Voyage 84 
spite of praise and s, As one who feels A Dedication 6 
hate and pity, and spite and s . Lucretius . ■;■; 

scorn (verb.) 
or if you s to lay it. Yourself, . Princess, vi. 1C7 
j The long result of love, . . InMem. i. J3 
these were such as men might s : <• xlvii. 4 
to be scom'd by one that 1 s, Maud, I. xiii. 1 

for I see you s my courtesies, . Enid . 1519 

touching fame, howe'er you s my song. Vivien . 294 
we J them, but they sting. . . Elaine . 140 

froud fellow again who ss us all ? »• 1059 

must not s myself : Guinevere . '- 

They that s the tribes and call us . Boadicea . 7 

scorn d. 
Comfort? comfort s of devil-. ? . Locksley ft. 75 
cursed and s, and bruised with stones: Two Voices 222 
* to help their equal rights . . Princess,vu, 21S 
S, to be s by one that 1 scorn . Maud. 1. xiii. 1 

scorner. 
Not a s of your sex Cut venerator . Princess, iv. 402 

scorning. 
He utter'd words of s : . . The Goose . 42 

set himself, -S" an alms, to work . En. Arden . 813 

scoundrel. 
stammering' s' out of teeth that . Aylmer's F. ,?5 
s in the supple-sliding knee.' . Sea Dreams 164 

scour. 
to scream, to burnish, and to s . Princess, iv. 499 

scour" d. 
youth who * His master's armour Enid . . 2-7 
s into the coppices and was lost, . 11 . 1383 

scou 
Your flesh, like me. with s's SIS. Stylites 177 
harsh groom for bridal-gift a s; . Princess, v. 368 

scouring. 
told him, s still ' The sparrow-hawk ! ' Enid , 260 

scout. 
inward raced the s's With rumour Princess, v. 107 

sco-wl. 
foreheads drawn in Roman s's , Princess, vii. 114 

scowled. 
s At their great lord. . . . Aylmer's F. 724 

scrambled. 
Have s past those pits of fire, . St S. Stylites 18: 

scrap, 
s's of thundrous Epic lilted out . Princess, ii. 353 

scraped. 
I s the lichen from it : . . T/ie Brook . 193 

scraping. 
With strumming and with s, , . Amphion . 70 
All my poor il irom a dozen years Sea Drums 77 

scratch. 
r from a J . El. Morris 63 
every 1 a lance had made upon it, Elaine . 20 

scrawl. 
in thy heart the s shall play . . Sailor Boy . 12 

to led. 
The butler diank, the steward s, . Day-Dm. . 142 



scream 's.) POEM. line. 

Now to the s of a madden'd beach Maud, I. iii. 12 

scream (verb.) 
To tramp, to s, to burnish . . Princess, i . 

screamed. 
The parrot s, the peacock squall'd Day- Dm. . 144 

screw. 
Let me s thee up a peg : . . Visiono/Sin £7 
J not the chord too sharply . . Aylmer's . 

scribbled. 
every margin s, crost, and cramm'd Vivien . 527 

scrip. 
lucky rhymes to him were j and share The Brook 4 

scripture. 
Preach an inverted s, . . . Aylmer's F. 44 

scroll. 

An open s. Before him lay : . . Tlie Poet . 8 

But one poor poet's J, ... » -55 

The seal was Cupid bent above a s. Princess, i. . 238 

she crush'd The is together . ■• iv. 375 

the j ' I follow fame.' . . . Vivien . 326 

ponder those three hundred s's . Lucretius . 12 

sctfl. 
foam-flakes s along the level sand D.o/F.ll'om. 39 

scudded. 
Of mighty mouth, we s fast . . The Voyage <5 

scullery. 
whinny shrills From tile to s, . Princess, v. 443 

sculptor. 
Musician, painter, s, critic . . Princess, ii 1C1 
Wan .S'weepest thou to take the cast Coquette, iii. 1 

sculpture. 
some sweet s draped from head to foot Princess, v. = j 

scum. 
scurf of salt, and J of dross, . . Vision o/S in 211 

scurf, 
s of salt, and scum of dross, . . Vision 0/ Sin 211 

scythe. 
The sweep off in morning dew, /«.1/V»».lxxxviii. iS 
the sun blaze on the turning s, . Enid . not 

sea, 

compass' d by the inviolate s.' . To the Queen 36 
heaped hills that mound the s, . Ode to Mem. oS 
music reach'd them on the middle*. Sea-Fairies 6 
High over the full-toned s: . . 11 . 15 

Runs up the ridged s. . «» -39 

Norland winds pipe down the s, . Oriana . oi 
I hear the roaring of the s, . . " . ^3 

Singing alone Cndcr the*, . . The Merman 5 
i often under the *, . . 11 . 15 

Soft arc the moss-beds under the */ 11 . 39 

Combing her hair Under the *, . Tlie Afemtaid 5 
great sea-snake under the * . » . 23 

mermen under the * •» 28, 42 

silvery spikes are nighest the *. . ■■ . 37 

Eurplt twilights under the * ; . 11 •44 

ranching jaspers under the *; . 11 -47 

. issls under the *, . . 11 . a 1 

from the hollow sphere of the s, . ■• . 54 

past 1 nto deep orange o'er the *, Mariana m IheS. 26 
There came a sound as of the * ; . " . £6 

With motions of the outer * : . F.leanore , 113 

in cataract after cataract to the *. CEnone . 9 

the sky 1 >ipt don n to * and sands. Pal. 0/ Art 32 
in .. clear-wall'd city on the *. . " . 97 

The plunging *'* draw backward . tt 

the low M.^an of an unknown s; . •> . 280 

.ry seem'd the s, . . Lotos-E's. . ji 
Vaulted o'er the dark-blue x. . n . 85 

spouted his foam-fountains in the *. " . 152 

thunder-drops fall on a sleeping * : D.o/F IV0111 1 . _• 
Your spirit is the calmed *, . . Margaret . 25 

Uujjuish for the purple j'j .' ' Ysuotkmt ■ _>,\.'. . 4 



355 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

round them ^ and air are dark ''Love thou thy land' 63 
the mountains by the winter s . M. d' Arthur 2 
with noises of the northern s. . n . 141 

hollows crown'd with summer s, . n . 263 

from the boat, And breathing of the s. Audley Ct. 7 
The s wastes all : but let me live my life, n . 50 
as a thorn Turns from the s; . " ■ 54 

the fair green field and eastern j. Love and Duty 9S 
s's, that daily gain upon the shore, Golden Year 29 
like a lane of beams athwart the s, n . 50 

lying in dark-purple spheres of s. Locksley H. 164 
A light upon the shining 5 — . St Agnes Eve 35 

Thought her proud, and fled over the 5 ; Ed. Gray 14 
And fluted to the morning s. . To E. L. 24 

Flow down, cold rivulet, to the s, A Farewell 1 
The wrinkled 5 beneath him crawls The Eagle . 4 
On thy cold gray stones, 6" /' Break, break,' etc. 2-14 
AfulUglazed with muffled moonlight, Princess,!. 244 



currents of clear morning s's. 
Wind of the western s . 
the moon may draw the s ; . 
the slope of,? from verge to shore, 
the s's ; A red sail, or a white ; 
God bless the narrow s. 



Con 
5^ 



Calm on the s's, and silver sleep, . In Mem. xi. 

To breathe thee over lonely s's. . 

Breaks hither over Indian s's, 

The moanings of the homeless s, . 

From belt to belt of crimson s's . 

The conscience as a s at rest : 

brought a summons from the s : , 

On winding stream or distant s ; . 

The stillness of the central s. 

Who lest to-night beside the s. 

loud war by land and by s, . 

azure bloom of a crescent of s, 

Over blowing s's, Over s's at rest 

Leap, beyond the J". 

A purer sapphire melts into the ^ 

trying to pass to the s ; 

shock Of the cataract s\r that snap 

While I am over the s I 

North, and battle, and s's of death. 

the long wash of Australasian j'j 



11 xvn. 
n xxvi. 

n XXXV. 

11 lxxxv, 
11 xciii. 
it cii. 

11 cxiv. 
11 exxii. 
1 1 Con. 
Maud, I. i. 
ir iv. 

xvii. 

xvlii. 

xxi. 

II. ii. 



it 



II III. vi. 
The Brook . 



Was great by land as thou by s. Ode on Well. 84-90 
roughly set His Briton in blown s's if . 155 

The tides of Music's golden 5 ir , 252 

To lands of summer across the s ; The Daisy . 92 
white sails flying on the yellow s; Enid . . 829 
not to goodly hill or yellow s . 11 . . S30 
like a shoaling s the lovely blue . 11 . 1535 

Against the heathen of the NorthernSir . 1817 

fighting for a woman on the s. . Vivien . 412 

half my realm beyond the s's, . Elaine . 954 
(S was her wrath, yet working . 11 1300 

realm beyond the narrow s's, . 11 I 3 I 3 

now the Heathen of the Northern S, Guinevere 134 
man-breasted things stood from the s t u . 244 

dark Dundagil by the Cornish s, . ir . 292 

heathen swarming o'er the Northern ^S" n . 425 

dread sweep of the down-streaming s's: En. A rdeu 55 
Enoch was abroad on wrathful s's, 11 . 91 

many a rough s had he weather'd in her! ir . 135 
the ^ is His, The j is His : He made it.' u . 225 
the loneliest in a lonely s. ir 554 

the low moan of laden-colour'd s's. 11 . 613 

fountains of sweet water in the s t 11 . 804 

came so loud a calling of the s, 
This had a rosy s of gillyflowers 
since our bad earth became one s, 
in a river of blood to the sick s 11 

month's leave given them, to the s :Sca Dreams 
Shall Babylon be cast into the s . 11 

that they saw, the s. h 

the s roars Ruin : a fearful night V 11 .bo 

broad s's swell'd to meet the keel, The Voyage 13 
At times the whole 5 burn'd, . 11 .5* 

Like Heavenly Hope she crown'd the s u 
my part Of danger on the roaring s Sailor Boy 
Singing, 'and shall it be over the .s's The Islet 
storm never wakes on the lonely s u - 33 



Ayhuers F. 159 
. 635 



36 



POEM. LINE. 

Sea-kings' daughter from over the 5 W. to Alexan. 1 
as the j- when he welcomes the land u . 24 

Bride of the heir of the kings of the s \\ .28 

flying by to be lost on an endless 5 — Wages . 2 
S's at my feet were flowing, . . 1865-1866 . 10 

seabird. 
And the lonely s crosses . . The Captain 71 

sea-blue. 
Flits by the s-b bird of March ; . In Mem. xc. 4 

sea-bud, 
under my starry s-b crown . . The Mermaid 16 

sea-cataract. 
And fell In vast s-c's . . . Sea Dreams 54 

sea-circle. 
first indeed Thro' many a fair s-c, E?t. Arden 538 

sedd (seed. J 
an' some on it doon in s. . . //. Farmer . 40 

sea-flower. 
Dressing their hair with the white s-f ; TheMerman 13 

sea-framing. 
in and out the long s-f caves, . Sea Dreams 33 

sea-friend. 
Enoch parted with his old s-f . En. Arden . 168 

sea-fit rbeloiv. 
dimpled flounce of the sfflap, . Sea Dreams 257 

sea-groves. 
the pale-green s-g straight and high, TJte Merman 19 

sea-hall. 
fill the s-h's with a voice of power ; The Merman 10 
blind wave feeling round his long s-h Vivien . 81 

sea-haze. 
Roll'd a s-h and whelm'd the world En. Arden . 673 

sea-king. 
S-k's' daughter from over the sea, W. to Alexan. 1 
S-k's' daughter as happy as fair, . 11 .26 

seal (of a letter, etc.) 
s, that hung From Allan's watch . Dora . . 132 
the .j an Elte vous suit, . . Ed. Morris 105 

Break lock and ^: betray the 'You might Jiave won 18 
Thes was Cupid bent above a scroll, Princess, i. 238 
To dissolve the precious 5 on a bond, Maud, I.xix.45 
Stoopt, took, brake s, and read it ; Elaine 1264 

Burst his own wyvern on the s, . Aylmer's F. 516 
Claspt on her s, my sweet 1 . . Tlie Window 135 

seal (animal.) 
as they say The s does music ; , Princess, iv. 435 

sealed. 
S it with kisses? .... CEnnne . 230 
This I .?,' The seal was Cupid . Princess, i. 237 
is now no more a fountain s: . 11 ii. 76 

since my will ^ not the bond — . 11 v. 389 

thy fate and mine are s: . . ir vi. 374 

^ The lips of that Evangelist. In Mem. xxxi. 15 
.? within the iron hills? 11 lv. 20 

^"her mine from her first sweet breath Maud, I.xix. 41 

sea-like. 
Hector said, and Wroar'd his host ; Spec, of Iliad 1 

sea-line. 
Back to the dark s-l . . . Maud, II. ii. 45 
fixt upon the far s-l; . . . The Voyage 62 

sea-light. 
with a wild s-l about his feet, . Guinevere . 240 



books of travell'd sea/uen, 

Mighty S, this is he 

Mighty S, tender and true, . 

With all that seamen needed 

get you a s's glass, 

A haunt of brawling seamen once, 

the seamen Made a gallant crew 

seamed* 
S with an ancient swordcut . 
*S" with the shallow cares 



Amphion . 82 

Ode on Well. 83 

it . 134 

En. Arden . 139 

11 . 215 

. 698 

The Captain 5 

Elaine . 258 

Aylmer's F, 814 



TENNYSOX'S WORK'S. 



357 



Where now the s pipes . 

sear. 
And woods are s . 

search (s.) 
and was wearied of the s. 
burst away In s of stream or fount 

search (verb.) 
To ^ thro' all I felt or saw, . 
To s a meaning for the song, 

seared. 
S by the close ecliptic, . 

searer. 
The woods are all the s 

sea-smoke. 
upjetted in spirts of wild j-j 

sea-snake. 
that great s-s under the sea . 



POEM. LINE. 

InMem. cxW. 13 

T/te Window 45 

Elaine . 628 

En. Arden . 636 

Two I'oices 139 
Day -Dm. . 247 

Aylmer's F. 193 

The Window 56 

Sea Dreams 52 

The Mermaid 23 



season. 
knew the s's when to take . . To the Queen 
Power fitted to the s CEuone 

in its s bring the law ; ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 
1 1 is a stormy ' . ... The Goose . 
watchman peal The sliding s: ■ . Gardener' sD 
the game, how scarce it was Thisi; Audley Ct. . 
' s's when they (lower . Co/den Year 
all the j of the golden year. 11 

writers push'd the happy s back, — 11 
Will thirty s's render plain . Two Voices 

In divers s's, divers climes ; . . Day Dm. . 
We circle with tho s't. . . . Will Water. 
the cube and square Were out of s: Princess, Pro. 
The s's bring the (lower again, . In Mem. ii. 
crown'd with all the s lent, . . 11 xxii. 

No joy the blowing s gives . . 11 xxxviii. 
break At is thro' the gilded pale : 11 ex. 

served the s's that may rise ; . ir cxii. 

Like things of the j gay, like the 

bountiful s bland, . . Maud, I. iv. 

blow by night, when the j is good » 1 1. v. 
breathes in converse s's. . . The Brook . 

Fixt in her will, and so the s's went. Vivien 
'to pluck the (lower in s ;' it 

The sunny and the rainy s's came En. Arden . 
subject to the s or the mood, . Aylmer's F. 

The meteor of a splendid s, u 

yet out of s thus 1 woo thee . Lucretius . 

seat (s.) 
downward to her r from the upper clifT CEuone 
Rest in a happy place and quiet is 11 

lady friends 1'rom neighbour s's . Princess, Pro. 
part rcel'd but kept their s's : n v. 

freedom in her regal s Of England; /nMem.cv'.d. 
mine is the firmer s, . . . Elaine 
prone from off her s she fell, . . Guinevere . 
Had castthecurtainsoftheirj aside Aylmer's E. 
no quiet s's of the just, . . Wages 

seat (verb. ) 
we will s you highest . . . Princess, iii. 
To s you sole upon my pedestal . / 'ivien 

seated. 
j on a serpent-rooted beech, . 
s on a style In the lone hedge, 
Annie, s with her grief, 



30 

ui 
3-' 

a 

"79 

3-' 
28 
3° 

(5 

t_- 

-■ I > 

(4 

'7 J 

5 

6 

5 



The Prook 

M 

En. Arden 



»43 

727 

»35 
279 
sea-voice. 
sent a deep s-v thro' all the land, . Guinevere . 245 

• ird-lound. 
§•& for health they | i Drtanis 16 

si a via rd-gazing. 
orge . . En. Arden . 559 

Sat often ill the ... o . J90 

sea-water. 
The salt s-w passes by, . . . In Mem \\x. 6 



sea-wave. pok.m. line. 

voice of the long s-w as it swcll'd Maud, I. xiv. 31 

sea-wind. 
over them the s-w sang . . M.d Arthur 48 

sea-iuold. 
On the broad s-w's in the crimson The Mermaid 36 

sea-worthy. 
The vesse' scarce s^ui, . . . En. Arden . 657 

second. 
She is the s. not the first. . . InAfem.cxm. 16 

second-Iiand. 
fit us like a nature s-h ; . Walk, to the M. 37 

second-sight. 
The*-* of some Astraean age . Princess, ii. 420 

secret. 
What know we of the s of a man Walk, to the M. 94 
s's of the brain, the stars, . . Day-Dm. . 223 
But keep the j for your Ufe, . Lady Clare 34-42 

science, and the s's of the mind : . Princess, 
the snake, My s, scem'd to stir . 11 iii. 28 

holy s's of this microcosm, ti . 296 

charms Hcrj from the latest moon ? ' In Mem. xxi. 20 
all the j of the Spring ... 11 xxiii. 19 
He reads the s of the star, . . u xcvi. 22 
And learnt their elemental s's, . Vivien . 482 

Might well have kept his s . . Elaine . 591 
her heart's sad J blazed itself . 11 . 832 

' Woman, I have a s— only swear, En. Arden . 838 

sect. 
I care not what the s's may brawl. Pal. 0/ Art 210 

To cleave a creed in s's and cries, In Mem. exxvii. 15 

secure. 
Lie still, dry dust, s of change . ToJ.S. . 76 
in their double love j, . . . Two Voices 410 

sedge. 



whisper'd ' Asses' cars ' among the s. Princess, ii. 9S 



see. 

Hither, come hither and s, ; . . Sea-Fairies 
thro' the windows wc shall s . Deserted If. 

There she s's the highway near L. o/Shalott, ii. 
1 s thy beauty gradually unfold . Eteanore 
I seem to s Thought folded over thought 11 
s thee roam, with tresses unconfined, 11 
I s the wealthy miller yet, . . Miller's D. 
And x the minnows everywhere . 11 
The doubt my mother would not s; ; 11 
Shall lone (Jiionc s the morning mist CEnone . 
Heaven, how canst thou s my face? 11 
dimly s My far-ofl doubtful purpose, 11 

the Earl was fair to s I (rep.) . The Sisters 
you had hardly cared to s. . L. C. I '. de I 'ere 
whom think ye .should I s . May Queen, i. 
to s me made the Queen ; . . n 

1 would s the sun rise . . . 11 ii, 2 

last New- Year that I shall ever x, 11 

never jThcblossomon the blackthorn, >i 
1 long to s n flower so . . . ■• 
never s me more in the long gray fields i» 
you'll come sometimes ana * me 11 

rho' you 'U not s me, mother <• 

s me carried out from the threshold 11 
I >' n't kt I.liic come to s me 



23 

10 

»3 
70 

1-2 

I 

51 

'54 

. : 2 

232 

246 

6 

32 

JJ 

26 

5' 

3 

7 

16 

26 

30 

38 

42 

43 



Waiting to f me die. . . . D.ofF.W~om.\i\ 

that 1 should ever s the light ! . ■■ ; 

lie will not j the dawn of day. D.of tlicO. Year 11 

A jollier year we shall not s. .11 .20 

To s him die, across the waste . 11 .30 

will s before I die The palms ' You ask me why,' 

Watch what I s, and lightly bring M. d' Arthur 44 

I s thec what thou art. 

s I by thine eyes that this i 

shall s, here or elsewhere, till I die, 

now I s the true old times arc dead 

shouldst never s my face as 



• "3 

• 1 , - 

• '54 

246 



111 itself the day we \i cut luj her. Gardener sD. 75 



353 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LI 

wish to s My grandchild on my knees Dora 
he may s the boy, And bless him . ir 

Allan said, ' I s it is a trick . u 

go you hence, and never s me more.' n 98, 
Whose house is that Is? . Walk to the M, 



s the raw mechanic's bloody thumbs 17 . 67 

I j the moulder'd Abbey-walls, . Talking O. 3 
when I ^ the woodman lift His axe ir . 235 

Then not to dare to s ! . . Love and Duty 38 
j the great Achilles, whom weknew. Ulysses . 64 
far as human eye could s ; . Locksley H. 15, 119 



0,\ s thee old and formal, 

S's in heaven the light of London 11 

O, I ^ the crescent promise . . m 

And loath'd to s them overtax'd ; . Godiva 

Had cunning eyes to s: . . it 

Still s's the sacred morning spread Two Voices 

' I 5 the end, and know the good.' 11 

scarce could 5 the grass for Mowers. 



• 93 
. 114 
. 187 

• 9 
57 
80 

43 2 
453 

14 
264 

49 



And s the vision that I saw, . . Day-Dm. 
lets thee neither hear nor s '. . . 11 

And wasn't it a sight to s, . . Amphion 
Let us j these handsome houses . L. of Burleigh 23 

S's whatever fair and splendid . n 27 
S's a mansion more majestic . 11 -45 

S that sheets are on my bed ; . Vision of Sin 68 

^ no men, Not even her brother . Princess, i. . 151 

I am sad and glad To 5 you, Florian. 11 ii. 287 

I know the substance when Is it. . t» . 391 

s's herself in every woman else, . 11 iii. 94 

could not j The bird of passage flying 11 . 193 

she that has a son And s'.s' him err : it . 244 

That we might s our own work out, ir . 253 

As parts can s but parts it . 310 

A man I came to 5 you : v iv. 421 

s's his brood about thy knee ; . it . 559 

sweet child, whom I shall 5 no more ! it v. 80 

and ours shall ^ us friends. 11 . 219 

s's me fight, Yea, let her s me fall, n . 505 

Sooner fight thrice o'er than 5 it.' . u vi. 209 

s that some one with authority . 11 . 219 

s how you stand Stiff as Lot's wife tt . 223 

now should men s Two women faster 11 . 235 

•s'.r a great black cloud Drag inward ti vii. 21 

knowledge is of things we s ; . In Ml em. Pro. 22 

he will 5 them on to-night ; . .11 vi. 33 

My Arthur, whom I shall not 5 . m ix. 17 

I s the cabin-window bright 11 x. 3 
1 j the sailor at the wheel. tt -4 

s the sails at distance rise, . . it xii 11 

widower, when he s's A late-lost form n xiii. 1 

Should ^ thy passengers in rank . tt xiv. 6 

The dust of him I shall not 5 . it xvii. 19 

spirits sink To 5 the vacant chair . 11 xx. 19 

bore thee where I could not s . it xxii. 17 

s Within the green the moulder'd . " xxvi. 6 

Or 5 fin Him is no before) tt . 10 

And finds ' I am not what Is, . 11 xliv. 7 

^ with clear eye some hidden shame 11 1. 7 

I cannot s the features right, . tt Ixix. 1 

I s thee what thou art, and know . n lxxiii. 6 

there is more than I can s t . . v 9 

I 5 thee sitting crown'd with good, 11 Ixxxiii. 5 

I 6 1 their unborn faces shine ir . 19 
I s myself an honour'd guest . m .21 

To 5 the rooms in which he dwelt. it Ixxxvi. 16 

I shall not s thee. Dare I say . 11 xcii. 1 

He i'i himself in all he s's. . . n xcvi. 4 

You leave us : you will 5 the Rhine, it xcvii. 1 

I have not seen, I will not s Vienna; it . ti 

those that here we s no more ; . ti cv. 10 

I 5 Betwixt the black fronts . _ . 11 cxviii. 5 

That s's the course of human things. 11 cxxvii. 4 
I s in part That all, as in some .11 .22 

I s her pass like a light . . . Maud, I. iv. n 

I 5 my Oread coming down . . it xyi, 8 

I 5 her there, Bright English lily . it xix. 54 

true lover may s Your glory also . it xx. 47 

.S what a lovely shell ... it II. ii. 1 

For one short hour to s . .11 iv. 14 

S } there is one of us sobbing, . it v. 30 



POEIV 

. Odeo. 



LINE. 

Well. 234 

• 245 

Maurice 2 

of Idylls 16 

103 



in summers that we shall not s 
Whom we s not we revere, . 
God-father, come and 5 your boy : ToF.D. 
we 5 him as he moved, How modest Ded. 
s my dear lord wounded in the strife Enid 

I ^ her Weeping for someday knight it . , 117 

petition'd for his leave To f the hunt if . . 155 

but come like you to s the hunt .11 . .179 

hearts who s but acts of wrong: . it . . 438 

can j elsewhere, anything so fair, ti . . 499 

for Enid s's my fall ! ' . . .11 . . 590 

while she thought ' they will not sine,' tt . . 666 

s myprincess as I s her now, . it . . 752 

That other, where we s as we are seen ! u . . 856 
shall s my vigour is not lost.' 
how is it I s you here? . 
I s it with joy — You sit apart, 

you may hear, or s, Or fancy .it . ■ 1264 

Is the danger which you cannot 5; tt . 1270 

makes me mad to s you weep. . it . 1464 

for I s you scorn my courtesies, . it . *5i9 

s you not my gentlewomen here . tt . 1530 

s's the trapper coming thro' the wood, it . T572 

not to s before them on the path, . it . 1621 

s but him who wrought the charm . Vivien . 61 

s you not, dear love, Thatsuchamood tt . 173 

that no man could s her more, . it t 492 

S's what his fair bride is and does, it . 631 

5 Her godlike head crown'd . u . 685 

Why ask you not to s the shield . Elaine . 650 

an you will it let me 5 the shield.' n . 658 

Going? andweshallneversyoumore.it . 922 

to s your face, To serve you n . 934 

'Not to be with you, not tos your face — n . 942 

s that she be buried worshipfully.' 11 1319 

to s The maiden buried, not as one it 3 3 2 3 

s your tender grace and stateliness Guinevere . 188 

sworn never to s him more, (rep. ) . 1. . 374 

almost makes me die To s thee . 11 . 531 

Never lie by thy side, s thee no more n . 574 

might s his face, and not beseen.' n . 582 

So she did not s the face, t, . 589 

now I s thee what thou art, u . 641 

must love the highest when we s it, it . 653 

s his children leading evermore . En. Arden . 115 

said Philip, ' I may s her now, . tt . 274 

not to j the world — For pleasure? . 11 . 296 

to s you poor and wanting help; . 11 . 403 

be ripe again : Come out and s. . 11 -457 

what he fain had seen He could not s »i . 582 

His hopes to s his own, it . 625 

Enoch yearn'd to s her face again ; " , 718 

S thro' the gray skirts of a lifting squall 11 . 830 

reveal it, till you s me dead.' . tt . 840 

'S your bairns before you go ! tt . 871 

charge you now, When you shall s her, n . 879 

if my children care to see me dead, 11 . 889 

I shall s him My babe in bliss ; . tt . 898 

i when you s her — but you shall not sher Ay liner s F. 309 

i like one that s's his own excess, . ti . 400 

[ florid, stern, as far as eye could s, Sea Dreams 212 
, Perhaps I shall s him the sooner . Grandmother 16 

Willy — he didn't s me, ... n , 42 

I shall s him another morn : . n . 67 

when they s's ma a passin' by, . N. Farmer . 53 

for I couldn abear to s it . . 11 .64 

seest all things, thou wilt s my grave : Tithonns . 73 
s's itself from thatch to base . . Requiescat . 3 

I s the place where thou wilt lie . Sailor Boy . 8 

S they sit, they hide their iaces . Boddicea . 51 
And I shall live to s it. . . Spiteful Let 18 

nor knows he what he s's ; . . Lucretius . 732 

he s's not, nor at all can tell it . 145 

seed. 

Sow the s, and reap the harvest . Lotos-E's. . 166 
s of men and growth of minds. ' Love thou thy land'20 
sow themselves like winged s's . Gardener sD. 64 

we, the latest s of Time, . c Godiva . 5 
having sown some generous s, . Tivo Voices 143 

Nor cared for s or scion! . . Amphion , 12 



7£.V.VVS0.V'S WORK'S. 



359 



POEM. LINE. 

The vilest herb that runs to s . Amphion . 95 

a noUe scheme Grew up from s . Princess, iv. 2^1 

the s. The little s they laugh'd at . 11 vi. 17 

finding that of fifty s's . . . In Mem. liv. 1 1 

itter s among mankind : . 11 Ixxxix. 4 

Ray round with flames her disk off, 11 c. 6 

the summer in the s ; m civ. 26 

is but i Ofwhat in them is flower . " Con. 135 

in my words were s's of fire. . The Letters 28 

the one true s of freedom sown . Ode on Weil. 162 

gray linnets wrangle for the s : . Guinevere . 253 

1 ■ to earth a s . . . Tlu; Flower 2 

the s by night. ... 11 .12 

For all have got the s. . 11 .20 

seedling. 
as Nature packs Her blossom or her s, En.Arden 179 

seedsman. 
s, rapt Upon the teeming harvest, Golden Year 69 

seeing. 

S all his own mischance — . L.o/Shalott,\v. 12 
we sliould find the land Worth s, : Princess, m. 156 
.- not, hearing not I heard : >• vi 3 

£ his gewgaw castle shine . . Maud, I. x. i3 
j them so tender and so close. . Enid . . 22 
s one so gay in purple silks, . 11 

s hei so sweet and serviceable. . 11 
Danced in his bosom, s better days. 11 
s cloud upon the mother's brow, . u 
I mt, with a great voice he cried . / ' 



284 I 
393 I 

505 
777 

309 ! 

1 1 ■ . low his brother's mood . Aylmer's I>. 403 ] 
seek. 
When my passion s's Pleasance . Lilian . 8 ! 

What waniest thou? whom dost thou I Oriana 71 I 
run to and fro, and hide and s, . The Mermaid 35 j 
I s a warmer sky, . ' You ask me why,' etc 26 j 
N'.t t'<o late to s a newer world. . Ulysses . 57 
to s, to find, and not to yield. . 11 . 70 ! 

seem to find, but still to s. . Two Voices 96 

that i them issue forth : Day- Dm. . 102 ' 
scarce knowing what he s's: . o .1171 

'() s my fathers court with me, . 11 . 191 j 

Hist,' he said " They s us : . . Princess, iv. 200 
where you s the common love of these, " vi. 156 j 

He s's at least Upon the last In Mem. xlvi. 12 ! 

j A friendship for the years to come. •■ lxx.\ 
s's to beat in time with one . . 11 .1151 

To s thee on the mystic deeps, . 11 exxiv. 14 

so that he find what he went to s, Maud. I. xvi. 3 1 
I s a harbourage for the night.' . Enid . . 299 ! 
To s a second favour at his hands 11 
had ridden wildly round To s him, Elaine 628 

childless mother went to s her child Aylmer's F. 829 

seeking. 
in s to undo One riddle, 
love or fear, or s favour of us, 
weak beast s to help herself . 
.V a tavern which of old he knew, 

seem. 
Howe'er it be, it s's to me, . L. C V. de Vert 53 1 
he to the boy. . . . Talking O. 108 j 
Moreover, something is or s's, . Two Voices 379 I 
I would be that for ever which I s Princess, ii. 239 
I s no more : / want forgiveness too : 1, vi. 272 
indeed He s's to me Scarce other Ded.of Idylls 5 
made it s his own : . . . Vivien . 585 

My father, howsoe'er I s to you, . Elaine J086 

seem'd. 
neither s there more to say . . Princess, v. 320 
so it s, or so they said to me, » vi. 6 

If Maud were all that she s, Maud, I. vi. 36, 92 

seeming-genial. 
Or s-g venial fault, . . . Will . . 13 

seeming-injured. 

The t-i simple-hearted thing . Vivien . 751 

seeming-leafless. 
pass his autumn into Wdays — A Dedication 10 



seeming-random, poem. line. 
grew to s-r forms, . . In Mem. cxvii. to 

seeming-wanton. 
make The s-~ui ripple break, . InMem xlviii. 1 1 

seen. 
who hath s her wave her hand? . L.o/Shalott,\ 24 
at the casement s her stand . . n ■ -S 

Beauty s In all varieties To With Pal. of Art 6 

the dale Was s far inland. . . Lotos-E's. . 21 
long since 1 have i a man. . D. of F, Worn. 131 

And faint, rainy lights are s . Margaret . to 

Such joy as you have s with us D. of the O. i'ear 17 
Two years his chair is s Empty . To J. S. . 22 
What is it thou hast j > M d' Arthur 68, 114 

what is it thou hast heard or s I . ■■ .150 

That, having s, forgot .' . . Gardener's P. 54 

You should have s him wince II ati: to the M. ( 3 
nor haves Him since, nor heard of her Ed. Morris 137 
. Talking O. . 49 
. Ulysses . 13 
. Locks/ey Ii. 
. Day-Dm. . 67 
ar Maid 10 
Princess, 1. 71 
=45 
»93 
306 
426 
=45 
S 

320 
48 

2 



I have s some score of those 
Much have I s and known . 
As I have seen the rosy red . 
glimpsing over these, just s, . 
She in her poor attire was .s ." 
1 myself, my bnde once s, . 
some dark shore just s that it was rich, 
'having s And heard the lady Psyche. 1 ' 
bottom agates s to wave and float 11 

after j The dwarfs of presage: . 1 
ever had I i Such thews ol men : . 1 

So often that I -peak as having s . 1 

Ida came behind 6' but of Psyche. 1 

Ere s 1 loved, and loved thee i, . 1 

Imagined moie than j.the skirts of France' 
we, that have not s thy face. . in Mem. Pro. 

If Death were * At first as Death . n xxxv. 
How many a fathei have Is, . 11 lii. 

A likeness, hardly s before, . n l.vxiii. 

I have not .(. I will not see Vienna • .1 xcvii. 
() earth, what changes hast thou s .' <• cxxii. 
1 were downcast, not to be j Maud, lii 
shall I believe him ashamed lokW " xiii. 
Squire had s the colt at grass . The Brook 
w -1.1 ..: », ..: 11 1 



Con 



>39 



Two Voices 232 
Enid . . 700 
Vivien . 348 
En Arden . 692 



World-victor's victor will be j no more C</<" ox Well. 42 
I, s of every land, . . 11 221 

it amid its olives green ; . The Daisy . 29 
milky-white, First s that day : . Enid . . 150 
having; all beauties of our tune. >■ 498 

pride is broken : men have s my fall.' 11 . . 578 
never yet had s her half so fair ; . • . . 741 

where we see as we are s ! . .11 . . £56 
have vou s how nobly changed ? . •■ . 1745 

for three days s, ready to fall. . Vivien . 143 
You should have s him blush : . 11 . 331 

Him have 1 s. : the rest, his Table Elaine . 1E5 

'One. One have 1 j— that other, . n . 422 

I might say thai I had s.' . . 11 . 426 

So great a knight as we have s . 11 . 532 

peradventure had he s hct first . 11 
might see his face, and not be*.' . Guinevere . 582 
would have been my pleasure had It. n . 652 

as a figure j 111 early dawn . En. Arden . 354 

what he fun had s He could not see, 11 . 581 

the mate had s at early dawn . 11 . 632 

things* are mightier than things heard, 11 . 767 

tell her you had s him dead . . 11 . 809 

seldom s a costlier funeral ■■ . 916 

must have s. himself had s it long : . Aylmer's F. 345 
she herself Had s to that : .. . 805 

High towns on hills were dimly s. The Voyage 34 

tetr. 

I. ike some bold s in a trance, /.. ofShalotf.'iv. 1 1 

the .9 Would watch her at her petulance, I r.ien 30 

'• . 803 



Her s, her bard, her silver star 

seest. 
Watch what thnu t, 
a long way With these thouj- 
And s the moving of the team 
s all things, thou wilt see my grave : I ithonus 

seethed 
S like the kid in its own mother's Vivien . 71 



M. if Arthur 38 

• »57 
. //; Mem. cxx. 16 

73 



3 bo 



CONCORDANCE TO 



seething. poem. line. 

when the surge was s free . . Lotos-E's. . 151 

Seine. 

The red fool-fury of the 6" . In Mem.cxxvi. 7 



' s the strangers,' is the cry. . 

To j and throw the doubts of man 

sorrow j me if ever that lisrht 

To ,? me by the hair and bear me . 

seized. 

at last a fever j On William, 
A hunger 5 my heart ; . 
therewithal came one and ^ on her, 
suddenly ^ on her, And bare her . 
slain your father, 5 yourself, 
who then ? ' a fury s on them, 
she s, And, thro' the casement 
desperately s the holy Book, 
6" it, took home, and to my lady, — 
Me they s and me they tortured, 

seizure. 
myself too had weird s*s 
' what, if these weird s's come 
On a sudden my strange 5 came . 
On a sudden the weird ^ 



Princess, 


iv 


201 


; In Men 


.cviii. 6 


Maud, I. 


IV 


12 


Elaine 




1415 


Dora . 




■52 


In Mem. 


xciv. 21 


Enid . 
11 




673 
1501 
1686 


Elaine 




475 


11 




1226 


En. Arden . 


49 1 


Ay liner's F 


■H2 


Boadicea 




49 


Princess, 


i. 


14 
81 


11 


111. 


167 


tr 


IV. 


53« 



The,?-/ Kins 



seldom frown i?ig 
; frown' d . 

self. 



Elaine 



. 711 



Smote the chord ot'S, . . . Locksley H. 34 

Half-fearful that, with s at strife , Will Water. 161 

We touch on our dead s, . . Princess, iii. 205 

Her falser .s slipt from her . . n vii. 146 

drowning life, besotted *n sweet s, v . 295 

stepping-stones Of their dead selves In Mem. \. 4 



transient form In her deep y 
fusing all The skirts of s again, 
praying, To his own great s, 
learns to deaden. Love of s, . 
that and these to her own faded s 
overthrow My proud s. 
To keep me all to your own s s 
and imputing her whole s, 
* Save your great s, fair lord ;'' 
morn by morn, arraying her swee 
the King's grief for his own ^ 
He not For his own s caring 
chafing at his own great 5 defied, 
to thy worst 5 sacrifice thyself 



Tl xvi. 

!» xlvi. 

Maud, II. v. 
Ode on Well. 
Enid . 

Vivien 

Elaine 



Guinevere 
En. Arden 
Aylmer's F. 537 
. 641 



33 
205 
65-2 
1697 
373 
652 
3i9 
902 

195 
165 



646 



thy worst .? hast thou clothed thy God. 

self-appla use. 
Not void of righteous s-a, 

self-balanced. 
S-b on a lightsome wing : 

self blinded. 
' S-b are you by your pride : 

self-conceit. 
Some s-c, Or over smoothness : 

self -con iained . 
High, s-c, and passionless, . . Guinevere . 403 

self-con tempt. 
Perish in thy s-c ! . . . . Locksley H. 96 

self-control. 
Self-reverence, self-knowledge, s-c CEnotie 



Two Voices 14 



In Mem. lxiv. 8 



. Two Voices 23 
. Ed. Morris 74 



faith that comes of s-c 



142 
In Mem. cxxx. 9 



self-distrust. 
It is my shyness, or my s-d, . Ed. Morris 86 

self-ga titer* d. 
S-g in her prophet-mind, ' Of old sat Freedom' etc. 6 

self-infold. 
s-?s the large results Of force InMem. lxxii. 15 

self-involved. 

Which all too dearly s-i, . . Day-Dm. . 261 

pitying, as it seem'd, Or s-i , . Princess, vi. 142 

dull and s-t, Tall and erect, . . Aybners F. 118 



self-knowledge. POEM. line. 
Self-reverence, s-k, self-control . CEnone . 142 

self-perplext. 
look'd so s-p That Katie laugh'd, The Brook . 213 

self-pity. 
for languor and s-p ran Mine . Princess, vii. 124 
sweet s-p, or the fancy of it, . . Enid . 1198 

self-pleached. 
Round thee blow, s-p deep, . . A Dirge . 29 

self -possess* d. 
neither s-p Nor startled, . Gardener 1 s D . 151 

self -profit. 
judge of fair Unbiass'd by s-p . CEnone . 156 

self -reverence. 
S-r, self-knowledge, self-control . CEnone . 142 

self -reverent. 
S-r each and reverencing each, . Princess, vii. 274 

self-sacrifice. 
The long s-.s of life is o'er. , . Ode on Well. 41 

self -scorn. 
Laughter at her s-s. . . , Pal. of Art 232 

self-seeker. 
All great j-j's trampling on the right; Ode onWell. 187 

self-styled. 
those 5-5 our lords ally Voui fortunes Princess, ii. 51 

sell. 
To s the boat — and yet he loved her En. Arden . 134 
yet to s her — then with what . u . 137 

.v her, those good parents, forhei good Aylmer'sF.^S^ 

semblance. 
Like to the mother plant in a'. . The Poet . 23 

sem i-jea lousy . 
A flash of j-/ clear 'd it to hei . Aybners F. 1S9 

send. 

would .T a hundred thousand men. Princess, i. . 63 

unless you s us back Our son . 11 iv. 396 

'"Sdeath! but we will s to her,' . 11 v. 314 

s it slackly from the string : . . 7;;/I/<f7«.lxxxvi.2o 

j One flash, that missing all things Vivien . 780 

Ourselves will 5 it after. . . Elaine . 544 

This will he .? or come for : . . n . 632 

I pray him, s a sudden Angel down •• 14*4 

5 abroad a shrill and terrible cry, . En. Arden . 769 

You 5 a flash to the sun . . The Window 179 

seneschal. 

maid, and squire, and s . . Enid . . 710 

sennight. 

three rich s's more, my love for her. Ed. Morris 30 

sense. 
did all confound Her s ; . . Mariana . 77 
Controlleth all the soul and s . Eleduore . 115 
Lord of the s's five ; . . . Pal. of Art 1S0 
Slowly my 5 undazzled. . . D.qfF. Won, 177 

feedeth The s's with a still delight Margaret . 17 
Flutter' d about my s's and my soul; Gardener 'sD. 66 
have they any 5 of why they sing ? 11 . 100 

lostthesthathandlesdailylife — Walk, to the M. 16 
my brain, my jV and my soul ! . Love and Duty '44 
If the s is hard To alien ears, . u . 50 

the common 5 of most shall hold . Locksley H. 129 
cancell'd a s misused ; . . . Godiva . 72 
Is cancell'd in the world of 5 V . Two Voices 42 
Unmannacled from bonds of s, . " . 236 

The simple s's crown 'd his head : . ir . 277 

By which he doubts against the s ? u . 285 

seem'd no room for .? of wrong. . 11 . 456 

Your finer female s offends. . . May -Dm. . 214 
I grow in worth, and wit, and s, . Will Water. 41 
a crime Of 5 avenged by ^ . Vision of Sin 214 

crime of ^ became The crime of malice ti . 215 

5 of wrong had touch'd her face . Princess, Pro. 213 
Or master'd by the 5 of sport, . n iv. 138 

broke the letter of it to keep the .? || . 319 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



POEM. LINE. 

I grant in her some s of shame, . Princess, iv. 330 
'Nay, nay, you spake but s' Said Gama 11 v. 197 

slou^h^ That swallow common s, . 11 . 432 

one part of s not Hint to prayer, . ir vi. 166 

My haunting s of hollow shows . 11 vii. 328 

Some s of duty, something of a faith 11 Con. 54 
Unfetter'd by the s of crime, . InMem. xxvii. 7 

an awful s Of one mute Shadow . it xxx. 7 

the hoarding s Gives out at times . 11 xliii. 6 

Drug down the blindfold s of wrong 11 lxx. 7 

'I - : >iuiet s of something lost . 11 lxxvii. 
The s of human will demands . ir Ixxxiv. 
O tell me where the s's mix, . . 11 lxxxvii. 
Where all the nerve of s is numb ; 11 xcii. 

Cry thro' the s to hearten trust . «i cxv. 

Who wants the finer politic s . Maud, I. vi. 
Suddenly strike on a sharper s . n M. ii. 
less of sentiment than s Had Katie ; The Brook . 
whether some false s in her own self Enid . 
s might make her long for court . n 
with every s as false and foul . Vivien 
of a saint Among his warring s's, . Guinevere . 633 
s Of meanness in Tier unresisting life, A ylmer" s F. 800 
such a s, when first I fronted him, Sea Dreams 70 
, as ant a 'aapoth o' s, . N. Farmer . 49 

sent. 
i it them by stealth, nor did they 

know Who J it ; . . . Dora . . 51 

She s her voice thro' all the holt . Talking O. . 123 
r a herald forth, And bade him cry, Codiva . 35 
With peals of genial clamour s . Will Water. 1S7 
gave the letter to be s with dawn ; Princess, i. . 241 
s For Psyche, but she was not there ; 
s for Blanche to accuse her . 
S out a bitter bleating fir its dim: 11 

when we s the Prince your way . 11 

s beneath his vaulted palm . 11 v. 

thrice had s a herald to the gates, 11 

A soul on highest mission s, . , InMem. cx\\. 
s the bailiff to the farm To learn . The Urook . '141 
s Her maiden to demand it . Enid 

S firth a sudden sharp and bitter cry 11 
s a thousand men To till the wastes, " 
s His horns of proclamation out . Vivien 
who he was, and on what quest .S 1 , Elaine 
lose the quest he s you on, . . u 
the diamond s you by the King:' 11 
tale of King and Prince, the diamond s,n 
toward even .V for his shield . 11 

he saw One of her house, and s him 11 
i a deep sea-voice thro' all the land, Guinevere . 245 
yet he $ Gifts by the children . En. Arden . 334 
j his voice beneath him thro' the wood n .441 

s for him and said wildly to him . u . 503 

j her sweetly by the golden isles, . „ . 532 

s a crew that landing burst away . 11 . 635 

.S" to the harrow'd brother, praying Aylmer's F. 607 
every roof S out a listener :■. . 11 . 614 

S like the twelve-divided concubine 11 . 759 

s out a cry Which mixt with little Sea Dreams 237 

sentence. 

And mystic j spoke. . . . Talking O. . 294 

that he speaks ; . . /«.!/<•;«. lxxix. 10 

t the i in his heart . Enid . . 890 

the king Pronounc'd a dismal s, . Vivien . 441 



What s ? Streaming eyes 
love in s works with faie, 
I shudder at the s, but 1 go.' 
the s of the tale Had touch'd her ; 

seraglio. 
iron grates. And hush'd s's. . 

seraph. 
Milton like a s strong, . 
by my side Show'd like fair s's. 



POEM. LINE. 

, Loveand Duty 2 

Day-Dm. . 103 

Princess, il. 218 

o Con. 30 

D.o/F.Wom. 36 

Pal 0/ Art 133 
SIS. Stylites 166 



39 
3 

7 

7 

47 

63 

9i 

800 

803 

646 



tv. 217 I 

. 220 I 

• 373! 

• ZT) 
v. 30 

322 I 



193,411 
1570 
•7 ) 

• 43° 
. 626 
. 652 
. 817 
. 820 

• 972 
1162 



sentiment. 
A classic lecture, rich in s, . 
less of I than sense Hal ! 



sentinel. 



And hear at times a s 

separate. 
Eternal, s from fears : . 

srf>ulchre. 
Gross darkness of the inner s 

sequel. 
S of guerdon cohM not alter me 
The s of lo-day unsolders all 



Princess, ii. 352 
The Brook . 91 

InMem exxv. 9 

/nJHsm.haaav.66 

D. o/F. Wont. 67 

M.d' Arthur 14 



in the rudest wind Never grow s, . Ode to Mem. 23 
Shrankone sick willow jand small Mariana in theS. 53 

serenade. 
A rogue of canzonets and s's. . Princess, iv. 117 

sermonizing. 
In sailor fashion roughly j . . En. Arden . 204 

serpent. 
Like birds the charming s draws, . InMem. xxxiv. 14 
Nor cared the s at thy side . . 11 cix. 7 

whose souls the old s long had drawn Enid 1480 

serpen £ -rooted. 
seated on a s-r beech, . . . 7 lie Brook . 133 

serpen t-throated. 
long horn And s-t bugle . . Princess, v. 243 

servant. 
rummaged like a rat: no tstayM: Walk, to the M. 30 
gull d Our s s, wrong'd and lied . Princess, iv. 519 
Arc but as s's in a house . . In Mem. xx. 3 

serve, 
s his kind in deed and word 'Loiic thou thy land' 86 
the state J for if I carved AudleyCt. . 47 
To i the hot-and-hot ; . . . Will Water. 228 
I 'II s you belter in a strait ; . . Princess, i. 84 
all things s their time ... 11 iv. 55 

fellow-worker be, When time should r/u 
We two will s them both . . 11 vii. 252 

butter s's a wholesome law, . In Mem. xlvii. 10 
May s to curl a maiden's locks ; . •■ Ixxvi. 7 
■! i the truth to s the hour, Ode on Well. 179 
But as he saves or s's the state . » . 200 

do not s me sparrow-hawks . . Ftud . . 304 
that her guest should s himself.' 'i 379 

hall must also 1 I' or kitchen, 11 390 

s you costlier than with mowers' fare 11 . 1080 

attendance, page or maid, lo i you -1. . 11 72 

but amplei means to s mankind, . / 'tvien . 339 

to see your face, To s you . . Elaine 
To s as model for the mighty world, Guinevere . 462 

served. 

So sitting, s by man and maid, . The Goose . 21 

and cream .9 in the weeping elm ; Gardener's D. 1 t 

and t With female hands . . Princess, vi. 79 

We s thee here they said ' so long In Mem. c:i. 47 

i the seasons that may rise ; . 11 cxii. 4 

the men who s About my person, Enid . . 453 

s for proof that 1 was loved, ■> 796 

s a little to disedge The sharpness 11 . 1038 

s By bands unseen ; Guinevere . 363 

s a year On board a merchantman En, A rden . 52 

master of that ship I'.noch had j in " . 120 

s, Long since, a bygone Rector . Aylmer's F. 10 

service. 
to find Another s such as this.' . In Mem. xx. 8 
Grateful to Prince Geraint for s done Enid. . 15 
s done so graciously would bind o 

did him s as a squire : . . n 

as one Speaks of a j done him) . •< 
weary of my s and devoir, . . Elaine 
Such s have you done me, that I make >i 

serviceable. 
seeing her so sweet and s. . Fuid . 

to be sweet and s To noble knights Elaine 

servile. 
s to a shrewish tongue I . . Locksley If. 42 



}62 



CONCORDANCE TO 



serving. 

loved me £ in my father's hall : 
feuds S his traitorous end ; . 



TOEM. 

Enid . 
Guinevere 



LINE. 

1547 



serving-man. 
As just and mere a s-m . . Will Water. 151 

servitor. 
Loyal, the dumb old 5, . . Elaine 11 38 

Then rose the dumb old s, . . h i*47 

session. 
in 5 on their roofs Approved him, The Brook . 127 
Leapt from her s on his lap . . Vivien . 693 

set (s.) 

For ( set of sun? 'set 0/ day? etc., see sun> day, etc. 

with others of our s, Five others : Princess, Pro. 8 

wretched s of sparrows, . . Enid . . 278 
Two s's of three laden with jingling ti . 1037 

set fverb.) 
s, That morning, on the casement-edge Miller sD. 81 
Many suns arise and s. . . ir 205 

To-night I saw the sun j . . May Queen, n. 5 
The sun is just about to s, . . Margaret . 58 
6' in all lights by many minds ' Love thou thy land? 35 

1 have s my heart upon a match . Dora . . 12 
I will s him in my uncle's eye m . -65 
women kiss'd Each other, and 5 out, tr . . 126 
j up betwixt his grandsire's knees, n . . 128 
Allan 5 him down, and Mary said : tr . . 136 
I 5 the words, and added names . Audley Ct. 60 
^"s out, and meets a friend . Walk, to theM. 34 
Time will .s me right. . . . Ed. Morris 88 
j an ancient creditor to work : . 11 . 130 
current of being .s'.y to thee.' . Locksley H. 24 
promise of my spirit hath not s. . m .187 
be ^ In midst of knowledge, . Tivo Voices 89 
Why not y forth, if I should do . n . 301 
He .? up his forlorn pipes, . . Amfihion . 22 
You a- before chance-comers, . Will Water. 6 
And, 5 in Heaven's third story, , 11 -7° 
S thy hoary fancies free ; . . Vision of Sin 156 
show'd the house, Greek, 5 with busts: Princess, Pro, 1 1 
5 with little wilful thorns, 11 . 153 
6 1 in a gleaming river's crescent-curve, tt i. 169 
when we 5 our hand To this great work, n ii. 45 
toward the centres the starry tides, n . 102 
need not s your thoughts in rubric if in. 34 
but we S forth to climb ; . . t> . 336 
like a jewel s In the dark crag : t< . 340 
5- the wild echoes flying, . . tt 352-64 
Norway sun S into sunrise . . n iv. 553 
lS 1 in a cataract on an island-crag, . tt v. 337 
I .? my face Against all men, . tt . 378 
6 s his child upon her knee — it . 545 
at the last she j herself to man, . i- vii. 269 
Once more to y a ringlet right : . In Mem. vi. 36 
s's the past in this relief? . , n xxiv. 12 
On thy Parnassus s thy feet, . 11 xxxvii. 6 
s thee forth, for thou art mine, . tt lviii. 13 
some poor girl whose heart is .? . m lix. 3 
I would s their pains at ease. . tt Ixii. 8 
"Whate'er thy hands are 5 to do . n lxxiv. 19 
in a moment s thy face ... it Ixxv. 2 
His credit thus shall 5 me free ; . " lxxix. 13 
my feet are s To leave the pleasant ti ci. 21 
6" light by narrower perfectness . 11 cxi. 4 
She jt's her forward countenance . tt cxiii. 6 
He s his royal signet there . . n exxiv. 12 
now j out : the noon is near . . it Con. 41 
s my face as a flint . . . Maud, I. i. 31 
S in the heart of the carven gloom i- xiv. 11 
He s'-s the jewel-print of your feet n xxii. 41 
s With willow-weed and mallow. . The Brook . 45 
roughly s His Briton in blown seas Ode on Well. 154 
God's love S Thee at his side again! Ded. of Idylls 53 
and j foot upon his breast, . . Enid . . 574 
dear child is s forth at her best, ir . 728 
in charge of whom ? a girl : s on. it . . 974 
then s down His basket, tt 1058 
on his foot She s her own and clirnb'd; tr . i£o8 



POEM. LINE. 

5 his foot upon me, and give me life. Enid 1698 

in their chairs j up a stronger race tr . 1788 

5 herself to gain Him, . . . Vivien . 21 

S up the charge you know, tt . 553 

and caught, And 5 it on his head, Elaine . 55 

j it in this damsel's golden hair . it . 205 

S every gilded parapet shuddering ; tt , 299 

Than if seven men had s upon him, tt , 350 

in the costly canopy o'er him s, . n . 442 

kith and kin, not knowing, .y upon him u . 597 

s himself to play upon her u . 643 

S in her hand a lily, ... it 1142 

Lancelotgotherhorse, .S"herthereon Guinevere , 122 

thought the Queen 'lo! they have 5 her on, it , 306 

5 on to plague And play upon . ti . 3157 

s himself beside her, saying to her: En. Arden . 280 

where he fixt his heart he s his hand tt , 293 

Suddenly s it wide to find a sign. . tt . 492 

s himself, Scorning an alms, to work it . 812 
also s his many-shielded tree ? . Ayhners F. j8 

never yet had s his daughter forth ti . 347 
' S them up ! they shall not fall ! ' Sea Dreams 220 

had 5 my heart on your forgiving him 11 . 2*60 

setting, 

s round thy first experiment . . Ode to Mem. 81 

It was when the moon was s, . MayQueen,\\\. 26 

s wide the doors, that bar . . Gardened sD.242 

s the how much before the how, . Golden Year n 

And in the s thou art fair. . . InMem. cxx'ix. 4 
Music'sgolden sea^ toward eternity Odeon Well. 253 

at 5 forth The Biscay, . . . En. Arden . 524 

settle (s.) 
on an oaken s in the hall, . . Enid . 1421 

settle (verb.) 

'Tis hard to 5 order once again. . Eotos-E's. . 127 

ere they s for the night. . . Enid . . 250 

s*s, beaten back, and beaten back S's, Vivien . 221 

settled, 
s down Upon the general decay . The Epic . 17 
central wish, until we s there. Gardener's D.220 

Loosely s into form. . . , Day-Dm. , 12 
sin her eyes The green malignant . Princess, \\\. 115 
6" a gentle cloud of melancholy ; . tt iv. 547 

the question 5 die.' ... n v. 507 

to her old perch back, and s there. Vivien . 752 

settling, 
s circled all the lists. . . . Enid . . 547 

seven-headed. 
S-h monsters only made to kill Time Princess,Pro. 200 

seventeen. 
Maud is not .s\ .... Maud, I. xii. 15 
petitionary grace Of sweet s . . T/w Brook . 113 

sever'd. 
Her lips are s as to speak . . Day-Dm. . 50 

severer. 
S in the logic of a life . . . Princess, v. 1S2 

severity. 
That pure s of perfect light — . Guinevere . 639 

Severn. 
The Danube to the S gave . . InJlfcm.xix. 1 
There twice a day the 6* fills ; ti .5 

rode with them, to the shores Of S, Enid . 45, 1803 



sew. 
Or teach the orphan girl to s 



L.C. V. de Vcre 70 



cleanse this common s of all his realm Enid 39, 1743 

sex. 
Madam — if I know your s, . . Vision of Sin iSr 
If our old halls could change their s, Princess, Pro. 140 
not a scorner of your s . . it iv. 402 

She wrongs herself, her s, and me it v. 113 

either s alone Is half itself, . . 11 vii. 283 

hustled together, each s, like swine, Maud. 1. i. 34 
No more of love ; your s is known ; The Letters 29 



TENNYSON'S JVOKA'S. 



shackle. poem. 

The s's ofan old love straiten'd him, Elaine 



LINE. 



shade. 
the long alley's latticed $ . . Arabian .VV112 
Life eminent creates thef of death Love and Death \-$ 
lavish lights and floating s's: . Eleanore . 12 
when in the chesnut s I found . Miller's D. . 201 
I mch'd with any s of years, . » . 219 

stedfast £ Sleeps on his luminous ring.' Pal. of Art 15 
hollow s's enclosing hearts of flame, 11 . 241 

'iiealh the hawthorn s, . MayQiieeen,\i.2g\ 

my eyelids dropt their s, . D. of '/•'. Wont. 1 , 
rrow, only sorrow's s, . Margaret . 43 
spread his dark -green layers of J. Gardener's D. 115 
trembled on her waist — Ah, happy s <• . 131 I 

Half light, half i, She stood, . 11 . 139 

into light, and died into the s; . 11 . 198 

in the s of comfortable roofs, . StS.Stylites 105 

What 's here '! a shape, ai, . . ■■ . 199 

Yet, since I first could cast a s, . Talking O. 85 
rising thro' the mellow £ . . Locks ley H. g> 
!ih of tropic £ and palms . " . 160 I 

Let me not cast in endless s . Two Voices 5 

A merry boy in sun and s 1 . . ■■ . 321 I 

.vide earth of light and s . Will Water. 67 
As she lied fast thro' sun and s. Sir L. audQ. G. 37 
Slided, they moving under s : . Princess, 
Thine are these orbs of light and s In Mem. Pro. 5 
So be it : there no ican last . 11 xlv. 5 

lender s of doubt may flit, . 11 xlvii. 7 
The s by which my life was crost, 11 l.w. 5 

A chequer-work of beam and s . 11 Lxxi. 15 

No visual* of some one lost, . 11 xcii. 5 
every span ofi that steals . . 11 cxvi. 10 
The sport of random sun and s n Con. 24 

A s falls on us like the dark .11 -93 

The x of passing thought . . 11 . 102 

touch with s bridal doors ■■ . 1:7 

light and s Coursed one another . Enid . . 521 
our fortune slipt from sun to s, » 714 

shallow j of a deep wood, . 11 . 968 

peaks that lUmed, or, all in s, . The Voyage 41 

shadow. 

Were fixed s's of thy fixed mood, Isabel . . 9 
the gusty s sway. . . Mariana . 52 
The j of the poplar fell . >■ .55' 

Thro' light and s thou dost range Madeline . 4 I 
Xs o( the silver birk . . . A Dirge . 5 
Light and ^ ever winder . 11 . 12 

Thou art the s of life, . Love and Death 10 | 

s passeth when the tree shall fall, >> . 14 

1 lie world appear. . L. o/Shalott, ii. 12 

4 I am half-sick of s's,' ... 11 

With one black s at its feet, Maria/tain t/teS. 



along the front, But deep in s : . Princess, 
chase The substance or the s ? . 11 

Well, Are castles i'j .' ... 11 

The sweet proprietress a s ? . . 11 

courts that lay three parts In s, . 11 

As flies the s of a bird, she lied. . 11 

No fighting s's here 1 . . . it 

somehow shapes the s, Time ; . 11 

liut in the i will we work. . . 11 

tumult and the kings Were s's . 11 

He has been among his s's.' . 11 v. 

Satan take The old women and their s's !n 
clung The £ of his sister . . 11 

o'er her forehead past A s, . . 11 vi. 

sofalark Hung in the sofa heaven? In.lleiii.xv'i. 



There sat the J>' fear'd of man 

The .V sits and waits for me. 

The i* cloak'd from head to foot 

That 6' wailing with the keys, 

one mute S watching all. 

The tender-pencil'd s play. . 

My Arthur found your s's fair 

His own vast s glory-crown'd, 

Her s on the blaze of kings : 

Let cares that petty s's cast, 

The hills are s's, and they flow 

A s there at my feet 

A s tlits before me, ..." iv 

And the light and s fleet ; . . ti 

Ripples on in light and s .11 

The s still the same : . . .11 

And the s flits and fleets . . n 

following our own s's thrice as long The Brook 

on thro' zones of light and s To /•'. D. Maurice 



LINE. 

i. 210 
ii. 387 

• 392 

. ■ 3j3 
m. 5 

. 109 

• 3>3 
. • 3'4 
>v. 543 

v. 32 

• 33 
. 248 

9« 
9 



XJUI. 12 



11 XXlll. 

•1 xxvi. 

«i xxx. 

■ ■ xlviii. 
11 lxx.wiii. 
11 xcvi. 
11 xcvii. 
11 civ. 

■ 1 exxii. 
Maud, II. i. 



35 



80 
134 
136 

26 

•77- 



I black s from the wall. 

Sometimes your 1 cross' d the blind. Milter's D. 
the I"",' 1 of the chair . . . ■• 

with his s on the stone, Rests like a s, (ICnone . 
1 n the *'* of the vine-bunches " 

thro' wavering lights and s*s broke, Cot 
The s's flicker to and fro : . D.ofthe (> ) 'car 
Fall into s, soonest lost . . ToJ.S. 
t of thi 1 . all the golden Gardcner'sD. 128 

with *'* of the common ground . 11 . 134 

Id my S cross thy thoughts Loveand Duty 85 
1 fall. . . Locksley 11. 80 
Thro* the * of the globe we sweep •• . 183 

S's thou dost strike, Embracing cloud, Two Voices 194 



•■1 



A s on the graves I knew, 

nave to grave the s crept 
Fainl lightly curld 

The i*j of the eonven'.-towers 

4 i weni over the w heat, 
and ilcw thro 1 light And s, . 
like s's in a dream. — . 
burnt B no , . . II 

should I he substance u 

tail. v. 465; . ii 

1 If the t of a dream iii. 172, v. 470)11 
p tint you out the i f.oin the irui 



11 . 272 

11 . 274 

Day-Din. . 25 

Eve 5 

""'s' 4 

Princess, J'ro 85 

11 . 222 

'• 7 

• 9 
. 10 
. 18 

• 83 



6 
3 

1; 
'3 
5 
39 
it 
36 
42 
7* 
90 
166 
27 
* of His loss drew like eclipse . Ped. 0/ Idylls 13 
like a s, past the people's talk . Enid . . 82 
wheel, and thou are j j in the cloud , n . . 357 
the dancing £*£ of the birds . . 11 . . 601 
never £ of mistrust can cross . 11 . 815,1097 

wholly arm'd, behind a rock In £, n . . 907 
Come slipping o'er their ££ . . " . 1320 

like a silver s slipt away . . livien . 273 

And the cairn'd mountain was a £, " 
shot red fire and £ - £ thro' ibe cave, Elaine . 413 

Fast like a J thro' the field, 11 1134 

s of a piece of pointed lace, In the 

Queen's £, " 

A ghastly something, and its £ flew Guinevere . 79 
the world, and all its lights And ££ 11 . 342 

£ still would glide from room to room " . 51 

the £ of another cleaves to me . 11 . 611 

now that s of mischance appeared . En. Arden . 1:8 
like a wounded life He crept into the £: 11 . 384 

o'er his countenance Nofpast, . n . 711 

his own £ in a sickly sun. . . Ayttner's P. 30 
their £'s to the Heaven of Heavens, 11 . 642 

knit themselves for summer jr. . » . 724 

.V and shine is life, little Annie, . Graudnifl! 
white-haired x roaming like a dream Tithonus . 8 
Alas I for this gray s, . . . 11 .11 

Coldly thy rosy j - £ bathe me, . " .66 

light and £ illimitable, . . . BoBdicea . 42 
'the lights and !"£ fly I . . . The Window 1 
and left me in £ here ! . . . n -37 

shadoiv 'verb.) 
5 forth thee : — the world hath not Isabel. . 38 



in the sun and is all beneath, 

.V forth the banks at will : 

1 all mv soul, that I may die 

And S Sumner-chacc I . 

you s forth to distant men, . 

Tho' the Roman eagle £ thee, 

.1 forth The all-generating powers. 

shadow 

sunders ghosts and i-< men . 
shadow' d. 

I have s many a gr >up . 

Ami j all her rest — 

I I long, s from the heat : . 
Is 1 by the growing hour, 



■;d Death 11 



Eleltnore 

(I'.nnne 
Talking O. . 

To /:. /.. . 

Lucretius . 


1 10 

»38 

150 

7 


I 'it'ien 


479 


Talking O. . 


61 
226 


Princess, ii. 
In Afem.xlv. 


435 
3 



364 



CONCORDANCE TO 



shadow-chequer d. poem. line. 
And many a s-c lawn . . . Arabian N's. 102 

shadowing (part and s.) 
doubts And sudden ghostly s's . Princess, iv. 549 
^ down the champaign ... 11 v. 515 

j- down the horned flood . . InMem.lxxxv. 7 
S the snow-limb' d Eve . . . Maud f l.xviii. 28 
shadow-streaks. 

With .?'.? of rain Pal. of Art 76 

shadowy -penc ill d. 
A thousand s-p valleys . . . The Daisy . 67 

shaft, 
shrilling j\s of subtle wit. *" Clear-headed friend' 13 
The winged ^'j of truth, . . The Poet . 26 

A thousand little s's of flame . Faiima . 17 

Betwixt the slender j's were blazon'd Pal. of Art 167 
lean a ladder on the .? . . . StS.Stylites 213 
And shrill'd his tinsel j. . . Talking O. . 68 

like a ^ of light across the land. . Golden Year 49 
j'j Of gentle satire, kin to charity, Princess, ii. 444 
beard-blown goat Hang on the s . 11 iv. 61 

brand, mace, and s, and shield — . 11 v. 492 

sunrise broken into scarlet s's . En. Arden . 593 
scarlet jjV of sunrise — but no sail. . 11 . 600 

shake (for shake hands, see hand.) 
The sun-lit almond-blossom s's — . To ilie Queen 16 
seem'd to 5 The sparkling flints . ArabianN's. 51 
5 All evil dreams of power — . The Poet . 46 

in the thoughts that 5 mankind . Locksley H. 166 
A wither' d palsy cease to 5 ? . Two Voices 57 

You .J your head. A random string Day-Dm. . 213 
Twang out, my fiddle ! s the twigs! Amphion . 61 
Swells up, and s's and falls. . . Sir Galahad 76 
Ho! from, some bay-window.?thenight: Princess t \. 105 
a sight to 5 The midriff of despair . ti . 107 

To break my chain, to s my mane : 11 ii. 402 

long light s's across the lakes . it iii. 350 

folds of our great ensign s . 11 v. 8 

two dewdrops on the petal ^ . . it vii. 53 

.s- The prophets blazon'd ou the panes: InJifemAxxxvl.y 
s The pillars of domestic peace. . 11 lxxxix. 19 
so, when the rotten hustings 5 . Jlfaud, I. vi. 54 
The slender acacia would not ^ . 11 xxii. 45 

For a tumult j\? the city, . . n II. iv. 50 
j its threaded tears in the wind . n III. vi. 28 
A cypress in the moonlight $■ . The Daisy , 82 

The hard earths, and a low thunder Elaine . 459 

s off the bee that buzzes at us, . if . 781 

shook beneath them, as the thistle s's Guinevere 252 
5 the darkness from their loosen'd manes, Tithonus 41 
felt the good ship ^ and reel, . The Voyage 15 

shaken (for shaken hands, see hand. ) 

3- with a sudden storm of sighs— . Locksley H. £7 

Every moment, lightly s, ran itself 11 . 32 

white shoulder s with her sobs, . Princess f iv. 270 

in a royal hand, But 5 here and there m v. 362 

grief hath s into frost ! . . .In Mem. iv. 12 

And my bones are ^ with pain, . Maud, II. v. 5 

The King was s with holy fear ; . The Victim 61 

shaker. 
O ^ of the Baltic and the Nile, . Ode on Well. 137 

Ska kespea re. 
Beside him S bland and mild ; . Pal. of Art 134 
My S's curse on clown and ' You might have won* 27 
The soul of S love thee more. . hi Mem. lx. 12 

shaking {{ox shaking hands, see hand.) 
thousand battles, andsa hundred \hxoT\zs.Maud\ .\. 48 
S her head at her son and sighing tixix. 24 

►S* their pretty cabin . . . En. Arden- 173 
S a little like a drunkard's hand . ir . 462 

j his gray head pathetically, . v . 715 

the singer s his curly head . . The Islet . 6 

shale. 
stony names Of s and hornblende Princess, iii. 344 

shallop. 
Anight my .y, rustling thro' . . ArabiauN's. 12 
My s thro' Lhe stai-strown calm, . n . 36 



POEM. LINE. 

The s flitteth silken-sail'd . . L. of Shalott, i.22 

to a low song oar'd a j by, . . Princess, ii. 433 

To where a little 5 lay . . . In Mem. cii. 19 

In a 5 of crystal ivory-beak' d . The Islet . 12 

shallow. 
And s's on a distant shore, . Mariana in the S. 7 
ripply s's of the lisping lake, . . Ed. Morris 98 
Against my sandy s's . . . The Brook . 177 

shallow-he a rted. 

my cousin, s-h I O my Amy, . Locksley H. 39 

Shalott. 
The island of S. . L. of Shalott, i. 9, et pass. 

shambles. 
The land all s— .... Ayhner's F. 765 

shame [s.) 
The flush of anger'd 5 . . . Madeline . 32 
look'd to 5 The hollow-vaulted dark Arabian N's. 125 
mix'd her ancient blood with s. . The Sisters . 8 
lnwrapt tenfold in slothful s, . Pal. of Art . 262 

sounds of insult, s, and wrong, . D. ofF. Wom.zg 
Her loveliness with sand with surprise 11 . 89 

hold his hope thro" ^ and guilt, ' Love thou thy land' 82 
s and pride, New things and old, Walk, to the M. 52 
Some grow to honour, some to s, — T7uo Voices 257 
To save from 5 and thrall : . . Sir Galahad 16 
As it were with 5 she blushes, . L. of Burleigh 63 
Sit thee down, and have no s, . Vision of Sin 83 
6* might befall Melissa, . . Princess, iii. 131 

a kind of j within me wrought . ir iv. 176 

full of cowardice and guilty s . v . 329 

1 grant in her some sense of s } . if . 330 
dismiss'd in y to live No wiser . 11 . 492 
horror of the 5 among them all : . 11 v. 92 
idle boys are cowards to their s, . ir . 299 
hatred of her weakness, blent with s. 11 vii. 15 
Glowing all over noble s, . . 11 . 145 
A touch of s upon her cheek In Afem.xxxv'xi. 10 
holds it sin and 5 to draw * . u xlvii. 11 
See with clear eye some hidden s . it 1. 7 
hide thy $ beneath, the ground ; . 11 lxxi. 28 
My j is greater who remain, . 11 cviii. 23 
chuckle, and grin at a brother's 5 ; Maud, I. iv. 29 
from some slight i one simple girl. 11 xviii. 45 
My anguish hangs like s. . ir II. iv. 74 
that was full of wrongs and s's, . n III. vi. 40 
Guarding realms and kings from ^ ,- Ode on Welt. 68 
whose hearths he saved from s n . 225 
my lord thro' me should suffer s . Enid . . 101 
my lord should suffer loss or s.' 11 918 
And s, could sbe thine, that s were mine. Vivien 298 
The ^ that cannot be explained for s. 11 . 548 
what .? in love, So love be true . 11 . 710 
as for utmost grief or s; ' . . ir . 746 
loves the Queen, and in an open s Elaine 1076 
she returns his love in open s. . 11 1077 
' Mine be the 5 ; mine was the sin : Guinevere . 1 1 r 
Mine is the s, for I was wife, . n .118 
.5" on her own garrulity it . 310 
happy, dead before thys?" ir . 420 
leave thee, woman, to thy s. . v . 507 
nor can I kill my s ; ir . 615 
from the voices crying 's.' . . 11 . 664 
the ,? The woman should have borne, Aylmer'sF.355 
poor child of s The common care . it . 687 
Whose s is that, if he went hence with s?u . 718 
You put me much to s, . . . The Ringlet 48 
Sold him unto .?. . . . . The Captain 60 
S and wrath his heart confounded n . 61 

shame (verb.) 
.? the boast so often made * Love thou thy land 'etc. 7X 
O Lady Clare, you s your worth ! Lady Clare 66 
mighty poetess, I would s you then Przncess,Pro. 132 
to s That which he says he loves : 11 iv. 229 

You j your mother's judgment too. n vi. 244 

and ; worse, might $ the Prince . Enid . . 726 
nay good father, $■ me not . . Elaine . 207 
Mine own name ,s'.s me, . . n *394 

Nor let me s my father's memory, Guinevere . 316 



TEA'.YVSOX'S WORK'S. 



365 



POEM LIN!:. 

To s these mouldy Aylmers . Aylmer's F. 396 

surely I shall s myself and him. . 11 . 734 

shamed. 

I am s thro' all my nature . . Locksley //. 140 

. naked to be s! . . . Visum of Sin 190 

s That I must needs repeat . . Princess, iii. 35 

He never shall be s. . . . Ode on Well. 191 

Then were you s, and, worse, . Enid . . 726 

end is come And I am s for ever . Guinevere . no 

sank down s At all that beauty . Lucretius . 63 

shameless. 

Ah s ! for he did but sing ' You might have won ' 21 
|o the s ones, who take Their pastime Elaine . 101 
will she fling herself S, upon me ? Lucretius . 200 

shameful. 

nothing wild or strange, Or seeming s, Vivien 710 

shape (s.) 
A gleaming s she floated by, L. ofShalolljv. 39 
1 that gather'd s : . . CEnone . 41 

the perfect s of man To With Tal. of Art 19 

O s's and hues that please me well ' Pal. of Art 194 
pf her palace stood Uncertain s's; 11 . 238 

So s chased .r as swift . . . D.ofF. Worn. 37 
pure white, that fitted to the s Gardiner's D. 125 
What's here? a s, a shade, . . StS.Stylttes 199 
Ten thousand broken lights and s's, Will Water. 59 
them, sitting, lying, languid s' s, . Vision of Sin 12 

1 .in heaven and take the s. Princess, vi. 365 
Titanic s's, they cramm'd The forum 11 vii. 109 
softer all her i And rounder scem'd : » . 121 

palled s's In shadowy thoroughfares InMcm.\x\x. 7 
whcel'd or lit the filmy s's . . 11 xciv. 10 
The s of him 1 loved, and love . ti cii. 14 

it old s's of foul disease ; . 11 cv. 25 

with the shocks of doom To s and use m cxvii. 25 
a lord, a captain, a padded s . Maud, I. x. 20 

niched s's of noble mould . TheDaisy . 38 
The j and colour of a mind and life, Elaine . 334 



face daintier? then her s 

a story which in rougher s . 

s dost thou behold thy God — 
The peaky islet shifted s's, . 
twisted s's of lust, unspeakable, 



638 

Aylmer's F. 7 

it . 657 

The Voyage 33 

, Lucretius . 157 



. Princess, iii. 

" vi. 

In Mem.Xxm. 

11 Ixxix. 

i:\ix. 



shaft 'verb.) 
thoughts Do » themselves within me CEnone . 243 
saying, hard to s in act ; ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 49 
that which /j it to some perfect end. LovenndPuty 26 
To s the song for your delight . Day-Din. . 274 
somehow s's the shadow. Time ; 
S it plank and beam for roof . 
And s the whisper of the throne 
Then fancy s's, as fancy can, 
J Mi-, action like the greater ape, 
Like clouds they t themselves and go, n exxu. 8 
face that meu.V to their fancy's eye Flame 1245 

and check'd His power to *: .Lucretius . 23 

shaped. 

s The city's ancient legend into this:— Godiva . 3 

•V her heart with woman's meekness /.. of Burleigh 71 

with blows. . Princess, v. 200 

s, it seems, By God for thee alone, Elaine 1357 

sha: 
me august decree, 
s faitli I ilic glance 

Here siu he a" wing, t<> fly; . 
And one the * of a star ; 
s an infant ripe for his birth, 

shard. 
I and scurf of salt, . 

d Your cities into s's 

share 's.) 
rhymes to him wrc strip and s, 
s's in I in mine. . 

O then to ask her of my j'i, . 



TotheQuecn 33 
Garden 

Two I 'oices 289 
/;.' Mem. cii. 36 
Main!, 1. iv. 34 



Vision of Sin 211 
. v. 132 



The Brook . 

Sta I 'reams 



share (verb.) 
Now could you s your thought ; . 
s's with man His nights, his days, 
Who stay to s the morning feait . 
him who had ceased to s her heart, 
shall s my earldom with me, girl, . 

shared. 
one sorrow and she s it not ? . 

sharp (adj. and s. 
I made my dagger s and bright. . 
His face is growing s and thin P. 
In little s's and trebles, . 
Thro' every change of s and flat ; . 

sharpened. 
Are s to a needle'* end ; 
s by strong hate for Lancelot. 

sharper. 
she was s than an eastern wind 

sharpness, 
s of that pain about her heart : 

sharp-smitten. 
S-s with the dint of armed heels— 

shatter, 
s all the happiness of the hearth, 
the hoary Roman head and s it, 

shattered. 
arms were s to the shoulder blade 
fromthesabre-stroke^S'and sunder'd LI. Brigade 
Spars were splinter'd, decks were s, The Captain 
S into one earthquake in one day Lucretius 

shattering. 
plunge in cataract, s on black blocks Princess, iii 274 

shaivm. 
With s's, and with cymbals, . . Dying Swan 32 

UieaJ 
Piling sheaves in uplands airy, . L.ofShalott.i^ 
In front they bound the sheaves . Pal. of A 1 
The varying year with blade and s Day-Pm. . 21 
scheme of seven Together in one s i Princess,Con. a 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, vi. 235 
" vii. 246 
In Mem. Con. 75 
Maud, I. six. 30 
Enid . 1474 

Aylmer's F. 702 

Th: Sisters tfj 

oftheO.Year 40 

The Hrook . 40 

Coquette, t. 4 

IitMem\xx\. 4 
Guinevere . 2 1 



AudleyCt. . 52 
Enid . 103 •) 

M.d Arthur 19a 



En. Arde/t 

Uoadicea 



Princess, 



77' 
6s 



36 
36 
45 
*47 



he may read that binds the s, 
whirl the ungarncr'd i afar, 



InJUem.xxxvi. 13 

lxxi. 23 



I did but J a feather, 



shear. 



sheath. 
New from its silken s. . 

crumpled than a poppy from the s. Princess, v. 28 
. Aylmer's F. 220 



Princess, v. 530 
P r/F. Won 



/«.l/c«:.cxxvii.i3 
Princess, 11. •- 



in rich s with jewels on it 

sheathe. 

To draw, to s a useless sword, 

Shela. 
S came to ask of Solomon." . 
Solomon may come to S yet 

shed If..) 
The broken s' flook'd sad and strange Mariana 

shed verb.) 
have not s a many tears, rep.) . Miller's P. 
that all the blood by Sylla * . . Liu 

sheep. 
livelong bleat Of the thick-fleeced s Ode 



47 



66 



what are men better than s or goats M d' Arthur 350 



lord of (at prize-oxen and . 

oxen from the city, and goodly s 



Princess ,i 

!i. ad 4 



sheepivalh. 
Or s up the windy wold ; 

sheer'd. 
Caught the shrill salt, and s the gale The ]'■■■. 

sheet. 
I wrapt his body in the s, 
1 a slumbrous 

Scaffolds, still s's of water, . 
s's of summer glass, , 



In Mem.xc'ix. 8 



rs 34 

1 1 

WotH. 54 

ToE.L. . a 



3 66 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

See that s's are on my bed . . Vision of Sin 68 
A music out of .s and shroud, . In Mem. cii. 54 

s's of hyacinth That seem'd the heavens Guinevere 387 
scaled in s's of wasteful foam . Sea Dreams 53 

sheet-lightnings. 

. Ay liner's F. 726 



Pal. of Art 
Xalking O. 
fuMem.xvi. 
En. A rden . 

A rabian N's. 
Sea-Fairies 



9 

118 



171 



361 
20 
16 
16 



64 

The Brook 72, 207 
Et. Brigade 22, 43 
. Enid . .681 



No pale s-l from afar 

s/ielf. 
Of ledge or s The rock rose clear 
Upon the rosewood s ; . 
strikes by night a craggy s, . 
With 5 and corner for the goods 

shell. 
A walk with vary-colour'd s's 
freshen the silvery-crimson s's 
pelt me with starry spangles and s's, The Merman 28 
broad sea-wolds in the crimson s's The Mermaid 36 
Jewel or s, or starry ore, . . Elednore . 20 

the bird, the fish, the s, the flower, Princess, 
should toss with tangle and with »'s In Aleut, 
Time hath sunder'd 5 from pearl.' . 11 li. 

The ruin'd s's of hollow towers? . 11 lxxv. 
See what a lovely s, . Maud, II. ii. 

For a s, or a flower, little things . 11 
when the s Divides threefold 
Storm'd at with shot and s . 
hold like colours of a s . 

shelter (s.) 
Nor, moaning, household s ci*ave Two Voices 260 
No branchy thicket s yields : . Sir Galahad 58 
wings of brooding r o'er her peace, Aylmer's F. 139 

sJielter (verb.) 
Will s one of stranger race. . . In Mem. ci. 4 
Call'd her to s in the hollow oak, . Vivien . 743 

shelter'd. 
O Walter, I have 5 here . , Talking O. . 37 

shepherd. 
the s who watcheth the evening star. Dying Swa?i 35 
A 5 all thy life but yet king-born . CE?ione . 126 
Ah me, my mountain s, . . tt . 198 

And s's from the mountain-eaves . Amphion . 53 
lives in height (the 5 sang) . . Princess, vn. J78 
the children call, and I Thy 5 pipe 11 . 203 

the S gladdens in his heart : . Spec, of Iliad 16 

shepherdess 
one of Satan's s'es caught . , Vivien . 608 

shepherd-lad. 
Sometimes a curly s-l, . . . E.ofShalott } Yi.2i 

sheriff. 
token from the king To greet the s, Ed. Morris 133 

sherris-warju'd. 
all his vast heart s-w . . . Will Water, 197 

she-slip. 
The slight s-s's of loyal blood . TalkingO. . 57 

she-society. 
long'd, All else was well, for s-s. Princess, Pro. 158 

she-world. 
bead and heart of all our fair s-w Princess, iii. 147 

shield. 
To a lady in his s, . . . E.ofShaloti,'ui.j 

A fairy 5 your Genius made . . Margaret . 41 
that month Became her golden s, . Princess, i. 101 
brand, mace, and shaft, and s— . n v. 492 

Close by her, like supporters on a j 11 vi. 338 

like a ruddy s on the Lion's breast Maud, III. vi. 14 

1116 
1118 
1417 
*574 



wild men supporters ofa s . . Enid 
one at other, parted by the 5 n 

All in the hollow of his s, it 

lay beside him in the hollow s) . >t 
carved himself a knightly s of wood, Vivien 
Guarded the sacted s of Lancelot; Elaine 
and read the naked, s, . . .11 
came the lily maid by that good s n 
by mere mischance have brought, myj.n 
— and the s — I pray you lend me one ti 



4 
16 
28 
189 
192 



POEM. LINE. 

God wot, his s is blank enough. . Elaine . 197 
' This s, my friend, where is it?' . it . 344 

brought the yet-unblazon'd s, . m . 378 

have my 5 In keeping till I come.' n . 381 

standing by the s In silence, . tr . 393 

she climb'd, and took the s, . . u . 396 

the knight, and here he left a s ; . n . 631 

ask you not to see the 5 he left, . n . 650 

an you will it let me see the s.' . 11 . 658 

when the s was brought, and Gawain 11 . 659 

toward even Sent for his s: ir . 972 

His very s was gone ; . . . tt . 984 

the s of Lancelot at her feet . tr 1331 

hall, Hung with a hundred s's . Aylmers F. 15 
Of her own halo's dusky .y . . T/ie Voyage 32 
Beat upon his father's 5 — ' Home they brought him ' 9 

shielded, 
s all her life from harm . . . InMem.Cou. ^7 

shift. 

As winds from all the compass s . Godiva . 33 
We fret, we fume, would s our skins, WillWater. 225 
To s an arbitrary power, . . InMem. cxxvii.iy 

shifted. 
She 5 in her elbow-chair, . . The Goose . 27 
The peaky islet 5 shapes . . The Voyage 33 

shine (s.) 
With spires of silver s.' . . . D. o/F. Wom.iS>S 
Shadow and s is life, little Annie . Grandmother 60 

shine (verb. ) 
waterfall Which ever sounds and s's Ode to Mem. 52 
house thro' all the level s's, . Mariana in the S. 2 
wild marsh-marigold s's like fire . MayQueen,\. 31 
the summer sun 'ill s . . . it ii. 22 

He s's upon a hundred fields . it iii. 50 

and there his light may 5 — . tt . 51 

fair form may stand and s, l Of oldsat Frcedoin* etc.ii 
To make the necklace s; . . TalkingO. . 222 
rust unburnish'd, not to s in use ! . Ulysses . 23 
Sometimes a little corner s's, . Two Voices 1S7 

beams, that thro' the Oriel s . . Day-Dm. . 54 
As ss the moon in clouded skies, . Beggar Maid 9 
Ralph Who s's so in the corner ; . Pri?icess,Pro.i.^ 
I see their unborn faces s . . InMe?n.\xxxii\.ig 
Not all regret : the face will s . 11 cxv. 9 

Seeing his gewgaw castle j . . Maud, I. x. 18 
But now £ on, and what care I, . 11 xviii. 41 
O when did a morning s . . v xix. 5 

S out, little head, sunning over . it xxii. 57 

sin the sudden making of splendid namestt III. vi. 47 
That s's over city and river, . . Ode on Well. 50 
tell her, she s's me down : . . Elai?ie 1219 

yonder s'sThe Sun of Righteousness, En. Arden 499 
.S's in those tremulous eyes . . Tithonus . 26 
Fairily-delicate palaces s . . The Islet . 18 
all the stars S, and the Shepherd . Spec, of Iliad \6 
he would only s among the dead . Lucretius . 129 

shingle. 
round it ran a walk Of s 
harsh s should grate underfoot 
Waves on a diamond s dash, 
Waves on the s pouring, 

shining, 
s in upon the wounded man . 
Unloved, the sun-flower, s fair 

ship. 
sinking s's, and praying hands . Loios-E's. . 161 
did we watch the stately s's, . Locksley H. 37 

And the stately s's go on ' Break, break* ct:. 9 
Fair s, that from the Italian shore In Mem. ix. 1 
great s lift her shining sides . . m cii. 40 

blush the news, O'er the blowings's. Maud.l.xvn. 12 
whether he came in the Hanover s, tt II. v. 59 
Some s of battle slowly creep To F. D. Maurice 26 
ere he came, like one that hails a s, Enid . 1389 

Had built the king his havens, s's, Vivien . 24 

master of that s Enoch had served in En. Arden 119 



. En. Arden . 73S 

" • 773 

. The Islet . 16 

. 1865-1866 . 11 

. Princess, vii. 46 

. In Mem. c. 5 



TE.YXYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



367 



POEM. LINK. 

Annie, the s I sail in passes here . En. Arden .214 

was lost' he said rep.' " -39° 

prosperously sail'd The* 'Good Fortune 'n . 524 

Another * (She wanted water] . " .628 

felt the good s shake and reel . The Voyage 15 

' A s of fools he shriek'd in spite (rep.) " . 77 

reach'd the s and caught the rope. Sailor Boy . 3 

many a fire between the s's and stream Spec.of Iliadij 

1 s of France . . The Captain 28 

he said : the s flew forward 11 . 33 

shi/r.vreck. 

Made orphan by a winter s . 

shire. 

A sign to many a staring 1 . 

. :r of half a servile s, 

shiver. 
Little breezes dusk and s 
The hard brands s on the steel, 
And here thine aspen s . 
chords that s to one note : 
the s of dancing leaves is thrown 



En. Arden . 13 

Will Water. 1:9 
Maud, I, x. 10 



. L. oj Shalnf 7,i. 12 
. Sir Galahad 6 ' 
. A Farewell 10 
. J'rincess, iii. 74 
Maud. I. vi. 73 
woodlands, when they s in January, Bututicca . 75 

skiver* d. 
Were J in mv narrow frame. . Fatima . iS 

A cry that s to the tingling stars, . il/. d' Arthur 199 

And j'i of pucker'd faces drive ; In Mew. box. 10 
like a J Of darling fish, . .£«/</ . I3«7 

*/«£•£ (s.) 

push thee forward thro' a life of s's, CEnone . 160 

With twelve great s's of sound, . Codiva . 74 

whom the electric s Dislink'd . J'rincess, Pro. 69 

his the s, so harshly given, . . JnMem. xvi. 11 

Diffused the s thro' all my life, . 

The stcpsof Time — the s's of Chance- 

■\Viih thousand s's that come and go, 

batter'd with the s's of doom 

When all that seems shall suffer s 

pulses closed their gates with a s Maud. 1 

5 Of the cataract seas that snap . 11 [" 

In middle ocean meets, the surging s, Will 

shock verb.) 

Must ever s, like armed foes, 'Love thou thy land' 78 

where the moving isles of winter 1 M. d'.i rthur 140 



xxxiv. 


55 


XCIV. 


42 


CX11. 


'7 


CXV11. 


24 


CX XX. 


2 


'. 1. i. 
II. ii. 


>5 
25 



493 



39 



. Witt Water. 216 



Dying Swan 1 3 



you Willi him evn to death, . Princess, iii. 

and there so furiously S, . . Elaine 

shock'd. 
S, like an iron-clanging anvil . J'rincess, v. 

shock-head. 
The x-A willows two and two . Amfihion . 

shoe. 
Shall fli.ig her old s after. . 
shone. 
S out their crowning snows, 

iewell'd s the saddle-leather L.of.shnlott,\\\.m 

y-whitc . . CEnone . 176 

irden-glassesx, and momently Hardener sD. ti6 

near Ins tomo a least S, silver-set J'rincess, Pro. 106 

cradle s the Northern star, " i. 4 

it 1 like a jewel . . 11 iii. 340 

than a glow-worm s the tent 11 iv. 7 

rions, wash'd with morning, 11 v. 253 

lumn'd entry 1 and marble stairs * _. 354 

,t Thro' glittering drops . . " vi. 365 
is born. In Mem. xxx. 32 
Mar \\ In. h f soi lose beside Thee, J>ed. of Idylls 46 
thro' these Princelike his bearing s Enid . . 545 
so thickly s the gems, » 154' 

that j white-lUted thro' ihc gloom. Vivien . 788 
the field, thai s Full-summ taint 1134 

on the burnish dboard Sparkled audi; En Ardenm 



S like .1 mystic si.ir 


. Ayltner's /*". 


'■ 


Hying j, the silver boss . 


. Tlic I 


3' 


shook. 






Hard by a poplar j alway 


. Mariana 


41 


wild hii word She s ihe world. 


. The Pott . 


50 



I OEM. LINE. 

s the wave as the wind did sigh ; . Dying Swan 15 
.V in the stedfast blue. . . D.ofP.Wom. 56 

Above her s the starry lights : ' Of old sat Freedom ' 3 
s his song together as he near'd . Gardener's D. 00 
a jolly ghost, that * The curtains Walk.tothe . 
I s him down because he was . Talking O. . 237 
anon she s her head, And shower'd Godiva . 46 
A sudden hubbub s the hall, . Day-Dm. 

paddling plied And s ihe lilies : . J'rincess, Pro. 72 
s aside! lie hand that play'd the patron 11 . 1,7 

s the songs, the whispers, . . 11 .'-97 

Melissa s her doubtful curls . 11 iii. 59 

desire to kneel, and s My pulses . 11 . 177 

s the woods, And danced the colour 11 _ . 27s 
the tear, She sang of, s and fell, . 11 iv. 42 

Psyche flush'd and wann'd and f ; 11 . 142 

Palpitated, her hand s . . . 11 . 370 

Not long : I Jit off; ... " , • 54 8 

and s the branches of the deer . «■ Con. 08 

s to all the liberal air . . InJrfem.ixxxviii. 7 
brighten like the star that s . 11 31 

s my heart 10 think she comes jl/VrW, I.xviii. 10 
I s her breast with vague alarms . The Letters 38 
On that loud sabbath s the spoiler Odeon Well. 123 
s his drowsy squire awake . . Enid . . 125 
s her pulses, crying. ' Look a prize I 11 . .972 
She * from fear, and for her fault . Vivien .801 
I hen s his hair, strode off ._ . Elaine . 718 

she was happy enough and J it off, 11 . 780 

She neither blush'd nor s, . , 11 . 960 

wild with wind That s her tower, 11 1013 

s beneath them, as the thistle shakes Guinevere 252 
j And almost overwhelm'd her . En. Arden . 525 
and s His isolation from him. . 11 . 652 

1 and s, holding the branch, 11 . 7^8 

s the heart of Edith hearing him. Ayltner's F. 63 
like a storm he came, And s the house » . 216 

a word ; she s her head. . Sea Dreams 1 1 2 
Like her, he i his head " . ill 

Whom all the pines of Ida s to see Lucretius . 86 

shoot (s.) 
and earliest s's Of orient green, . Ode to Mem. 17 

sJioot (verb.) 
s into the dark Arrows of lightnings. To J. M. K. 13 
While all the neighbours i thee, . The Blackbird 2 
The northern morning o'er thee s, Talking O. 275 
1 would s. howe'er in vain . . Tivo Voices 344 
little boys begin to s and stab, . J'rincess, Con. 61 
At times a carven craft would * . The Voyage 53 
as the rapid of life S's to the fall . A Dedication 4 

shore (s.) 
the happy blossoming s. . . Sea-Fairies 8 
Who can light on as happy as. " .40 

shallow s on a distant i, . Mariana in UieS.7 

shadow'd coves on a sunny s, . Eteduore . 18 
the shadowy s 11 .4' 

with bars of sand : Left on the *; Pal. of Art 250 
mourn and rave On alien s's . Lotos-Es. . 33 

Between ihe sun and moon upon the ! 11 -38 

the s, Than labour in mid-ocean . 11 171 

the temples, w aver'd, and the s ; . D. ofF. Won: 1 1 4 
sail with Arthur under \oomings's,M.dA rthur, J'./>. 1 7 
unto the i'i of nothing ! . . Gardener's />. 1 7 

a daily gain upon the s, . Golden Year 29 
on s, and when Thro' scudding drifts Ulysses . 9 

the barren, barren s! . . Locksley 1J. 40 

111 lingers, and I linger on the s 11 _. 141 

dark J just seen that it was rich. . J'rincess, i. 245 
grasping down the houghs I gain'd the * 11 iv. 171 
Rolling on some wild s 11 v. 141 

ol ■ a from verge to s, . 11 vii. 23 

Fair ship, thai from the Italian s . In Mem. \\. 1 
laid him by the pleasant J . . 11 xix. 3 

The sound of that forgetful j . 11 zzxv, 14 
Yet turn thee to the doubtful s, . 11 be 9 

buy lengths on boundless /x; . 11 l.vix. 12 
Dip down upon the northern s, . 11 btxxii. 1 

To the other 5, involved in thee, . 11 lxxxnl. 40 

1 watch thee from the quiet s . n Ixxxi 
paced the i'i And many a bridge, 11 lxxxvi. 11 



3 68 



CONCORDANCE TO 



still as vaster grew the s, 
The boat is drawn upon the s ; 
And heard an ever-breaking s 
..To spangle all the happy .s's 
More than a mile from the s . 
That made it stir on the s 
cannon bullet rust on a slothful s 
heave the hill And break the s, 



rode with them, to the s's Of Severn Enid . 44, 1 
did you never lie upon the s . . Vivien 
wild battles by the 5 Of Duglas : . Elaine 



the thundering s's of Bude and Bos Guinevere . 2 



the waste and lumber of the s, 
As down the s he ranged, 
and fill'd the s's With clamour 
j's that darken with the gathering 
forth they came and paced the s, 
Swept with it to the s, . 
spoke with me on the s ; 
On open main or winding s ! . 
O hundred s's of happy climes, 
While about the s of Mona . 



POEM. LINE. 

hi Mem. cii. 25 

n cxx. 6 

11 cxxiii. 11 

ti Con. 120 

Maud, I. ix. 2 

ir II. ii. 15 

III. vi. 



Ode on Well. 260 



140 
2S9 



En. Arden , 



Aylmer's F.. 
Sea Dreams 



The Voyage 6 
11 . 49 

Boddicea . 1 



sliore (verb.) 
good Queen, her mother, s the tress Princess, vi. 97 
6" thro' the swarthy neck, . . Enid . 1576 

shore-cVJf. 
From the long s-cs windy walls . Enid . 1013 

shorn. 
And, issuing s and sleek, . . Talking O . . 42 

shot[s.) 
A s, ere half thy draught be done, In Mem. vi. 11 
Storm'd at with 5 and shell . . Lt. Brigade 22,44 

shot (verb.) 
•5" thro' and thro* with cunning 'Clear-Jieadedfrietid'i'j 

Momently s into each other. . Madeline . 23 

S over with purple, and green, . Dying Swan 20 

as a flying star s thro' the sky . Pal. of Art 123 

■S 1 on the sudden into dark . .ToJ.S. . 28 
S like a streamer of the northern . M. d Arthur 139 

..9 thro' the lists at Camelot, . 11 224 

Be s for sixpence in a battle-field, Audley Ct. . 40 

palfrey's footfall s Light horrors . Godiva . 58 

The fire s up, the martin flew, . Day-Dm. . 143 

.S sidelong daggers at us, . . Princess, ii. 427 

s from crooked lips a haggard smile 11 iv. 345 

s A flying splendour out of brass . 11 vi. 344 

*S up and shrill'd in flickering gyres, " vii. 31 

s red fire and shadows thro' the cave, Elaine . 413 

climbingupthevalley; atwhomhes; Ayhners F, 228 

by a keeper s at, slightly hurt, . 11 . 548 

.5" up their shadows to the Heaven ir . 642 

toner 'ed s un as dead as a naail . N. Farmer \ 35 

.5" o'er the seething harbour-bar, . Sailor Boy . 2 

S out of them, and scorch'd me . Lucretius . 66 

shoulder. 
a leopard skin Droop'd from his s. CEnone 
Upon her pearly s leaning cold . n 
golden round her lucid throat And s 11 . 175 

off her s backward borne : . . Pal. of Art 118 
clapt his hand On Everard's s . The Epic . 22 
Make broad thy s's to receive my M.d Arthur, 164 
O'er both his s's drew the languid hands n . 174 

Naiads oar'd A glimmering s . To E. L. .17 
Till over thy dark s glow l Move eastward,' etc. 5 
robed the s's in a rosy silk, . 
white s shaken with her sobs, 
slanted o'er a press Of snowy s's 
on my s hung their heavy hands, 
from the dewy s's of the Earth 
On either shining s laid a hand, 
and the squire Chafing hiss; 
Droop from his mighty s, 
Gazed at the heaving s, 
turn'd, and smooth'd The glossy s, Elaine 
a heaved s and a saucy smile . Aylmer's F. 466 
Among the honest s's of the crowd Sea Dreams 162 
pure brows, and from thy s's pure, Tithonus . 35 



58 



. Princess,Pro 


.103 


11 


IV. 


270 


11 




45B 

531 


ir 


V. 


41 


. Enid . 




518 
876 


. Vivien 




92 
74S 


, Elaine 




347 



shoulder 'd. 
Then we s thro' the swarm . 
bloated things .S" the spigot, . 

slwut (s.) 
Herod, when the s was in his ears, 
O shall the braggart s . 
But that there rose as: 
a j rose again, and made The long 
a s More joyful than the city roar 
caught once more the distant s, . 
At the s's, the leagues of lights, . 



POEM. LINE. 

Audley Ct. . 8 
Guinevere . 266 

Pal. of Art 219 
LoveandDuty 5 
Princess, Cou. 36 
line m . 96 

ti Con. 100 
InMem. lxxxvi. 9 
Maud, II. iv. 21 
slwut (verb.) 
hark ! they s ' St Simeon Stylites.' SIS. Slylites 14+ 
They s, ' Behold a saint ! ' . . n . 151 

he 5*5 with his sister at play ! ' Break, break,' etc. 6 
6" Icenian, Catieuchlanian (rep.) . Boddicea . 57 

sJiouted. 
Till I struck out and s; . . Princess, v. 529 

But I heard it s at once . . Maud, II. v. 50 

shouting. 

Heard the heavens fill with s . Locksley H. 123 

a loyal people s a battle cry, . Maud, III. vi. 35 

the red cock s to the light, . . Enid . 1233 

shovelVd. 
s up into a bloody trench . . A udley Ct. 41 

show (s.) 

not with s's of flaunting vines . Ode to Mem. 48 

Had made him talk for s ; . . Will Water. 196 

Princess Ida seem'd a hollow s, . Princess, iii. 169 

camp and college turn'd to hollow s's ; ti v. 467 

They did but look like hollow s's ; 11 vii. 119 

My haunting sense of hollow s's: 11 . 328 

sliow (verb.) 
might s it at a joust of arms, . M. oV A rthur 102 

^ me the man hath suffer'd more St S. Stylites 48 
That s the year is turn'd. . . Talking O. 176 
Nor canst thou s the dead are dead. Two Voices 267 
.S".y At distance like a little wood . Day-Dm. . 61 
all that else the years will s, . 11 . 225 

s you slips of all that grows . . Amphion . 83 
So j'j my soul before the Lamb, . St Agnes' Eve 1 7 
Shall j thee past to Heaven : . Will Water. 246 
the faults he would not s ; ' You might have won' 17 
All he i'i her makes him dearer : L. oj Burleigh 33 
sThat life is not as idle ore, . InMem. cxvii. ig 

That wills itself without. . . Maud, II. iv. 61 
threefold to s the fruit within. . The Brook 73-208 
call'd old Philip out To s the farm : ip . 121 

intoDamleychaseTosSir Arthur's deer.ir . 133 

for the last time while Is,. . Guinevere . 451 
' 6" me the books ! * . . . Sea Dreams 144 
these I thought my dream would s to me Eucretiussi 

showed. 
the world Like one great garden s, TIiz Poet . 34 
One ^ an iron coast . . . Pal. of Art 69 
for he 5 me all the sin. . . . MayQucen,\\\. 17 
by my^side ^ like fair seraphs. . St S. Stylites 166 
s the House, Greek, set with busts : Princess, Pro. 10 
5 the late-writ letters of the king. ir i. 173 

He ^ a tent A stone-shot off : . 11 v. 50 

Who s a token of distress ? . In Mem. lxxvii. 13 
s him in the fountain fresh . . n lxxxiv. 26 
What Roman strength Turbia s . The Daisy . 5 
visor up, and J a youthful face, . E?iid . . 189 
s themselves against thesky,andsank.ir . . 240 
For while the mother jit,. ir . . 636 

^ an empty tent allotted her, . tr . 1733 

the crown, and s them to his knights, Elaine . 58 
green path that s the rarer foot, . 11 . 162 

•S* her the fairy footings . . Aylmer's F. 90 
when she 5 the wealthy scabbard, n . 236 

5 their eyes Glaring, and passionate Sea Dreams 228 
s A riotous confluence . . . Lucretius . 29 

shower (s.) 

sweet s's Of festal flowers, . . Ode to Mem. 77 

These in every s creep . . . A Dirge . 33 

I thirsted for the brooks, the s's; . Eatima . 10 



TEXXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



369 



moonlight on a falling s ? 

like the rainbow from the s, . 

The slow result of winter s's: 

I'll take the s's as they fall, . 

Perfume and flowers fall in s's 

s s of random sweet 

close Her crimson fringes to the s; InAIem.\xxi. 12 



POEM. LINE. 

. Margaret . 4 
. Two Voices 444 
" . • 452 
. Amphioti . 101 
. Sir Galahad 1 1 
Princess, vii. 71 



Lxxxv. 
Ode on Well. 155 
The Daisy . 70 
Enid . 1372 

Vivien . 253 



Sweet after s's. ambrosial air, 
in blown seas r.nd storming s's 
s and storm anil ulast Had blown 
cared as much for as a summer s : 
sunlight on the plain behind ai: 

made a noise of falling s's. Elaine 410, 522 
Thegentles, thesmellof dying leaves, En. Arden 612 

shower (verb. ) 
Down s the gambolling waterfalls Sea-Fairies 10 
s the fiery grain Of freedom . . Princess, v. 411 

showered, 

s the rippled ringlets to her knee ; Godiva . 47 

Before me s the rose in flakes . Princess, iv. 245 

Lavish honour s all her stars, , OdeonWetl. 196 

s His orieutal gifts on every one . Ay Inter's F. 213 

showering. 
S thy gleaned wealth . . . Ode to Mem. 23 
s wide Sleet of diamond-drift . Vision 0/ Sin 21 
fountains spouted up and s down . Princess, i. . 215 

showing. 
S a gaudy summer-morn, . . Pal. of Art 62 
J> the aspick's bite) . . D. oj F. IVoni.jbo 

shown. 

Half s, arc broken and withdrawn. Two Voices 306 

shrank. 
"one sick willow sere and small Mariana in tlteS.$-} 



L'nid i far back into herself, 
charger at her side. She s a little 

shrewdnets. 
; the want By s 



Enid 



M55 
1669 



nor compensating 



En. Arden . 230 

shriek s. ) 
Dislink'd with s's and laughter . Princess,Pro. 70 
vonuer, s's and strange experiments «» . 228 

the songs, the whispers, and the s's n i. 97 

rose a s as of a city sack'd . . 11 iv. 147 

then another j, 'The Head, the Head " . 157 

kingdom topples over with a s •• Con. 62 

The shrill-edged s of a mother . Maud, i. i. 16 
thcie was love in the passionate s, " . 57 

all in passion uttering a dry s, . Enid . 1310 

rogether with a wailing s, . Vivien . 716 
gave A marvellous great s . Elaine . 515 

myriad r of wheeling ocean-fowl, . F.n. Arden. 584 
the keen t 'yes love, yes Edith, yes" Aylmer's F. 582 
.1- their fa Kan highest up the gamut Sen Dreams 225 
One i of hate would jar all the hymns •' . 251 

shriek (verb.) 
if any came near I would call, and s, The Mermaid 38 
and s ' Vou are not Ida :' . . Princess, \u. 79, 
shall I j if a Hungary fail? . . Maud, I. iv. 46 
That ever s's before a death,' . Elaine 1017 

S out ' I hate you, Enoch," . . En. Arden . 33 

shrieked. 
Behind the mouldering wainscot s, Mariana: . 64 
' No voice,' she s in that lone hall, Pal. of Art 258 

ilicy s the burden ' Him !' . Ed. morris 123 
Daintily she s And wrung it . . Princess, Pro.iji 

'.' s the old king, . . » v. 318 

1 The virgin marble ... n vi. 330 

s against nis creed— . . . In Mem.lv. 10 
5 to the strati not a dead Enid . 1627 

moved so much the more, and s again, " . 1630 

s out 'traitor 1 to the unhealing wall, Elaine . 609 

he swung his arms, ami s . . Sea Dreams 24 

'A ship of 1 >li ' he * in spite, . The Voyage 77 

aid s between her daugl : 6, 72 

1 That the but meant to win nun Lucretius .274 



shrieking, 
s out ' O fool ! ' the harlot leapt 
fell The woman s at his feet, 
s ' I am his dearest, 1 — 

shrift. 
And numbered bead, and s, . 
in her grief, for housel or for s 

shrike. 
the sparrow spear' d by the s, 

shrill, 
s's All night in a waste land, 

her whinny s's From tile to scullery 

shrill-edged. 
The s-e shriek of a mother . 

shriird. 
(s the cottonspinning chorus) 
And 5 his tinsel shaft, 
merrily-blowing s the martial fife ; 
Shot up and s in flickering gyres, . 
s and rang, TU1 this was ended 

shri/let'i. 
The shattering trumpet s high 

shrilling. 
she ^ ' Let me die !' . 



ioem. 1 

■- . 8ji 

Aylmer's i 
The Victim 76 

Talking O. . e,j 
Guinez-ere . 147 

Maud, I. iv. 23 

M. d'A rthur 201 
Princess, v. 442 

Maud, I. i. 16 



Ed. Morris 122 

Talking O. 63 

Princess, v. 241 

11 vii. 31 

En. Arden . 175 

Sir Galaliad 5 

Elaine 1020 



shrine. 
By Bagdat's s's of fretted gold, . Arabian X's. 7 
Still-lighted in a secret s. . Mariana in the S. 18 
From one censer, in one s, . . Eieauore . 50 
from the ruin'd s he stept . . M.d' Arthur 45 
may carve a s about my dust, . St S.Stylites 192 
My knees are bow'd in crypt and s : Sir Galahad 18 
Then by some secret s I rule 11 -29 

The desecrated s, the trampled year. Princess, v. lai 
that s which then in all the realm Flame 1320 

lie before your s's ; . . . Cumevers . 673 
Going before to some far J, . On a Mourner 1 7 

shrined. 
Methinks my friend is richly s, . In Mem. Ki. 7 

shrine-doors, 
s-d burst thro' with heated blasts D. ofF. Worn. 29 

shrink, 
s to the earth if you came in. . Poet's Mind 37 
Smite, s not, spare not. . . St S.Stylites lyi 

nor J For fear our solid aim . . Princess, iii. 248 
her small goodman S's in his arm-chair 11 v. 444 

shrive. 

let me J me clean, and die. ' . . Elaine 1094 

shriveWd. 
Were s into darkness in his head . Godiva . 70 
Is s in a fruitless lire, . . . In Mem. liii. 11 

shrivelling. 
sting of shrewdest pain Ran jthro' mc^tS.Slylitesic/j 

shroud (s.) 
Nor was the night thy s. . . Ode to Mem. 28 

A music out of sheet and s, . . In Meiu.cu. $x 

shroud (verb.) 
To s me from my proper scorn . hi Mem. xwi 1 *. 
s this great sin from all ! . . Aylmer's F. 773 

shrub. 
Tall orient s's, and obelisks . . Arabian X's. 107 

shudder f s.) 
her child I— a r comes Across me . CEnone 

shudder (verb.) 
I s at the sequel, but I go.' . . Princess, ii. 
s but to dream our maids should ape 11 iii. 
Nor s's at the gulfs beneath, . /'/ Mem xl. 

' I s, some one steps across . . Guih 
if you do not s at me . . . u 

shudder 1 d. 
1 cry Should break his sleep Walk, tot ' 
"Why men:' h; , Princess, 111. 4-- 

blood (Jf luo own son, s, , . 11 

2 A 



249 

218 

292 

»s 

57 
667 



370 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Yet I s and thought like a fool Maud, I. xiv. 38 
s, as the village wife who cries . Guinevere . 56 

shudder est. 
S when I strain my sight, . . Fatima. . 3 

shuddering. 
delight and 5 took hold of all my mind May Queen, Iii. 35 
s fled from room to room . . Princess, vi. 350 
Set every gilded parapet s; . . Elaine . 299 

thought With s ' Hark the Phantom 11 1016 

knew not wherefore, started up S, En. Arden . 618 
s at the ruin of a world ; . . Sea Dreams 30 

shun. 
on our dead self, nor s to do it, . Princess, iii. 205 
will not j The foaming grape . hi Mem. Con. 79 
s the wild ways of the lawless tribe £uid . 1456 

do not 5- To speak the wish . . Elaine . 909 

5 to break those bounds of courtesy «> 1214 

did not 5 to smite me in worse way, Guinevere 432 
Nor 5 to call me sister, . it 668 

skimnd. 
nor s a soldier's death, . 
and had not 5 the death, 
Enoch s the middle walk 
which he better might have s 



. Princess, Pro. 38 
ii v. 170 

. En. Arden . 739 
ir . 741 



Shushau. 
brawl at ^ underneath the palms 

shut. 
I s my sight for fear 
he that s*s Love out, To — 
shall be S out from love 
S upas in a crumbling tomb, 
white dust, 5 in an urn of brass ! 
She left the new piano s : . 
said he lived s up within himself 
door s, and window barr'd. . 
I ^ my life from happier chance, 
any moral s Within the bosom 
By squares of tropic summer s 

one deep chamber s from sound . Princess, vi. 355 
sometimes in my sorrow s, . In Mem. xxiii. 1 
Were 5 between me and the sound 
Or been in narrowest workings, . 
God s the doorways of his head. . 
A gulf that ever s's and gapes, 
I will not 5 me from my kind, 
little maid, sin by nunnery walls, . Guinevere 
smeround with narrowing nunnery-walls, n . 663 

s from all Her charitable use 

shutter. 
Close the door, the s*s close, 



Princess, iii. 214 

. CEnojie . 184 

With Pal. of Art x 4 
" - 15 

Pal. of Art 273 
Lotos-E 's. . 113 
Talking O. . 119 
Golden Year 9 
Godiva . 41 
Two Voices 54 
Day-Dm. . 203 
A mphion . 87 



XXV1I1. 
XXXV. 

xliii. 
lxix. 
cvii. 



Aylmer*s F. 565 
. Deserted H, 



shutting, 
s reasons up in rhythm . . Lucretius . 220 

shy. 

S she was, and I thought her cold ; Ed. Gray . 13 

A little s at first, but by and by . Princess, v. 43 

Might say no, for she is but s : . The Window 97 

shyness. 

It is my s, or my self-distrust, . Ed. Morris . 86 

sib Hat ion. 
with a long low s, stared . . Princess, i. 174 

Sicilian. 
as the great S called Calliope . Lucretius . 93 

sick. 
*I am half s of shadows,' . . L.ofShalott,u.-$5 
King is s, and knows not what he M. d' Arthur 97 
y of home went overseas for change. Walk, to the M.iS 
girl, for whom your heart is s, . Talking O. . 71 

S art thou — a divided will . . Two Voices 106 
but I am s of Time, ' Co?ne not, when* etc. 9 

.5" for the hollies and the yews Princess, Pro. 185 

talk'd The trash that made me s . :r ii. 372 

Were you s, ourself Would tend upon you ir iii. 303 
Hung round the $: the maidens came 11 vii. 7 
fair peace once more among the s. ti .29 



POEM. LINE. 


. In Mem. ii. 


M 


" xlix. 




Maud, I. i. 


&<% 


) " 


61 


tl X. 


1 


» 


36 


ir Xlll. 


ir 


" XIX. 


73 


ir II. ii. 


44 


vere Elaine . 


7° 


ir 


80 


tr 


88 


11 


57° 


TI 


iosB 


it 


1080 


. En. Arden . 


6=; 


. Sea Dreams 


1^=; 


. The Voyage 


9' 


ir 


93 



S for thy stubborn hardihood 

heart is s, And all the wheels 

cheating the s of a few last gasps 

I amsof the Hall and the hill (rep, 

S, am I j- of a jealous dread ? 

S, s to the heart of life, am I. 

his essences turn'd the live airs, 

5" once, with a fear of worse, 

v? of a nameless fear, 

Spake (for she had been s) to Guii 

1 Are you so s, my Queen, . 

'stay with me, I am s ; 

' Love, are you yet so s ?' 

to go, So far, being s V 

too faint and s am I For anger ; 

father lying s and needing him) 

— it makes me s to quote him — 

half the crew are s or dead . 

blind or lame or s or sound 

The land is s, the people diseased, Tlie Victim . 47 

sicken. 
Here at least, where nature s's, . Locksley H. 153 
Or s with ill-usage, . . . Princess, v. 83 

A time to s and to swoon . . In Mem.xxi. 17 
pains him that he s's nigh to death ; Enid . 1348 

I hate, abhor, spit, s at him, . Lucretius . 196 

sicken' d. 
Which s every living bloom, 
war On all the youth, they s; 

sickening, 
s of a vague disease 

sickle. 
ere the silvers of that month 

sicklier. 
sickly-born and grew Yet s, . 

sickly. 
Bore him another son, a s one: 
the third, the s one, who slept 

sickly-horn. 
Now the third child was s-b 

sickness. 
Some turn this s yet might take, 
read My s down to happy dreams 
due To languid limbs and s ; 
serviceable To noble knights in s, 
as but born of s, could not live : 
What the rough s meant, 
a languor came Upon him, gentle s, En. Arden 825 

side. 
the piney s's Of this long glen . CEnone . 91 
and thrust The dagger thro' her s.' D. of F.Wom. 260 
clamber'd half way up The counters Golden Year 7 
Had cast upon its crusty s . . Will Water. 103 
Whichever s be Victor, . . Princess, ii. 213 

To rail at Lady Psyche and her s. n iii. 17 

when our s was vanquished . . ir vi. 8 

A great ship lift her shining s's . In Mem. cii. 40 
Up the s 1 went, n -43 

That has to-day its sunny s. . >t Con. 72 

There were two at her s, . . Maud, I. ix. 9 
Was not one of the two at her s . " x. 2 

sweeter blood by the other s . m xiii. 34 

Would he have that hole in his s ? i» II. v. 82 
'Not at my s. I charge you ride before Enid + 863 
the head Pierced thro' his s, - Elaine . 489 

up the s, sweating with agony, . 11 . 493 

parted from the jousts Hurt in the s/ 11 . 620 

Thro' her own s she felt the sharp lance i» . 62 r 

in an oriel on the summer s, . tr 1171 

on our dull s of death, 11 1373 

Never lie by thy s, see thee no more Guinevere 574 
The very s's of the grave itself . Lucretius . 253 
drove the knife into his s 11 . 271 



. In Mem. lxxi. 7 
. Vivien . 422 

L.C. V.deVcre 62 

Princess, i. 100 

En. Arden . 260 

En. Arde?i . 109 
11 . 229 

En. Arden . 260 

Two Voices 55 

Princess, ii. 235 

>t vi. 356 

Elaine . 764 

n . 876 






Wheedlin: 



siding. 
■ and i with them ! 



Princess, v. 151 



TENNYSOITS WORK'S. 



371 



sifted. POEM. LINE. 

hcedfully I * all my thoughtj . StS. Stylites 55 
Every heart, when J well, . . Vision of Sin 112 
this matter might be s clean.' . Princess, i. 79 

sigh (s.) 
wasting odorous j'? All night long Adeline . 43 
With her laughter or her s's, . Milter's D. 184 
my voice was thick with s's . . D.qf F. Worn. 109 
in s's Which perfect Joy, perplex'd Gardener 1 'sD .249 
A welcome mix'd with s's. . . Talking O. 212 
shaken with a sudden storm ofs's—Locksley Ft. 27 
The bosom with lung s's labour'd, Princess, vii. 210 
Love would answer with a s, InMem.xxxy. 13 

Nor feed with s's a passing wind 11 evil. 4 

in my thoughts with scarce a 5 . " cxviii. 11 
lord-lover, what s's are those, Maud,l.xxii. 29 
Half the night I waste in s's . ■■ II. iv. 23 

With half a s she turn'd the key, The Letters 18 
songs, S's, slow smiles, . . Elaine . 646 

sign (verb.) 
you may hear him sob and s ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 5 
shook the wave as the wind did s Dying Swan 15 
To breathe and loathe, to live and*, Two Voices 104 
here will s thine alder tree, . . A Farewell 9 
She s's amid her narrow days, . In Mem. lix. 10 
and s The full new life ..." lxxxv. g 
whenever a March-wind s's . . Maud, I. xxii. 40 
often when they met S fully, . Vivien . 38 

sigh'd. 
my name S forth with life . D. ofF. Worn. 154 
So i the King, Muttering and . M. d 'Arthur 178 
they that heard it J, . . . Vision of Sin 18 
Cold ev'n to her, she s ; . Princess, vi. 86 

Is: a touch Came round my wrist, it vii. 122 
Long have 1 s for a calm . . Maud, I. ii. 1 
thought, is it pride, and mused and s 11 viii. 12 

They s for the dawn and thee. . 11 xxii. 52 
i and smiled the hoary-headed Earl, Enid . . 307 
came upon him, and he s ; . 11 . 1098 

.Sin passing 'Lancelot Forgive mc ; Elaine . 1340 

S, and herein to gather heart . Guinevere . 366 

s to find Her journey done . . 11 . 401 

sigheth. 
the solemn oak-tree, s . . . Claribel . 4 

sighing. 
winter winds are wearily s : . D. of the O. Year 2 
by them went Thecnamour'dair r, Print, ess, vi. 63 
I hey will ii-. t.' 11 vii. 280 

O, art thou s for Lebanon (rep.) Maud, I . xv'm. 15 
Shaking her head at her son and s 11 xix. 24 

lurn'd .V, and feign'd a sleep . Elaine . 838 

1 'let me rest' she said : . . En. Arden . 372 

sight. 

talking to himself, first met his J,' Love and Death 6 

H tears blinded my s . . Oriana . 23 

vc the mirror's magic s's L. qfShalotl,\i.2q 

I cannot veil, or droop my s, . Eleiinore . 87 

Shudderest when I strain my s, . Fatima . 3 

Bursts into blossom in his *. » -35 

1 shut my s for fear . . . (Enone . 184 

■r she turn'd her s . . Pat. of Art 225 

1 argent of her breast to s , D.ofF.iVom. 158 

1 Each little sound and s. . 11 . 277 

Even in her s he loved so well? . Margaret 40 

a J to make an old man young. Gardener's D. 140 

at first s, first-born 11 . 185 

But not a creature was in s : . Talking 0. . 167 

trembling, pass'd in music out of J. Locksley It. 34 

Kain'd thro' my s its overflow. . Two Voices 45 

And wasn't it a 1 to see . . Amphion . 49 

was the s . . Princess, /Vo.54,89 

Pretty were llic s If nur old halls . 11 . 119 

a > to shake The midriff of despair » i. 197 

Pitiful x, wrapt in a soldier's cloak 11 v. 53 

like to turn whose J is lost ; . . In MemXxi. 8 

I bis weakness in thy *. . " cix. 4 

closed her 1 . Maud.X x\w\. 67 

1 breath'd in * of haven, . The Brook . 157 

List s that Euid had of home . Enid . . 873 



POEM. 


LISE. 




• 694 


Elaine 


- 84 



In Mem.cxxiv. 12 



as a viper frozen : loathsome s 

A s you love to look on.' 

and the sorrow dimm'd her s. 

How fresh was every s and sound The Voyage 5 

out of s, and sink Past earthquake Lucretius . 152 

in s of C'ollatine And all his peers, » . 235 

sign (s. ) 
heaven's mazed s's stood still ' Clear-headed 'friend '28 
and I will tell the s. . . . MayQueen,\\\ia, 
I thought, 1 take it for ai. . . .1 .38 

By s's or groans or tears : . D. of F. Worn. 284 

surer s had followM, either hand, M. d' Arthur 76 
A J betwixt the meadow and the cloud, St S . Stylites 1 4 
Know I not Death '! the outward s's 1 Two Voices 270 
A s to many a staring shire . . Wilt Water. 139 
If my heart by s's can tell, . . L. of Burleigh 2 
stood a bust of Pallas for a i, . Princess, i. 219 

cannot speak, nor move, nor make one s, >i vii. J38 
Till the Sun drop dead from the s's.' 11 . 230 

no more $ of reverence than a beard. Vivien . 128 
With s's and miracles and wonders Guinezere . 220 
what of s's and wonders, but the s's 11 . 227 

thy wise father with his s's . . 11 . 272 

Pray'd for a s ' my Enoch is he gone ? ' En. A rden 487 
Suddenly set it wide to find a s, . 11 492 

making s's They knew not what : . ■> 641 

swang besides on many a windy s — A) liner's F. 19 

sign (verb ) 
Now x your names, which shall be read, In Mem. Con. 57 

signal. 

An idle s, for the brittle fleet . Sea Dreams 129 

signed. 
The names are s, and overhead . In Mem. Con. 60 

signet. 
He set his royal s there ; 

silence. 
All night thc-f seems to How 
One deep, deep s all ! . 
ripen toward the grave In s ; 
sank thro' the s drear, . 
only s suitcth best, 
waked with s, grunted 'Good !' M. 
There was s in the room ; 
is saved From that eternal s, 
crystal s creeping down, 
To s from the paths of men : 
a costly bribe To guerdon s, 
S, till I be silent too. . 
And makes a s in the hills . 
And s follow'd, and we wept 
here shall s guard thy fame ; 
They haunt the s of the breast, 
And strangely on the s broke 
And fell in s on his neck : 
And, tho' in s, wishing joy. . 
a s fell with the waking bird 
pass Unclaim'd, in Hushing s, 
wish Your warning or your s ? 
his command of s given, 
In s, did him service as a squire ; 
round his long sea-hall In s : 
let me think i>' is wisdom : . 
such a s is more wise than kind.' 
Dark-splendid, speaking 111 the s, 
standing by the shield In s, . 
little maid, who brook'd No s, 
I cry my cry in .9, 
howsoever much they may desire 
ihen came s, then a voice, 
lint Philip loved in s ; . 
Vocal, with here .mil there a s, 
With twenty months of s, 
a louder one Was all but s — 
felt the s of his house About him, 
escaped His keepers, and the s 
silenced by that s lay the wife, 
thou growest beautiful In s, 
Thro' s and the ticmbling stars 



. Oriana 


86 


. Pal. of Art 


260 


. Lotos- Es. . 


97 


D.oJF. Horn 


121 


. To y.s. . 


64 


I. d' Arthur, Ff. 4 


. Dora . 


>5* 


. Ulysses 


27 


. Two Voices 


86 


. Day-Dm. . 


218 


. Princess, i. 


201 


. In Mem.x\\\. 


8 


11 xix. 


8 


If XXX. 


20 


■1 lxxiv. 


17 


11 XClil. 


9 


11 XC1V. 


25 


11 cii. 


i* 


11 Con. 


88 


. Maud. 1 xxi 


■ >7 


. The Brook . 


105 


. Enid . 


936 


■■ . 111 


5- ?') 


" 


1255 


. Vivun 


82 


11 


102 


" 


.38 


, Elaine 


337 


• 1 


394 


. Guinevere . 


<58 


i» 


•99 


: S, ,1 


205 


M 


416 


. En. A rden . 


4> 


. Ay Inter" i P 


146 


11 


567 


ii 




1 " 


810 


•1 


S3.) 


. Sea Preanii 


46 


. Tithonus 


44 


. On a Mourner .J 



372 



CONCORDANCE TO 



silence (verb.) poem. line. 
ever widening slowly 5 all. . . Vivien. . 242 
surely can I s with all ease. . . Elaine . no 

silenced, 
s by that silence lay the wife, . Sea Dreams 46 

silent. 
S into Camelot L. qfShalott, iv. 41 

5 in its dusty vines : . . Mariana in theS. 4 
grasshopper is s in the grass : . CEnone . 25 
.s in a last embrace. . . . Locksley H. 58 
1 pledge her s at the board ; . . Will Water. 25 
knew us men, at first Was s, . Princess, iv. 213 

s we with blind surmise n . 362 

with his whelpless eye, S ; . . ir vi. 84 

Erect and s, striking with her glance ir . 136 

all s, save When armour clash'd . ir . 342 

s in the muffled cage of life : . tr vii. 32 

Silence, till I be 5 too. . . . luMem.x'ni. 8 
Sats, looking each attach. . , n xxx. 12 

And 5 under other snows : n civ. 6 

is ever the one thing s here. . Maud, II. v. 68 

voice is 5 in your council-hall , OdeonWell. 174 
whatever tempests lour For ever s n . 176 

even if they broke In thunder, $; u . 177 

all narrow jealousies Are s; . Ded. of Idylls 16 

Worn by the feet that now were s, Enid . . 321 
I am 5 then And ask no kiss ;* . Vivien . 102 

We could not keep him s, . . 11 . 266 

s, tho' he greeted her, she stood . Elaine . 334 

To hers which lay so s, . . n 1278 

bowed down upon her hands S, . Guinevere . 157 
Her own son Was s, En. Arden . 479 

5 in her oriental haven. 11 . 533 

Enoch rested s many days. »t . 700 

^ when I spoke to-night? . . Sea Dreams 259 

silen t-lighted, 
And pass the s-/town, . . . In Mem.C071.z12. 

silently, 
s, in all obedience . . . Enid . . 767 

silen i-sfieaking. 
on the silence broke The 5-5- words In Me?n.xciv. 26 

silk. 
trod on s, as if the winds . . A Character 21 
s's, and fruits, and spices, clear of toll, Golden Year 45 
A gown of grass-greens she wore, SirL. andQ. G. 24 
robed the shoulders in a rosy s, Princess, Pro. 103 
She brought us Academic s's, . h ii. 2 

ihro' the parted s's the tender face ir vii. 45 

statueof Sir Ralph From those rich s's 11 Con. ji8 
she bethought her of a faded s, . Enid . . 134 
In summer suit and s's of holiday 11 . . 173 
seeing one so gay in purple s's 11 284 

the fair Enid, all in faded s, 11 366 

All staring at her in her faded J." ?r 617 

ride with me in her faded s.* n 762 

Enid ever kept the faded s, . ti . . 841 

tearing off her veil of faded s . ir . 1303 

a splendid s of foreign loom, . m . 1535 

fashioned for it A case of s, . . Elaine . 8 

silk-soft, 
s-s folds, upon yielding down . Eleanore . 28 

silken-folded. 
fancies hatch'd In S;/ idleness . Princess, iv. 49 

silken-sailed. 
The shallop flitteth ss . . . L. ofShalott,l.22 

silken-san da I'd. 
tapt her tiny s-s foot . . Princess, Pro. 149 

silver. 
flaring bright From twisted s's . Arabian N's. 125 
three on either side, Pure s ir . 145 

Twilights of airy s, AudleyCt. . 81 

Sipt wine from s, praising God, . Will Water. 127 
spreadTheir sleeping s thro' the hills; In Mem. Con. 116 
cups ands on the burnish'd board Eft. Arden . 743 

silver -ch iming. 
the central fountain's flow Fall'n s-c Arabian Ns. 51 



silver-clear. poem. line. 
A little whisper s-c, . . . Two Voices 428 

silver-coasted. 

saviour of the s-c isle, . . Ode on Well. 136 

silver-gray. 
Will turn it s-g ; . . . . The Ri?iglet6, 16 
You should be s-g: ... n -30 

silver-green. 
All s-g with gnarled bark : . . Mariana . 42 

silver-set. 
near his tomb a feast Shone, s-s; . Princess, Pro. 106 

silver-treble, 
S-t laughter trilleth : Lilian . 24 

silve ry-crimson. 
They freshen the s-c shells . . Sea-Fairies 13 

silvery-streak 'd. 
And overstream'd and j-s . . The Islet . 20 

Simeon (see Stylites.) 
'Fall down, O S ; thou hast suffer* d St S. S tylites Q? 

Courage, St S ! . . . u . 153 

I, 6"ofthepillar,bysurnameStylites(rep.)ir . 158 

Simois. 

Came up from reedy 6" all alone . GEnone , 51 

Flash in the pools of whirling *S . ir . 202 

simmer. 
s and set their voices lower . . Maud, I. x. 15 

simple (adj.) 
Not s as a thing that dies . . Tzvo Voices 288 
some of the s great ones gone . Maud, 1. x. 6r 
Full swasher answer ' What know I ? Elaine . 668 

simple (s. ) 
the hermit, skill'd in all The s's . Elaine . 858 

simple-hea > ted. 
The seeming-injured s-h thing . Vivien . 751 

simpler. 
guilt S than any child, . . Guinevere . 369 

simple-seem i?ig. 
Our s-s Abbess and her nuns . Guinevere . 307 

simplicity. 
In his s sublime .... Ode on Well. 34 

sin (s.) 
you are foul with s ; . . . Poet's Mind 36 
that will take away my s, . . Pal. of Art 287 
for he show'd me all thes. . . May Queen, \n.17 
one slough and crust of s, . . StS.Stylites 2 
mercy, Lord, and take away my s, n . 8,44 

those lead-like tons of s, ?r . 25 

subdue this home Of s, my flesh . 11 -57 

mercy, mercy ; cover all my s. n . 83 

meicy, mercy! wash away my s. ir . 318 

sinful man, conceived and born in s; n . 120 

On the coals I lay, A vessel full of s ; ir . 167 

S itself be found The cloudy porch Love and Duty 8 
To make me pure of s. . . . St Agnes' Eve 32 
from the palace came a child of s, Vision of Sin 5 
s's of emptiness, gossip and spite . Princess, ii. 78 
Forgive what seem'd my s in me In Mem, Pro. 33 

1 sometimes hold it half a s , n v. 1 
Thou fail not in a world s, . , it xxxiii. 15 
holds it s and shame to draw . it xlvii. 11 
life is dash'd with flecks of s. . 11 Ii. 14 
pangs of nature, s*s of will, . , if liii. 3 
Ring out the want, the care, the s if cv. 17 
heap'd the whole inherited s . Maud,I.xiii. 41 
Not touch on her father's s . .11 xix. 17 
Whatever the Quaker holds, from ?; >i IX. v. 92 
We might discuss the Northerns To F.D.Maurice2g 
s that seem'd so like his own . Enid . . 594 
s that practice burns into the blood, Vivien . 612 
a face, bright as for s forgiven, . Elaine 1096 
Such s in words, Perchance, . 11 1182 
men worse by making my s known ? u 1407 
s seem less, the sinner seeming great ? i? 1408 



TEAWYSOX'S WORK'S. 



373 



POEM. LINE. 

Mine be the shame ; mine was the s ; Guinevere in 
is that made the past so pleasant « . 373 

and as yet no s was dream'd) . " . 385 

the s which thou hast sinn'd — . ■■ . 452 

thy shameful s with Lancelot : . 11 . 483 

came the s of Tristram and Isolt . 11 . 4 •, 

in the golden days before thy s. . 11 . 496 

all is past, the s is sinn'd, . _ 11 . 539 

Gone thro' my s to slay and to be slain ! 11 . 606 

I cannot kill my s, If soul be soul ; 11 . 614 

in mine own heart I can live down s 11 . 629 

shroud this great s from all ! . Ay Inter's F. 773 

the 1 That neither God nor man . Sea Dreams 62 
says, our s's should make us sad ; Grandmother 93 
An' a towd ma my s's . . N. Farmer 1 1 

The wages of s is death, . . Wages . 6 

sin 'verb.) 
s against the strength of youth ! . Locksley H. 59 
is your beauty, and I s In speaking Elaine 1180 

I almost s in envying you : . . Aylmer's F. 360 

Sinai. 

As over S's peaks of old 



s the simple passage o'er and o'er 

sweetly could she make and s. 

if indeed you list to s, S, 

and every' bird that s's : 

sleep, And I will s you ' birdie.' . 

I hear them too — they s to their team 

strange song I heard Apollo s 

O skill'd to s of Time and Eternity, 

to dance and s, be gaily drest 



POEM. 

Elaine 



LINE. 

II loco 

Guinevere . 1^3 
Sea Dreams ico 
11 . 273 

Grandmother 81 
Tithonus . 62 
Milton 2 

Coquette, ii. 3 



singer. 
The sweet little wife of the s said, The Islet 
And the s shaking his curly head n 



In Mem. xcv. 22 



Of s and arc, spheroid and azimuth. Princess, vi. 239 

sinecure. 
So moulder'd in a s as he : . Princess, Pro. 180 

sinew. 
home is in the s's of a man, . . Princess, v. 257 

sineiu-corded. 
supple, t-c, apt at arms : . . Princess, v. 524 

sinewed. 
until endurance grow S with action CEnone . 162 

sing. 
S's a song of undying love ; . . Poefs Mind 33 
We will s to you all the day : . Sea-Fairies 20 
sit and s the whole of the day ; . The Merman 9 
s to myself the whole of the day ; The Mermaid 10 

mb'd I would s and say, 11 .12 

bird would j,nor lamb would bleat, Mariana in theS. 37 
Sometimes I heard you s within . Miller's D. 123 
Ah, well— but s the foolish song . .1 . 161 

So s that other song I made, 11 . 1991 

To j her songs alone- . . Pal. of Art too 

harken what the inner spirit s's, Lotos-Ks. . 67 
and the minstrel s's Before them •< . 1:1 

O Blackbird I s me something well : T/te Blackbird 1 
Take warning ! he that will not s 11 . 21 

s for want, ere leaves arc new, . 11 .23 

Think you they s Like poets, . Gardener' sD. 98 
any sense of why they j? << . 100 

th.i: still S in mine cars. . . St S. Stylites 182 
thif Is truth the poet s's, . . Locksley II . 75 
Not even of a gnat that s's. . Day-Dm. . 41 

nclcss! for he did but s ' You might haveivoti '21 
That he s's in his boat on the bay ! Break, break' 8 
he s's of what the world will be . Poet's Song 15 
let the ladies s us, if they will, . Princess, /Vff.233 



' Let some one s to us : lightlicr move 



held it truth, with him who s's 
I s to him that rests below, . 
I do bul s because I must, . 
pipe bul as the linnets s : 
in the songs I love to .1 
Then arc these songs I s of Ihcc 
lay their eggs, and sling and 1, 
we do him wrong To s so wildly: 
And in that solace can I s, . 
voice the richest-toned that s's 
For him she plays, 10 him she s's 
one would s the death of war. 

'lie songs he loved to hear. 
I I he ballad that she s's 
Do I hear her s as of old, 
That s's so delicately clear, . 

the grcai Sir Lancelot s it 
every minstrel s's it differently . 



In Mem. 



iv. iS 



II 




23 


II 




24 


•1 xxxviu. 


7 


It 




II 


II 


xlix. 


II 


II 


Ivi. 


4 


II 


Ixiv. 


■; 


II 


lxxiv. 


7 


II 


XC'.l. 


29 


II 


cu. 


33 


II 


CV1. 


24 


. Maud, Il.iv. 


43 


ii 




44 


. Enid 


. 


332 


. I r.'ien 


23S 


o 




308 



Singing. 
S alone Under the sea, . . The Merman 4 

A mermaid fair, .S alone, . . The Mermaid 3 
heard her s her last song, . L. cfShalott, iv. 26 
.S in her song she died, . n -35 

5 and murmuring in her feastful mirth, Palo/Arti 77 
s clearer than the crested bird D. ofF. Worn. 179 
And we with s cheer'd the way, . In Mem. mas. 5 
She is s an air that is known to me Maud, I. v. 3 
^ alone in the morning of life .11 .6 

5" of men that in battle array .11 .8 

S of Death and of Honour 11 .16 

She is s in the meadow, . n Il.iv. 40 

casement of the Hall, S ; . . Enid . . 329 
half s a coarse song, . . . 11 , 1377 

he is j Hosanna in the highest . Fn. Arden . 498 
5 'and shall it be over the seas . The Islet . 9 
s airy trifles this or that, . . Coquette, i. 2 

single. 
in thee Is nothing sudden, nothing s ; Eleanore 57 
S I grew, like some green plant, D. 0/ F. Worn. 205 
make an onslaught s on a realm . Enid . 1765 

sink. 

And while he s's or swells . . Talking O. 270 
s's the nebulous star we call the Sun, Princess, iv. 1 

s's with all we love below the verge 11 29 

they rise or s Together, . . 11 vii. 241 

staggers blindly ere she s ? . . InMem.xvi. 14 

So much the vital spirits s . . 11 xx. iS 

' Twcre best at once to s to peace, n xxxiv. 13 

When in the down 1 s my head, . 11 Ixvii. 1 

And the great >Eon s's in blood, . 11 csxvi. 16 

v. e scarce can 1 as low : . Varan . 662 
I cannot s So far — far down ' My life is full' etc. 8 

out of sight, and s Past earthquake Lucretius . 152 

sinned. 

I have s. for it was all thro' me . Dora . . 58 

Alas, my child, 1 s for thee.' . Lady Clare 50 

s in grosser lips Beyond all pardon Princess, iv. 232 

that lie s, is not believable : . . Vivien . 610 
if he s. The sin that practice bums n .611 

the sin which thou hast s. . . Guinei'ere . 452 

ensample from fair names, .V also, 11 . 487 

all is past, the sin 1- j. . . . 11 , 539 

in the flesh thou hast s ; 11 . 550 

sinner. 
I am a s viler than you all. . . St S. Stylites 133 
In haunts of hungry s's, . . Will Water. 222 
Thou hast been a s too : . . Vision of Sin 92 
sin seem less, the s seeming great ? Elaine . 1408 

sinning. 
Another s on such height, with one, Elaine . 248 

sift. 
S wine from silver, praising God, Will II 'ater. 1 3 7 

Sir. 

these great Ss Give up their parks Princess, Con. 102 

sire. 

to die For God and for my s .' . D.nfF. H 'cm ?^j 
That we arc wiser than our s's. 'Loz-e thru thy fand'jQ 
1 read - two letters — one her s's. . Princess, iv. 378 
my V, his rough cheek wet with tears n v. 22 

White hands of farewell to my s, . 11 . 223 

' O S,' she said, ' he lives: . 11 vi. 1 ■" 

brake out my s Lifting his grim h':ad n . 354 



374 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

yet-loved .? would make Confusion In Mem.\xxx\x. 18 
What said the happy s ? . . Vivien . 560 

siren. 

sister, S's tho' they be, were such Princess, ii. 181 

Siriits. 
as the fiery S alters hue . . Princess, v. 252 

sister. 

three s's That doat upon To . With Pal. of Art 10 

greet their fairer ss of the East. . Gardener's D. 184 
Stole from her s Sorrow. it . 251 

Sleep, Ellen, folded in thy s's arm, Audley Ct. . 62 
shouts with his ^ at play ! * Break, break,' etc. 6 

1 have a 5 at the foreign court, . Princess, i. 74 
'My j.' ' Comely too . it ii. 99 
* My brother!' 'Well, my s.' . 11 . 171 
O s, Sirens tho' they be, were such 11 . 181 
Here lies a brotlier hy a s slain, . if . 191 
when your ^ came she won the heart n iii. 71 
compass our dear s's' liberties.' . m . 271 
Shall croak thee s, ... m iv. 106 
Lift up your head, sweet s : . . tr v. 61 
clung The shadow of his s, . 11 . 248 
and in our noble s's cause? n . 302 
Old s's of a day gone by, . In Mem. xxix. 13 
Leave thou thy 5 when she prays 11 xxxiii. 5 
A guest, or happy s, sung . . n lxxxviii. 26 
Has not his 5 smiled on me ? . Maud,l.xui. 45 
Among her burnish'd s's of the pool. Enid . 655 
Would call her friend and s, . . Elaine . 861 
'Ah s,' answer'd Lancelot, ti . 927 
' Peace to thee Sweet V ir . 991 
To which the gentle ^ made reply, tr 1067 
l S, farewell for ever,' (rep.) . u * T 45 
must strike against my s's son, . Guinevere . 568 
Nor shun to call me s, . n . 668 
My ss crying ' stay for shame ;' . Sailor Boy . 18 

sister-eyelids. 
The dewy s-e lay Day-Din. . 4 

sisterhood. 
O peaceful S, Receive . . . Guinevere . 139 

sister-world. 
glow Thy silver s-w, . ' Move eastward,' etc. 6 



t l n a i_- . f c Clear-headed 

Low-cowering- shall the sophist s ; j friend,' etc. 10 

The white owl in the belfry s's. . The Owl, i. 7, 14 
s and sing the whole of the day ; . The Merman 9 
In yonder chair I see him s, . Miller's D. 9 

* by that lamp,' I thought, ' she j'j V \\ . 114 

Sometimes I saw you ^ and spin ; . 11 . 121 

1 .? as God holding no form of creed, Pal, of Art 211 
But ^ beside my bed, mother . May Queen,iii.2^ 

you .J between Joy and woe, . Margaret . 63 

to 5, to sleep, to wake, to breathe.' Ed. Morris 40 
S with their wives by fires, . . StS. Siylites 106 

S brooding in the ruins of a life, Love and Duty 12 
Here s*s he shaping wings to fly : . Two Voices 289 
Here s's the Butler with a flask . Day-Din. . 45 
I s (my empty glass reversed), . Will Water. 159 
5" thee down, and have no shame, Vision of Sin 83 
5 beside your feet And glean . Princess, ii. 240 

beneath an emerald plane S's Diotima n iii. 285 
I will go and s beside the doors, . n v. 93 

may .? Upon a king's right hand . tr . 428 

To s a star upon the sparkling spire ; ir vii. 182 
upon the skirts of Time, S side by side n . 272 

I j within a helmless bark . . In Mem. iv. 3 
back return To where the body s's, » xii. 19 

By the hearth the children ^ . u xx. 13 

The Shadow s's and waits for me. 11 xxii. 20 

Alone, alone, to where he s's, . n xxiii. 3 
he was dead, and there he s's, . tr xxxii. 3 
And we shall j at endless feast, . n xlvi. 9 

Her life is lone, he s's apart, . n xcvi. ij 

on her forehead s's a fire : . m cxiii. 5 



POEM. LINE. 

In the little grove where I s . Maud, I. iv. 2,24 

Why 5V he here in his father's chair rr xiii. 23 
She s's by her music and books, . ir xiv. 13 

s's on her shining head . . tr xvi. 17 

your good damsel there who s's apart, Enid 1148 
I see it with joy — You s apart, . n 1170 

He s's unarmed ; I hold a finger up ; tr 1186 

sung nearly where we s\ . . Vivien . 256 

I .y and gather honey ; 11 . 451 

They j with knife in meat i» , 544 

To j once more within his lonely hall, Guinevere 493 
God bless him, he shall .y upon my knees En. Ardeu 197 
■5", listen.' Then he told her . u . 862 

S down again ; mark me . u 877 

They come and ^ by my chair, . Grandmotlier 83 
To s with empty hands at home. . Sailor Boy 16 
See they s, they hide their faces, Boadicea . 51 
care to ^ beside her where she s's — Coquette, iii. 10 
All alone she s's and hears * Home they brought' 3 
5 the best and stateliest of the land? Lucretius ijz 

sit lest. 
That 5 ranging golden hair ; 



In Mem. vi. 26 



an' a s *ere o' my bed. 



si t tin . 



. A". Fanner 9 

sitting. 
charm Pallas and Juno s by : .A Character 15 
A merman bold, 6" alone, . . The Merman 3 
on this hand, and s on this stone ? CEnone . 22*9 
I saw you $ in the house, . May Queen, iii. 30 
j on a crimson scarf unroll'd ; D. ofF. Worn. 126 
5 girt with doubtful light. ' Love thou thy land' 16 
s, served by man and maid, . . The Goose . 21 
sin the deeps Upon the hidden bases M. d' Arthuno$ 
we s, as 1 said, The cock crew . u Ep. 9 

she s with us then, . . . Gardener* sD. 21 

s muffled in dark leaves, . n - ?7 

sstraightWithin the low-wheel'd chaise, I'alkingO. zog 
Push off, and s well in order smite Ulysses . 58 
s, burnish'd without fear The brand. Two Voices 128 
s, lying, languid shapes, . . Vision of Sin 12 
As night to him that 5 on a hill . Princess, iv. 551 
I see thee s crown'd with good, . In Mem. lxxxiii.5 
Peace ^ under her olive . . Maud, 1. i. 33 

5 here so stunn'd and still . . (f II. 1. 2 
on a day, he .s high in hall, . . Enid . . 147 
knew her 5 sad and solitary. . tr , 1131 

Enoch and Annie, 5 hand in hand, En. Ardeu . 69 
5 at her side forgot Her presence, ;i . 381 

lo ! her Enoch 5 on a height . if . 496 

s all alone, his face Would darken, Sea Dreams 12 
I am oftener 5 at home . . Grandmother 90 

They found the mother 5 still ; . The Victim 32 

sitting-room. 
To fit their little streetward s-r . En. Arden . 170 

six hundred. 
Rode the s h . . . Lt. Brigade 3. etpass. 

sixpence. 
Be shot for 5 in a battle-field, . Audley Ct. 40 

size. 
His double chin, his portly s, . Millers D. 2 
This weight and s, this heart and eyes, SirGalahad 71 
often fineness compensated s . Princess, ii. 133 

skate. 
taught me how to s, to row, . . Ed. Morris 19 

skater. 
the ^ on ice that hardly bears him, H endecasy liable s 6 

skeleton. 

the bare-grinning ^ of death ! . Vivien . 696 

Had trodden that crown'd s, . Elaine . 50 

Gaunt as it were the s of himself, 11 760-812 

make the carcase a s, . . Boadicea . 14 

sketch. 

No matter what the 5 might be ; . Ode to Mem. 95 

Buss me, thou rough 5 of man, . Vision of Sin 1S9 

ses rude and faint, . . . Aylmers F. 100 



TE.VXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



- i 



sketcher. POEM. LINE 

I was a s then : See here, . . Ed Morris 4 

sketching. 

s wiih her slender pointed foot . The Brook . 102 

skill. 
ine the sweetness or the s, . In Mem. cix. 17 
with force and s To strive . . 1/ exit. 6 

skiWd 
the hermit, s in all The simples . Elaine . 857 

s to sing of Tune and Eternity, Milton 

skim. 
wings in tears, and s away. . . InMem xlvii. 16 

skimm d. 
fleeter now she s the plains . SirL.andQ.G. 32 

skimming. 
S down to Camelot : . . . L.ofShalott,\. 23 

skin Is.) 
A million wrinkles carved his s; . Pal of Art 133 
they roll a prurient s, . n . 201 

asAi clean and white as privet Walk to the M. 47 
scratch No deeper than the s : . JCtt. Morris 64 
the ulcer, eating thro' my s, . . StS.Stylites 66 
We fret, we fume, would shift our i*, Will Water.225 
s's of wine, and piles of grapes. . Vision of Sin 13 
or woaded winter-clad in s s . Princess, ii 105 
hunt them for the beauty of their s's n v. 149 

Pnckle my s and catch my breath Mat$d,\ xiv. 36 
the s Clung but to crate and basket Vivien . 474 

skin (verb.) 
s's the wild beast after slaying him Enid . . 942 

dart 

Brightening the s's of a long cloud M d Arthur 54 
thro' warp and woof From s to s; Pnuiess, i. 62 
the s and fringe of our fair land, . 11 v. 210 

up m the s's of Time, Sit side by side 11 vii. 271 
more than seen, the s's of France. » Con. 43 

fusing all The s's of self again, . InMem \\\\. 3 
grasps the s's of happy chance, . 11 lxiii. 6 
j'jareloosen'd by the breaking storm Enid . 1308 
gloomy s's Of Celidon the forest ; . Elaine . 291 

thro' the gray s's of a lifting squall En. Arden . 830 

skirt (verb.) 
oft when sundown s's the moor . In Mem. xl. 17 

skull. 

Is but modell'd on a s. . . . Vision of Sin 178 

on the j which thou hast made . InMcm.I'/\>. 8 

and the s lirake from the nape, . Elaine . 50 

from the j the crown Koird . .11 -51 

sky. 
thickest dark did trance the j, . Mariana . iS 
trenched waters run from s to s, . Ode to Mem. 104 
When thou gazest at the situs \ . Adeline . 50 
With a half-glance upon the s . A Character 1 
Sunn'd by those orient skits . . The Poet . 42 
white against the cold-white s, . Dying Swan 12 
comest atween me and the skies, . Oriana . 75 
clothe the wold and meet the s; . L. ofShalott,\. 3 
Heavily the low s mining . . ■■ iv. 4 

(irow golden all about thei; . Eleanore . 101 
siies stoop down in their desire ; . Fatuna . 32 

All naked in a sultry s .37 

s Dipt down to sea and sands. . Pal. of Art 32 
as a flying star shot thro' the s . 11 . 123 

violet, thatcomes beneath the skies. May Queen, i\i. 5 
sleep down from the blissful sites Lotos-E's. . 52 

Hateful is the dark-blue s, . . n .84 

next moon was roll d into the s, Dof.F Worn. 229 
Ruled in the eastern s. . . ■■ 264 

1 seek a w. inner s, . ' You ask me why,' etc. 26 

irerj Hear seed of men ' I. en e thou thy land' 19 

mellow moons and happy skies, . locksley II. 159 

.rls far from other skits— . Day-Dm. . 105 

Vs are the frosty skies, . St Agnes.' 

'The clouds are broken in the j, . Str Galahad 73 
shines the moon in clouded skies, . Beggar Maid tj 
Flutter 'd headlong from the s. . Vision of Sin 45 



roEM. 
Princess, 



In Mem. 



O love, they die in yon rich s. 

When your skies change again : 

A web is wov'n across the s ; 

reach the glow of southern skies 

rooks are blown about the skies ; . 

circles of the bounding s. 

The baby new to earth and s 

roll'd the psalm to wintry skies 

For pastime, dreaming of the s ; . 

sow the s with flying boughs, 

o'er the s The silver)- haze . 

bats went round in fragrant skies . 

Where first we gazed upon the s ; 

Ring out wild bells to the wild s, . 

Of sorrow under human skies: 

change their s To build and brood : 

The brute earth lightens to the s, 

wild voice pealing up to the sunny s Maud, I. v. 

makes you tyrants in your iron skies 11 xviii. 

countercharm of space and hollow s 11 

On a bed of daffodil s ... 11 xxii 

dawn of Edenbright over earth and i, u II 1. 

The delight of early skies; . . •- iv. 

This nurseling of another s . . Tlie Daisy . 

show'd themselves against the s. and sank Enid . 

crests that smoke against the skies, Elaine 



I. INF.. 

i. 3to 

i 2Ct 

i. 6 



xvn. 
xliv. 
Iv. 
lxv. 
lxxi. 
xciv. 



CVll. 

cxiv. 
exxvi. 



'5 

37 

•4* 

10 

8 

2s 
08 
240 
483 

On a Mourner 3 
Wages . 9 
The Window 87 



;rcj; ■» vii 
Enid . 


261 
1686 


J i-'ien 
Elaine 


S°7 
42 


Guiiu-t'crc 


307 
435 
606 



every land beneath the skies, 
or to bask in a summer s : 
Such another beneath the s ? 

skylark. 
some wild s's matin song . . Miller's D. 40 

slacken. 

I saw it and grieved— to s and to cool ; Princess, iv. .'So 

slackcn'd. 
His bow-string' s, languid Love . Eleiinore . 117 

their pace at first, but s soon. . Enid . . 88s 

slag. 

foreground black with stones and s's, Pal. of Art 81 

slam. 
With thine own weapon art thou s, Two Voices 311 
Here lies a brother ly a sister s . Princess, li 1 .1 
s with laughter roll'd the gilded Squire n v. 21 

a great cry, The Prince is s. . 11 vi. to 

make her as the man, Sweet Love were s: * 
huge Earl lay s within his hall. 
I should have s your father, 
after furious battle turfs the s 
each had s his brother at a blow, 
High on a heap of s, 
but many a knight was s ; . 
thro' my sin to slay and to be s ! 
they brought him i wiih ' Home they brought him 1 

slake. 
Let her go I her thirst she s's . Vision of Sin 143 

slander. 
Thee nor carketh care nor s: . A Dirge . 8 
emptiness, gossip and spite And s Prim-ess, it 79 
The civic s and the spite . . In Mem cv. 22 
'Thro s, meanest spawn of Hell . The Letters 33 
f And women's s is the worst) . n . 34 

spake no r, no, nor listcn'd to it . Ded. of Idylls o 
sow'd a s in the common ear . Enid . . 450 

faintly-vcnom'd points Of s, . . Vi-.ien . 2) 

these are s's : never yet Was noble man Elaine 1081 
speak no s, no, nor listen to it, . Guinevere . 469 

slander [verb.) 
the hollow heart they s so ! . . Princess, vi. 270 
ever ready to s and steal : . . Maud, i iv 1, 
Jcnny.to s me, who knew what JcnnyGrandmother^i 

slandrr'd. 
he thought, had s Lcolin to him. . Aylmcr's F. 350 

slandering. 

And she to be coming and s me, . Grandmother 27 

slant. 
S down the snowy swaid, . . St Agnes' Eve 6 



J/~ 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

huddling s in furrow-cloven falls . Princess, vil. 192 
To j the fifth autumnal slope, . IuMem.xxd. 10 

slanted. 
n beam Had s fonvard . . . Princess, ii. 123 
Long lanes of splendour s o'er a press ir iy. 457 

slanting. 
reach'd a meadow s to the North . Gardener sD.ioj 

slate-qnarry. 
I heard them blast The steep s-q, Golden Year 75 

slaughter. 
beat her foes with s from her walls Princess, P?-o. 34, 123 
Ran the land with Roman s, . Boadicea . 84 

Dismal error ! fearful s ! . . The Captain 65 

sla ugh icr-house. 
makes a steaming s-h of Rome. . Lucretius . 84 

slave. 

Of child, and wife, and s; . . Lotos-E's. . 40 

Drink deep, until the habits of the s, Princess, ii. 77 



play the s to gain the tyranny. 
s's at home and fools abroad.' 
or brought her chain'd, a s, , 
slay. 
arise and s thee with my hands, 
lift His axe to s my kin 
s this child, if good need were, 
that except you s me here . . 11 

you could not s Me, nor your prince : 11 
we will ^ him and will have his horse Enid 
would 5 you, and possess your horse it 
' Fly, they will return And 5 you ; v 

1 S not a dead man ! ' . . . n 

s not him who gave you life.' . 11 

to j the folk, and spoil the land.' 
thro' my sin to 5 and to be slain ! 

slaying. 

be he wroth even to J me, 
skins the wild beast after s him, 

sleek (adj.) 
chisell'd features clear and s. 
And, issuing shorn and s, 

sleek (verb J 
To 5 her ruffled peace of mind, 

sleeked. 
smooth* d his chin and s his hair 



11 IV. 1 14 

11 . 500 

11 v. 133 

M. d* Arthur 132 
Talking O. 236 
Princess, ii. 267 

"'■ 4^3 

t. 62 
. 911 
• 9 2 3 
1597 
1627 
1631 
. 136 
. 606 



Guinevere 



Enid 



916 
942 



A Character 30 
'Talking O. 42 



Vivien 



748 



sleeker. 



A Character 11 



Elaine 



30 



Had been the s for it : 

sleep fs. ) 
In 5 she seem'd to walk forlorn e Mariana 
in s I sank In cool soft turf . . Arabian N's. 95 
coiled s's in the central deeps . The Mermaid 24 
breathed in s a lower moan, Mariana in the S. 45 
Each morn my s was broken thro' Miller s D. 39 
Softer than 5 — all things in order Pal. of Art 87 
sweet 5 down from the blissful skies. Lotos-E's. 52 
the poppy hangs in s. , ir .56 

brought Into the gulfs of s. . . D.oj F. Worn. 52 
We drank the Libyan Sun to j, , u . 145 

dissolved the mystery Of folded 5. 11 . 263 

I from j To gather and tell o'er . ti . 275 

Such a s They sleep . . . AT. d' 'Arthur 16 
yet in ^ I seem'd To sail . . m Ep. 16 

in her bosom bore the baby, S. . Gardener sD. 263 
a cry Should break his 5 by night Walk, to the M. 66 



after a little s, I wake : 
But, rolling as in s, 
pointing to his drunken s, 
* O eyes long laid in happy 5 .'* 
*0 happy s, that lightly fled ! * 
'O happy kiss, that woke thy s ! 
So sleeping, so aroused from s 
Yet sleeps a dreamless s to me ; 
A s by kisses undissolved, 
Echo answer'd in her s . 
tinged with wan from lack of y, 



St S.Stylites 111 
. Talking O. 278 
. Locksley H. 81 
. Day-Dm, . i8x 



" - 233 

ir . 262 

ti . 263 

Princess, Pro. 66 
11 ui. 9 



CEnone 


27 


Pal. of Art 


16 


H 


202 


Mav Queen, 


1. 9 


To 7. S. . 


68 


ii . 


69 



M.d'Arthnr 17 

Gardener sD. 170 

)Andley Ct. , 61 

Ed. Morris 



40 



POEM. LINE. 

more than infants in their s. . Princess, \h. 39 

thro' and thro' with Love, a happy s. u . 157 

To iS" I give my powers away ; . In Mem. iv. 1 
Calm on the seas, and silver s, . ii xi. 17 

A late-lost form that s reveals, . n xiii. 2 
sleeps or wears the mask of 5 . 11 xviii. 30 

'They rest,' we said, ' theirs is sweet,' n xxx. 19 
If ..9 and death be truly one, . 11 xlii. 1 

S, Death's twin-brother (rep.) . 11 lxvii. 2 
foolish 5 transfers to thee 11 .16 

S t kinsman thou to death and trance n lxx. 1 

And S must lie down arm'd . Maud, I. i. 41 

death-white curtain meant but s . ti xiv. 37 

thought like a fool of the 5 of death, u . 38 

and held her from her s . . . Elaine . 338 
he roll'd his eyes Yet blank from s, n . 816 

feign'd a 5 until he slept 11 . 838 

Chanerofs, and wine, and exercise, Aylmcr*s F. 44S 
came upon him half arisen from s, 11 . 584 

sank As into s again. 11 . 502 

sleeps— another s than ours. . . Sea Dreams 208 
let your s for this one night be sound : n . 302 

sleep (verb.) 
I 5 forgotten, I wake forlorn.' Mariana in the S. 36 
and the cicala s's. . 
J>'s on his luminous ring.' 
graze and wallow, breed and 5 ; 
I s so sound all night, mother, 
The place of him that s's in peace 
S sweetly, tender heart, in peace 
S, holy spirit, blessed soul, . 
.S till the end, true soul and sweet 
S full of rest from head to feet 
Such a sleep They s — . 
home I went, but could not sfor joy. 
S, Ellen Aubrey, s, and dream {rep. 
to sit, to s, to wake, to breathe.' 
We 5 and wake and s, but all things Golden Year 22 
s and feed, and know not me. . Ulysses 
Thine anguish will not let thee s, . Two Voices 
Go, vexed Spirit, s in trust ; . 
Each baron at the banquet s's, 
She s's : her breathings are not heard 
She ss : on either hand upswells 
She s's, nor dreams, but ever dwe! 
I'd s another hundred years, 
And learn the world, and s again 
To s thro' terms of mighty wars 
Yet s's a dreamless sleep to me ; 
while my pretty one, s's. (rep.) 
.5" and rest, s and rest, . 
Behold me, for I cannot s, . 
S, gentle heavens, before the pro 
S, gentle win^s. as he s's now, 
S's or wears tne mask of sleep 
I s till dusk is dipt in gray . 
Long s's the summer in the seed 
Whatever wisdoms with thee 
how much wisdom s's with thee 

I come once more ; the city ss; . 11 cxviii. 3 
s Encompass'd by his faithful guard, m cxxv. 7 
My dearest brother, Edmund, s's. The Brook . 1S7 
s's in peace : and he, Poor Philip 11 . 190 

Look how shes's— the Fairy Queen, Elaine 1248 

1 Wake him not ; let him s ; . . En A rdett . 232 
it chanced That Annie could not s, 11 . 486 

S's in the plain eggs of the nightingale A ylmer'sF. 103 
6", little birdie, s! will she not s (rep.) Sea Dreams 271 
She s's; let us too, let all evil, s . 11 . 297 

He also s's — another sleep than ours. 11 . 298 

And I shall s the sounder !' . . n . 300 

s beneath his pillar'd light ! . . The Voyage 20 

sleeper. 

watch the s's from the wall. . . Day-Dm. . 44 

Me, that was never a quiet s ? . Maud, II. v. Q s 

Beat, till she woke the s's, . . Enid . ^53 



49 

it . 115 

Day-Dm. . 57 

• 9 3 

• 97 
s n .99 

-' • 173 

11 . 220 

11 . 221 

ii . 262 

Princess, ii. 463 

1- . 464 

J?i Mem. vii. 6 

; tr ix. 14 

i' _• 15 

11 xviii. 10 

ir Ixvi. 12 

m civ. 26 

11 cvii. 16 

11 cxii. 2 

n cxviii. 

, >f cxxv. 

The Brook . 



S over all the heaven, 



sleefieili. 



Elednore 



39 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



sleeting. toem. line. 

you were ,; and I said,/ It's not ^£$~ % 
I haply dream her arm u ; mine. . AuMgC | 

^^m^^fchother^f • £ 

,, though ,. like ahorsc'S hears W^ , ; 44 
so , was the land ' 

^ -, , WmvI . J * W ' ■ StS.Stylites *~ 
Devils pluck d my , ; 



roKM. line 
/« .!/■•>«. xvii. 16 



Lucretius 

. rriucess, vi. 
. Vivien 

. Maud, I. vi. 
, Elaine 



87 

66 



• a red * Broider'd with pearls • •*""«« 
to the prize, who wore the* Of scarlet, ,. 
upon his helm A , of scarlet, . ' 

What of the knight with the red J? 
he wore your s : Would he break faith 
on the maid, Whose * he wore : . 
her scarlet *, TW carved and cut, 
helm, from which her s had gone. 

slept. B 

A sluice with blacke-Al-ters,, -f^n^s.t 
Adown to where the water s Dying Swan 19 

■ rhe tangled vjater-c-mrses * ^Dy»* S J. ? 9 

How say you? we have,, my lords ■»•> " 
elbow-deep m sawdust, *, ■ ■ "'" ;i 

over all things brooding * . . »«™ 

God's finger touch'dhim. and he*, " Ixxxiv. 
landlike J along the deep . ■ 
Of Queen TheodoUnd, where we* i The Daisy 

Oi hardly *, but watch d awake . « 
Woke where he * in the high hall, Enia 
made for the couch and s, . ■ rm*» 
either,, nor knew of other there; 
told her all the charm and s. . » 
gain'd the cell in which he s, . £1""'" 
fit* shtd^m^Ui dreamt G„^«; f : 
Ascending tired, heavily * till morn En. Arden . 
the third, the sickly one, who * . 
she closed the Hook and *: • Dre ams 

s, woke, and went the next . . •?>'« JJreams 

upthc stream In fancy, till I "gam, 

■ ■««««& a " d U '■ ■ Grandmother^ 



S from the bosom of the stars. 

I s by hazel covers ; 

1 slip, 1 s, I gloom, I glance 

S from that quiet heaven ol hers, 

slided. 
tremulous isles of light S, 
s up his knee and sat, . 

sliding. 
Come s out of her sacred glove, 
On to the palace-doorway * . 

slight [adj.) 

We are fools and * . ■ ' „ U. 6 

How dimly character d and, . 

To look at her with *, and say Mariana in the S. C6 



85 
1239 



Ed. Cray . 19 



Dora 



118 



,/;^/'' [verb, 
yet you dared To s it. . . 
hardness, and to J His mother: . _ 
will learn to s His father S memory ■ • ; | 
He seems to J her simple heart. . in. nem « 
A sone that *', the coming care, . " ■ 7c, 

Why , your King And lose the quest *««»• 6 5* 
NYheiefore, me not wholly . llendecasyllabics «S 

slight-natured. .. 

If she be small, *-», nuserable, . Princess, vu. 249 

slime. . 

tare each otner in their,, . • /" Mem. lv ' 2 3 

stinted 

snakelike i his victim ere he gorged ; SeaDreau.s 189 

slink. 

As boys that * From ferule . 

,/i> (s.) 

moon-lit ,', of silver cloud . 

show you*"* of all that grows 



Princess, v. 33 



CEnone 
A inphion 



214 
83 



show you *'* 01 ail tun B r«»= . - •;,•-. -, 

great heart, and *"* in sensual mire, i nnce.s, v. 191 



,/;>(vcrb., 

I Could, its bark and walk . . Talking O. .88 

Sometimes I let a sunbeam ,, . . •■ A 

to , away, To-day, to-morrow, soon . PruKtSS,^ , 



fain had s at his side. 

ifrtv. 

,him with your noble birth 
tho' I , thee with my hand . 
Sooth his sons: . _ ; 
my brother $ him for it. 
stunn'd the twain Or 1 them, 

slid. 
Night , down one long stream 
Another ,, a sunny fleck, 
.. from pillar unto pillar, • 
alien answer * betwixt : 
Tie snake of gold s from he. hair. Vtvun 
The.e from h£ charger down he s, Elaine 

down dark tides the glory **, /.„„,,..< , v 2i (, 

as the waterlUy starts and it ■ ' "" "• ' • \ ) 
Now *"* the silent meteor on, 



s at once all-fragrant into one 
5', into the bosom of the lake : 

^thir^jjfeanddLath^^i 
Or , between the ridges . . 1 nc uru 
1 ,, I slide, I gloom, I glance, . » 

not let his name S from my lips . Ema 
by and by S's into golden cloud. . 
, From the long shore-chft S windy 



55 

172 

"73 

16 

28 

. 440 

• 730 
1012 



L.C. V.deVcrctf 
. Loiksley H. 56 
. Princess, ii. 268 

11 vi. 92 
'. Enid . . 94i 
1766 



Gardener's D. 262 

. Talking O. . 223 

. Godiva . 49 

Ttno Voices 226 

737 

509 



moon comes, Time s's away, 

slipper 

fit to wear Your , for a glove. 

slippery. 
that it was too , to be held, . 
slipping 
three times, from the outer edge 
The, thro' from state to 51 
Went s down horrible pre 1 
S o'er their shadows on the -and, 
.V back upon the golden "ays 
The silent water , from the lulls, 
slipt. 



The Window 163 



Enid 



Elaine 



1471 



?13 



The Epic . . 1 
Two Voices 35* 
Enid . »" 8 
.320 
Guinevere . 377 

En Arden. 034 



nisgone^thousandMu'lihave^W^.S. 

The snake* under a spray, . • ':',;'%. „, 
I, out: but •whither will you . Princess, * 
s\ round and in the dark in- ■ ■ fS 

„.fragrant* the heavy dews 
raiser self , from her like a robe, 

hearing her own name had . awa) ) /•»«' • ■ 5«7 
our fortune i from suu to bhadc 7- V 



573 



CONCORDANCE TO 



NE. 

273 1 
738i 

214 ; 
654 ; 
774 i 
826 ! 
75 ! 
106 ! 



11 


112 


D ofF. Worn. 


16 


Audley Ct. 


IQ 


To E L. . 


20 


Vision of Sin 


2iq 


Princess, Pro 


60 


it Vll. 


■23 


it Con. 


40 


11 


Q9 


InMem.xxW. 


10 


tt Ixiii. 


14 


]Mtiud,\.xyii\ 


IQ 


Enid . 1 


6*) 


The Window 


P 


it 


16 



POEM. 

like a silver shadow .? away . . Vivien 

the braid J> and uncoil'd itself, 

s and fell into some pool . . Elaine 

lost the hern we 5 him at, 

her suit allow'd, she s away : 

S like water to the floor 

5 aside, and like a wounded life . En. Arden . 

by mischance he 5 and fell : . 

half-another year had 5 away. 

s across the summer of the world, ir . 527 

.S" into ashes and was found no more. AylmersF. 6 

.5" o'er those lazy limits . . 11 495 

out I J Into a land all sun . . Sea Dreams 98 

sloe-tree. 
Poussetting with a s-t : . . Amphion . 44 

slope (s.) 
on the s, an absent fool . . Miller's D. 62 

Upon the freshly-fiower'd s. 
The downward 5 to death, 
on a s of orchard, Francis laid 
many a ^ was rich in bloom . 
At last I heard a voice upon the .y 
from butts of water on the s, 
the s of sea from verge to shore . 
we climb'd The 5 to Vivian-place . 
From s to s thro' distant ferns 
To slant the fifth autumnal ^ 
Becomes on Fortune's crowning 5 
Upon a pastoral 5 as fair, 
half way down the s to Hell, 
and 1 stand on the 5 of the hill 
Follow them down the si 

slope (verb.) 

swimming vapour .?'.? athwart the glen CEnone . 3 

the summits $ Beyond the furthest Two Voices 184 

The monstrous ledges there to s, . Princess, vii. 197 

5" thro' darkness up to God, . . In Mem, liv. 16 

Ass's 3. wild brook o'er a little stone Enid . . 77 

sloped. 

the mountain-shade S downward . CEnone . 21 

up we came to where the river s . Princess, Hi. 273 

arms on which the standing muscle s, Enid . . 76 

sloping. 
Was s toward his western bower . Mariana . 80 
The s of the moon-lit sward . Arabian N's. 27 

great Orion ^ slowly to the West. . Locksley H. 8 
s down to make Arms for his chair Elaine . 436 

sloth, 
stagnates in the weeds of s; . . InMejn. xxvii. 11 

slough. 

In filthy s's they roll a prurient skin Pal. of Art 201 
one 5 and crust of sin, . . . SiS. Stylites 2 
s's That swallow common sense, . Princess, v. 432 
mountain there has cast his cloudy s, Lucretius . 177 

slow. 
So full, so deep, so s, Elednore . 95 

Not swift nor ^ to change, Love thou thy land ',' etc 31 
my heart so s To feel it ! . . Love and Duty 34 

slow-developed. 
A s-d strength awaits ' Love thou thy land* etc. 57 

slow-dropping. 
S-d veils of thinnest lawn . . Lotos-E's. . 11 

slow-flaming. 
Would seem -s^crim-son fires . Pal. of Art 50 

slowly-dying. 
winks behind a s-d fire. . . Locksley H. 136 

Ring out a s-d cause, . . . In A/em. cv. 13 

slozvly-pa infu I. 
More s-p to subdue this home Of bin, SiS. Stylites 56 

slow-worm 
The s-iu creeps, and the thin weasel Aylmers F. 852 

sludge. 
tends her bristle grunters in thee.*' Princess, v. 26 



sluice. 
A ^ with blacken'd waters slept, 

sluiced. 
canal From the main river s, 

slumber (s.) 
Into dreamful S lull'd. . 
My heart a charmed s keeps, 
steep our brows in s's holy balm ; 
5 is more sweet than toil 
Betwixt the 5 of the poles 
5 in which all spleenful folly . 
As thro' the s of the globe 

slumber (verb. 
And the kindly earth shall s, 
In some long trance should s on • 

slumber d. 
the garden-bowers and grots S : 



POEM. LINE. 

. Mariana . 38 
. A rabian N's. 26 



Elednore 
Lotos-E's. 



• 30 
. 128 

. 66 

InMem.xcvin. 18 
Maud, I. iii. 2 
The Voyage 23 

Locksley H. 130 
InMem.xiil. 4 

A rabian N*s. 79 



While Enoch emotionless and pale, En. Arden. 907 
L. ofShalott,W\. 15 



The Owl, i. 
hi Mem. cxviii. 



slung. 
from his blazon 'd baldric 5 

slur. 
seem'd to 5 With garrulous ease . Princess, i. . 161 
5 him, saying all his force Is melted Enid . . 106 

slurring. 
And $ the days gone by, . . Maud, I. i. 33 

smacking. 
and 5 of the time ; . . . Princess,Pro. 89 

small. 
o'er it many, round and s . . Mariana . 39 
heads were less: Some men's weres; Princess, ii. 132 
If she be s, slight-natured . . n vii. 249 

the village, and looks how quietand s! Maud,l. iv. 7 
S, but a work divine ... n II. ii. 23 

grieving that their greatest are so s, Vivien . 682 
my words, the words of one so s, . Guinevere . 1S3 
gams were dock'd, however ,s ; S 

were his gains, .... Sea Dreams 8 
you so s, and you so fair (rep ) . The Window 72 

sjnell (s.) 
moist rich softhe rotting leaves 'A spirit haunts' 17 
The 5 of violets, hidden in the green D. ofF. Worn 77 
the gentle shower, the s of dying leaves, En.Arden 612 

smell (verb, ) 
rarely s\s the new mown hay, 
I s the meadow in the street 

smelling. 
S of musk and of insolence . 

smelt. 
Hesperian gold, That 5 ambrosially CEnone . 66 
S of the coming summer, . . Gardener s D. 77 
a dusky loaf that e of home, . Audley Ct. . 21 

smile (s.) 
wealthy s's: but who may know 

Whether e or frown be fleeter (rep. )Madeline . 11 
s and frown are not aloof . . n 

In a golden-netted s; ... u 

Wherefore those faint s's of thine, Adeline 3 
Hence that look and 5 of thine . u 

Hollow 5 and frozen sneer . . Poet's Mind 
Comes out thy deep ambrosial s . Elednore 
The slow wise s that, round about Miller's D. 
a subtle 5 in her mild eyes . . CEnone 
She, flashing forth a haughty s, D. ofF. Worn. 129 
The very 5 before you speak, . Margaret . 14 

slight Sir Robert with his watery s Ed. Morris . 128 
With tears and s's from heaven again Sir L andQ.G.2 
s that like a wrinkling wind . . Princess, i. 114 
paused, and added with a haughtier e m iii. 209 
from crooked lips a haggard s. . tr iv. 345 

j, that looked A stroke of cruel sunshine 11 . 503 

common light of -s's at our disguise if v, 261 

doubtful 5 dwelt like a clouded moon tr vi. 253 
' Ay so,' said Ida with a bitter s, . ir . 296 

blush and s, a medicine in themselves 11 vii. 47 



. Maud, I. vi. 45 



19 
41 
-38 
63 

10 

74 

5 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



379 



POEM. LINE. 

Is matter for a flying* . _ . In Mem. lxi. 12 

In glance and s, and clasp and kiss » lxxxiii. 7 
1 know it and smile a hard-set s . Maud, I. iv. 20 
touch'd my hand with a s so sweet ir vi. 12 

And i as sunny as cold o -24 

And her * were all that I dream'd »i 37, 93 

But a s could make it sweet. . n 39, 95 

With a glassy s his brutal scorn— 11 . 49 

Perhaps the s and tender tone n . 63 

The sun look'd out with a s . . 11 ix. 3 

(so rare the s's Of sunlight . . The Daisy . 53 
turn thy wheel with s or frown ; . Enid . . 350 
With frequent s and nod departing 11 . . 515 
slight and sprightly talk, And vivid s s, Vivien . 26 
when the living i Died from his lips, Elaine , 322 

token on his helmet, with a s . 11 . 373 

slow s's, and golden eloquence . m . 646 

silent s's of slow disparagement : . Guinevere . 15 
Heart-hiding s, and gray persistent eye; » . 64 

half-allowing s's for all the world, Ay Inter's F. 120 
half forgot his lazy s Of patron . 11 . 197 

a heaved shoulder and a saucy s, . 11 . 466 

Never one kindly s, one kindly word : 11 . 564 

with the fat affectionate 5 . . Sea Dreams 151 
grant mine asking with a s, . Titlwnus . 16 

With one s of still defiance . . Tlie Captain 59 
ghost of passion that no s's restore Coattette, ii. 1 1 

smile fverb.l 
5 at the claims of long descent L. C. V.de Vere 52 
s in secret, looking over wasted lands Lotos-E's 159 
But they s, they find a music . " . 162 

Shall j away my maiden blame . D.c/F. Worn. 214 
He will not j — not speak to me . To J. S. . 21 
I know it, and s a hard-set smile . Maud, I. iv. 20 
The very graves appear'd to s, . The Letters 45 
S and we s, the lords of many lands : Enid . 353 
Frownand we s, the lords of our own hands." . 354 
To make her j, her golden ankle-bells. Vivien. 429 
smiling us a Master s's at one . 11 . 512 

you yourself will s at your own self. Elaine . 947 
Did they s on him. . . . The Captain 56 

with how great ease Nature can s, Lucretius . 174 

smiled 
He s, and opening out his milk-white palm CF.nnnefn 
And somewhat grimly s. . . I'al 0/ Art 136 
At me you s, but unbeguilcd L C. V. de Vere 5 
with dead lips s at the twilight plain, D.o/F. Wom.62 
And now and then he gravely s. . Two Voices 414 
He look'd upon my crown and s ; hi Mem. lxviii. 10 
Has not his sister s on me ? . . Maud, I. xiii. 43 
She faintly s, she hardly moved : . The Letters 14 
sigh'd and s the hoary-headed Earl, Enid . . 307 
the mother s, but half in tears, •■ 823 

like a stormy sunlight s Gciaint . 11 . 1329 

till he sadly s : l To what request Vivien . 112 
.S' at each other, while the Queen Elaine . 735 

and lay as tho' she s .11 1155 

Full sharply smote his knees, and s Guinevere . 48 
that which pleased him, for he s. . En. A rden . 758 

smiler. 
Thou faint s, Adeline ? . . .Adeline . 48 

smilest. 
Thou that faintly s still, . . Adeline . 15 
. but thou dost not speak, . Oriana . 68 
And s, knowing all is well. . In Mem, exxvi. 20 

sm;. ■ 

S, never speaks; .... Lilian 19 

.S, frowning, evermore . . . Madeline . 8 
t folded over thought, s asleep, Eleiinore 84 

babe in arm. . . . I'al. of Art 96 

Eustace turn'd, and 1 said to me . Card. n.r'sD. 96 

And, s, put the question by. . Pay-Pm . 164 

one said s ' l'rctty were the light J'rmcess,Pro.iy> 

Took both his hands, and j faintly o ii. 284 

While Psyche watch d them, s, . <• . 344 

but s ' Not for thee,' she sal. I, ,, iv, 103 

giavcly s, lifted her from horse, . Enid . 1731 



POEM. LINE. 

Vivien answer'd s saucily . . Vivien 1 1 

Vivien answer'd s mournfully ; . n 160, 288 

Vivien answer'd s as in wrath. . 11 . 376 

j as a Master smiles at one r, . 5 i 2 

while the king Would listen s. . Elaine . 117 

lily maid of Astolat Lay s, . . „ 1236 

smirk'd. 
The parson s and nodded. . . The Goose . : 1 

stmt, 
s with freer light shall slowly melt Golden Year 33 

smite. 
S, shrink not, spare not. . . St S.Stylites 173 
his footsteps s the threshold stairs 11 

s The sounding furrows ; . . Ulysses . 53 
Tho' one should s him on the cheek Two Voices 251 
not shun to * me in worse way, . Guinevere . 4jj 

smitten. 
I am so deeply s thro' the helm M.d' Arthur 25,41 
i by the dusty sloping beam, . Enid . . 262 

mists and s by the lights, . . Guinevere . 5 > 1 

stnock'd. 
Tho' s, or furr'd and purpled, . Princess, iv. 22S 

smotle. 
Looak W quoloty s's . . . X. Farmer 53 

smoke (s.) 
And like a downward i . . Lotos-E's 8, 10 

Beneath its drift of * ; . . . Talking O. 6 
And all the war is roll'd in s.' . Two I 'oices 156 
A j go up thro' which I loom to her Princess, v. 124 
Athwart the s of burning weeds . 11 vii. 337 

Streets were black with s and frost, fnMem. lxviii. 3 
Wrapt in drifts of lurid s . . Maud, II. iv. 66 
far from noise and j of town, To F. 1). Maurice 1 j 
thro' the s. The blight of low desires Ay Inter' sF. 672 
like the s in a hurricane whirl'd . Bo&aicea . 5 > 

smoke ( verb. } 
long way s beneath him in his fear : Enid . 1381 

stormy crests that s against the skies, Elaine . 4 , 

smooth*. 

s my pillow, mix the foaming draught Princess,\\. 233 

smooth'd. 
He s his chin and slcek'd his hair . A Character ii 
Roll'd on each other, rounded, s . D.o/F. Wont. 51 
s a petted peacock down . . Princess, : 
turn'd, and s The glossy shoulder, Elaine . 346 

smooth-siua rded. 
Naked they came to that s-s bower GLnone . 93 

smote. 
morning s The streaks of virgin snow CEnone . 54 
he 5 His palms together . M.d'Art!.. 

wither'd moon .S by the fresh beam " . 214 

[ s them with the cross, . . St S.Stylites 170 
s on all the chords with might ; . Lockslcy II. 33 
.V the chord of Self, ... 11 -34 

! >ry J him on the face.' . Two Voices 225 
r Her ufe into the liquor. . . Will Water, m 
as she s me with the light of eyes Princess, i 
s her harp, and sang. ... 11 iv. 20 

I j him on the breast : . . . 11 . 146 

tougher, heavier, stronger, he that s 11 v. 525 

heavily-galloping hoof .Von her ear. Enid . J297 

However lightly, j her on the cheek >> . 15(6 

whom he s, he overthrew. . . Elaine . 404 
Thereon she s her hand : . . " 

s bis thigh and mock'd ; . " ■ ' ' 1 

they flash'd, and s the stream. . •> 1228 

Full sharply s his knees, ami smiled Guinevere . 48 
6" him, as having kept aloof . . En, Arden . 273 

smoulder. 

light cloud t'i on the summer crag Ed tforris 147 

betwixt these two Division *"* . Princess, iii. 63 

Where s their dead despots . . » v. 370 

smonlder'd. 
1 on the refluent estuary ; . . Boddicta . a3 



;So 



CONCORDANCE TO 



snake. toem. line. 

house the cold crown'd s; ! . . CEnone . 36 

The s slipt under a spray, . . Poet's Song 10 

playing now A twisted s, . . Princess, Pro. 62 

at these words the s, My secret . n iii. 27 

look'd A knot, beneath, of s's . Enid . . 325 

about his neck, Clung like a s, . Vivien . 91 

The j of gold slid from her hair, 11 * 737 

snakelike, 

s slimed his victim ere he gorged ; Sea Dreams 189 

snap. 

S The three-decker's oaken . . Maud, II. ii. 26 

chord too sharply lest it s ' . . Ay liner's F. 469 

snapt. 

A touch, a kiss ! the charm was s . Day-Dm. . 133 

*S in the rushing of the river-rain . Vivien . 807 

Pierced thro' his side, and there s t Elaine . 489 

snare (s.) 

I saw the s, and I retired . L. C. V. de Vere 6 
Rapt inhersong, andcarelessof thes. Princess,!. 218 

thro' wordy s's to track Suggestion InMem xciv. 31 

She meant to weave me a s . . Maud, I, vi. 25 

He laid a cruel s in a pit . . 11 II. v. 84 

snare (verb.) 

s^s them by the score . . . Princess, v. 156 

s him in the white ravine, . . tr vii. 190 

rail on me To s the next, . . Vivien . 660 

5 her royal fancy with a boon . Elaine . 72 

coarse websto s her purity, . . Aylmer's F. 780 

snared. 

And. 1 !' the squirrel of the glen? . Princess, ii. 1231 

in the garden 5 Picus and Faunus, Lucretius . 181 

snarling, 

s at each other's heels. . . . Locksley H. 106 

And little King Charley s . . Maud, I. xii. 30 

snatch (s.) 

chanted ses of mysterious song . Elaine *397 

snatch (verb.) 

5 me from him as by violence ; . Enid . 1206 

snatch' d. 

s her eyes at once from mine . The Brook . ior 

S thro' the perilous passes of his life Aylmers F. 209 



. Poefs Mind 10 
. Aylmer's F. 562 

. The Voyage 78 



sneer. 
Hollow smile and frozen s 
crost his child without a s ; . 
sneer' d. 
* A ship of fools ' he s and wept 

sneeze. 
S out a full God-bless-you . . Ed. Morris 80 

snipe. 
swamp, where hums the dropping s, On a Mourner 9 

snow. 
before his burning eyes Melted like s. The Poet 40 
Shone out their crowning ss % . Dying Swan 13 
dun wolds are ribb'd with s, . Oriana . 5 

smote The streaks of virgin J . CEnone . 55 
And highest, s and fire. . . Pal. of Art 84 

I wish the s would melt . , May Queen, ii. 15 
Three silent pinnacles of aged s . Lotos-E's. . 16 
knee-deep lies the winter s, D. of the O. Year 1 
over the £ I heard just now . 11 37 

falls not hail, or rain, or any s, . JIT. d' Arthur 260 
heat, hail, damp, and sleet, and 5 StS. Stylites 16 
with rain or hail, or fire or s ; . Locksley H. 193 
In tufts of rosy-tinted s ; . . Two Voices 60 
!Deep on the convent-roof the ss . St Agnes* Eve 1 
The streets are dumb with 5 . Sir Galahad 52 

From flower to flower, from s to s InMem. xxii. 4 
The silent spossess'd the earth , u lxxvii. 3 
And silent under other s's : . .11 civ. 6 

Ring, happy bells, across the s: . tr cv. 6 

fades the last long streak of s, . rr cxiv. 1 
star of morn Parts from a bank of s, Enid . . 735 
falls the least white star of s, . Lucretius . 107 

like the flakes In a fall of s, . . n . 167 



snow-COld. POEM. LINE. 

Over her s-c breast and angry cheek CEnone . 140 

Snowdon. 
we that day had been Up S ; . Golden Year 4 

snowdrop. 
to live till the s's come again : . May Queen, ii. 14 
To die before the 5 came, . . 11 iii. 4 

Or this first s of the year . . St Agnes' Eve 11 
white Of the first s's inner leaves ; Princess, v. 189 

snowed. 
A hundred winters s upon his breast, /W. of Art 139 
Tore the king's letter, s it down, . Princess, i. 60 

snow-limbed. 
the s-l Eve from whom she came. Maud, I. xviii. 28 

snowshoe. 
Claymore and s, toys in lava, . Princess, Pro. 18 

snow-white. 
The snowy peak and s-w cataract CEnone • 207 

snowy -ba?ided. 
The s-b, dilettante, . . . Maud, I. viii. 10 

soak'd. 
Tho' 5 and saturate, out and out, Will Water. 87 

sob (s.) 
all at once the old man burst in /.? ; Dora . . 155 
shaken with her s's, Melissa knelt ; Princess, iv. 270 
dark crowd moves, and there are .s\s Ode on Well. 268 
false voice made way broken with s's Vivien . 706 
And bluster into stormy s's . . Elaine 1061 

sob (verb.) 
hear him s and sigh In the walks' A spirit haunts' 5 
to clamour, mourn and s, . . StS. Stylites 6 

sobbed. 
for three hours he s o'er William's child Dora . 163 
And s, and you s with it . . Princess, ii. 254 

sobbing. 
See, there is one of us s, . . Maud, II. v. 30 

sober-suited, 
s-s Freedom chose . * You ask me why,' etc. 6 

Socratic. 
Or threaded some S dream ; In Mem. lxxxviii. 36 

sod. 
with the dull earth's mouldering s, Pal. of Art 261 
To rest beneath the clover s, . In Mem. x\ 13 

The blackness round the tombing s On a Mourner 27 

sofa. 
broider'd s's on each side : . . Arabian N's. 19 

soft. 
S are the moss-beds under the sea The Merman 39 
that are forked, and horned, and s The Mermaid 53 

soften. 
And s as if to a girl, . . . Maud, I. x. 16 

softened. 
and the brazen fool Was s . . In Mem. cix. 12 

softening. 
S thro' all the gentle attributes . Ay Inzer's F. 730 

softer. 
S than sleep— all things in order . Pal. of Art 87 
sail hershape And rounder seem'd: Princess, vii. 121 

softly-shadow d. 
Glows forth each s-s arm . . Day-Din. . Bg 

soil. 
Fast-rooted in the fruitful s. . . Lotos-E's . 83 
race of men that cleave the s, . tr . 165 

numbers forty cubits from the s. . StS. Stylites 90 
Upon my proper patch of s . . Amphiou . 99 
song, the true growth of your s, . Princess, iv. 132 
Has risen and cleft the s, it vi. 19 

The s, left barren, scarce had grown In Mem. Iii. 7 

soiled. 

When, s with noble dust, he hears Two Voices 152 



TEIWYSON'S WORK'S. 



3Sr 



POEM. LINE. 

As these white robes are j and dark St Agnes' Eve 13 
And s with all ignoble use . . In Mem. ex. 24 

soiling, 
s another, Annie, will never make Crnndmol/ier 36 

so i litre. 
fearing rust or s fashioned for it . Elaine . 7 

'seise. 

Noaks wur 'ang'd for it oop at 's — IV. Farmer . 36 

solace (s.) 

Vain s .' Memory standing near . To J. S. . 53 

Nay, but Nature brings thee s ; . Locksley H. 87 

A doubtful gleam of j lives . InMem. xxxviii. 8 

And in that s can 1 sing, . 11 lxiv. 5 

solace (verb.) 
A little hint to s woe, . . . Two Voices 433 

solaced. 
Whom Averill 5 as he might . . Aylmer's F. 343 

sold. 
Himself unto himself he s: . . A Character 26 
he's abroad : the place is to be s Walk, to the M. 1 1 
Nor s his heart to idle moans, . Two Voices 221 
are s to the poor for bread, . . Maud, 1. i. 39 
the four-year-old I J the Squire.' . The Brook . 137 
never s the truth to serve the hour Ode on Well. 179 
beingjand-rhadbought them bread: Enid . . 641 
j her wares for less Than what she 

gave in buying what she s : . En. Ardeti . 254 
The horse he drove, the boat he s, 11 . 610 

our Caucasians let themselves be 5. Aylmer's F. 349 
She that gave you's bought and s The Ringlet 33 
6' him unto shame. . . . The Captain 60 

soldier. 
The Roman $ found Me lying dead, D.o/F. Worn. 161 
nor sliunn'd a s's death . . . Princess, Pro. 38 
Pitiful sight, wrapp'd in a s's cloak ir v. 53 

The s f No : What dares not Ida 

do that she should prize The s ?. 11 . 165 

not shunn'd the death, No, not the s's •> . 171 

one loves the s, one The silken priest tr .375 

king is scared, the * will not fight m Con. 60 

with music, with s and with priest, Ode on Well. 8r 
To thee the greatest f comes ; . 11 .88 

So great a 5 taught us there tr . 131 

keep the s firm, the statesman pure » . 222 

Not tho' the s knew . . . Lt. Brigade 11 
s'i wont to hear His voice in battle, Enid . 1023 

like s's may not quit the post . Eucretiits . 148 

soldier-city. 
led Threading the s-c, . . . Princess, v. 7 

Soldier-laddie. 
violin Struck up with S-l, . . Princess, Pro. 86 

soldierlike. 
anger-charm'd from sorrow, s, . Aylmer's F. 728 

soldierly. 
His own, tho' keen and bold and s, Aylmer's F. 192 

soldier-priest. 
A latter Luther, and zs-p . . To J. M. K. 2 

sole. 
From scalp to J one slough and crust StS. Stylites 2 

solecism. 
Chimeras, crotchets, Christmas s's Princess, Pro.iqq 

solemn. 
a hero lies beneath, Grave, s !' . Princess, Pro. 208 
for the comic touches in them ■■ Con. 6S 
And hold it s to the past. . . In Mem. civ. 16 

solemnity. 
watching here At this, our great s. Ode on Well. 244 

solid-set. 
Lut like a statue s-s. . . . In Mem. Con. 15 

solitary. 
knew her sitting sad and s. . . Enid . 1131 



POEM. LINE. 

Their voices make me feel so s.' . Eh. Arden . 394 

the long-hair' d long-bearded s, . 11 . 638 

solitude. 

Deep dread and loathing of her s Pal. 0/ Art 229 

You move not in such s's, . . Margaret . 45 

drove him into wastes and s's . Elaine . 252 

| The rosy idol of her j'j, . . En. A rden . 90 

1 Surely the man had died of s. . 11 . 622 

My grief and s have broken me : . it . 858 

Solomon. 
That Sheba came to ask of S.' . Princess, ii. 325 
6' may come to Sheba yet 11 . 323 

solstice. 
A league ofstreet in summer* down, Princess, iii. 112 

soluble. 

More j is this knot By gentleness Princess, v. 129 

solve. 

The doubt would rest, I date not*. Two Voices 313 

somebody, 

s, surely, some kind heart will come Maud, II. v. 102 

S said that she'd say no, (rep.) . The Window 02 
s knows that she'll say ay. . ■■ .93 

something, 

s which posscss'd The darkness . Arabian X's 71 

And then did s speak to me — . MayQueen, iii 34 

Blackbird ! sing me s well, . The Blackbird t 
S to love He lends us : . . . 'To J. S. .13 
Vet s I did wish to say : 11 .60 
.J so said 'twas nothing . . 'Die Epic . 31 
Or this or s like to this he spoke. Ed. Morris 41 
ijarr'd; Whether he spoke too . 11 .72 
there seem'd A touch of s false, . 11 .74 
s ere the end, Some work of noble Ulysses . 51 
men the workers, ever reaping s . Locksley II. 117 

j such strange war with s good . Two Voices 302 
Moreover, s is or seems, . . 11 . 379 

I Of j felt, like s here ; (rep.) 11 . 382 

] He trusts to light on s fair, . . Day-Dm. . 120 
I I had hope, by s rare, . . . Will Water. 165 
Ah, were I s great I . . . Princess, Pro. 131 
chiefly you were born for s great. 11 iv. 2S8 

there is s in it as you say : . n v. 202 

J may be done— 1 know not what .. . 218 

Swear by St s— I forget her name — 11 . 283 

to think I might be s to thee, . 11 vi. 184 

s wild within her breast, . . ■■ vii. 222 
S it is which thou hast lost, . . In Mem. iv. 9 
Tis well; 'tis' s j we may stand . n xviii. 1 
thou art turn'd to * strange, . 11 xl. 5 

grown To s greater than before ; . 11 Con. 20 

none of us thought of a s beyond . Maud, I. xix. ij 
S far advanced in State, . . Ode on Well, 275 
swiftly made at her A ghastly s, . Guinevere . 79 
with s happier than myself. . . En. Arden . 4.2 
.S' divine to warn them of their foes: Sea D' earns 69 
phantom husks of * foully done, . Lucretius . 160 
seem no more a s to himself, . 11 . 250 

something-pot tie-bodied. 
in a court He saw A s-p-b boy . Will Water. 131 

somt~vhat. 
There's s in this world amiss . Miller's D. 19 

There's s flows to us in life , . >< .21 

Ha ! ha ! They think that I am s. StS. Stylites 1 .-4 
Felt you were s, yea and by your Enid . . 430 

son. 
mythic Uther's deeply wounded s Pal. 0/ Art 10% 
Our s's inherit us : our looks are 
s and heir doth rid.; post-haste P. of the O. ) 

William waOiiM-, And she hixliiccc. Dora . . * 

' My >, I married late . . . 11 . .9 

■peak with him that was ray s, .11, . 4t 

1 have kill'd my s. I have kill dhim ■■ . ■ i$6 
I'm I loved iiim my dear r . ■• . . 157 

Francis Hale, 1 s . AtldleyCi. . -% 

( ) niyi'j.niyi'i, I , Sun. , m , if the pillar,.S7 S. StylitSSXyi 

my s, mine own Telemacbus, . Ulysses . 3- 



382 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

His s's grow up that bear his name, Two Voices 256 

On the first-born of her s's. . . Vision of Sin 146 

visiting the s, — the sAWalter too, — Princess, Pro. 7 

Slew both his ss : tr ii. 268 

that has a s And sees him err : 

here he keeps me hostage for his s.' 

* You have our 5 ; touch not a hair 

unless you send us back Our;, 

did but keep you surety for our s, 

took the king His three broad s's ; 

dabbled with the blood Of his own s, 

half fool'd to let you tend our s, . 

O Sire, Grant me your s, to nurse 

s's of men, and barbarous laws 

The Tory member's elder s . 

Strong S of God, immortal love, I> 

Who pledgest now thy gallant s, . 

Dear as the mother to the s t 

All knowledge that the 5*5 of flesh 

tho' their 5V were none of these, . 

Shaking her head at her $ and sighing Maud, I.xix.24 

whom the strong 5'; of the world despise ; The Brook 3 i 

on the things Of his dead s . . The Letters 24 I 

thanks to the Giver, England, for thy 5 Ode o?i Well. $5 

this is England's greatest s, . tr . 95 

dares foreshadow for an only 5 . Ded. of Idylls 28 



111. 
iv. 

. 


243 
386 
388 




397 


v. 


24 


vi. 


259 
89 




257 




279 


Vll- 21 

Con. 

m.Pro. 


9-40 

5° 
1 


VI. 


10 


IX. 


19 


Ixxxiv. 


27 


lxxxix. 


17 



England dreaming of his s 

love of all Thy s's encompass Thee, 11 

* Whither, fair s?' to whom Geraint Enid , 

good house, tho* ruin'd, O my S, . ir 

wroth or grieved At your new s, . ir 

1 Envy calls you Devil's s, . . Vivien 

S's of kings loving in pupillage . n 

two strong s's, Sir Torre and Sir Lavaine, Elaine 174 

Hurt in his first tilt was my s, 

1 my s's and little daughter fled 

furthermore Our s is with him ; 

s's born to the glory of thy name 

fair, my child, As a king's s, 

call'd him the false s of Girlois , Guinevere 

I must strike against my sister's s. 11 

Philip Ray the miller's only s . En. Arden 

Bore him another s, a sickly one . ?? 

Her own s Was silent, ... tr 

Her s, who stood beside her. . ir 

like her mother, and the boy, my s/ tr 

tell my s that I died blessing him. it . 886 

s's of men Daughters of God ; . Ay Inzer's P. 44 

loved you more as s than brother, 11 . 351 

Bornof a village girl, carpenter's s, ?t . 668 

some, S's of the glebe, with other frownsir . 723 

Gone for a minute, my s, . Gra?id7notker 103 

Gallant s's of English freemen . The Captain 7 

Every mother's s — Down they dropt — tr . 50 

They have taken our s, . . The Victim 51 

We have his dearest, His only s !' ir .69 



• 30 

• 50 
. 298 
. 378 
. 780 

317-47 

• 3 6 7 



. 276 
. 633 
1362 
1400 



13 
109 
478 

757 
792 



song. 
Take, Madam, this poor book of s; To the Queen 
Her s the lintwhite swelleth 
sings a s of undying love ; 
flooded over with eddying s . 
Hear a s that echoes cheerly 
heard her singing her last s, 
Singing in hers she died, . 
some wild skylark's matin s. 
The phantom of a silent s, 
Ah, well — but sing the foolish s 
So sing that other s I made, 
build up all My sorrow with my s CEnone 



Claribel 

Poet's Mind 33 

Dying Swan 42 

L. of Shalott, i. 30 

it iv. 26 

» • 35 

Miller's D. 40 

-r . 71 

tr . 161 

199 

!9 



the world-worn Dante grasped his s, Pal. of Art 135 
To sing her s's alone. tr . 160 

my soul to hear her echo'd s . 11 . 175 

a music centred in a doleful s . Lotos-E's. B 162 
Sung by the morning star of s, D. of P. Worn. 3 
far-renowned brides of ancient s . it . 17 

With timbrel and with s. ir . 200 

Leaving the dance and s, tr . 216 

What s's below the waning stars . Margaret . 33 
shook his s together as he near'd Gardener's D. 90 
Like poets, from the vanity of s ? it . 99 



POEM. LINE. 

He sang his s, and I replied with Attdley Ct. . 55 
found it in a volume, all of s's, . 11 -56 

in the Latin s I learnt at school, . Ed. Morris 79 
shall have that s which Leonard . Golden Year 1 
that same s of his He told me; .11 .7 

falser than all s's have sung, . Locksley H. 41 

And a s from out the distance . 11 . 84 

The woods were fill'd so full with s, Two Voices 455 
You'd have my moral from the s, Day-Dm. . 243 
To search a meaning for the s, 11 . 247 

To shape the s for your delight . n . 274 

Had I lived when s was great . Aniphion 9, 13 
When, ere his s was ended . ti . 50 

A s that pleased us from its ''You might have won' 22 
Sometimes the linnet piped his s: Sir L.andQ.G. 10 
Storm'd in orbs of s, . . . Vision of Sin 25 
nightingale thought *I have sung 

many s's Poet's Song 13 

time to time some ballad or a s . Pri?zcess,Pro.2^ 
here I give the story and the s's. . ti . 239 

shook the s's, the whispers, tr i. 97 

the nightingale, Rapt in her s, . n . 218 

to a low s oarM a shallop by, . tr ii, 433 

* Know you no s of your own land,* tr iv. 66 

great is s Used to great ends : . n . iiq 

for s Is duer unto freedom n . 122 

s, the true growth of your soil . rr . 132 

dragg'd my brains for such as,. tr .136 

the s Might have been worse , n . 231 

pardon ask'd and given For stroke and s t rr V. 45 

a s on every spray Of birds tr . 228 

noise of s's they would not understand: rr vi. 24 
Remembering his ill-omen'd s, . tr . 143 

she that sang the mournful s, . it , 288 

I brim with sorrow drowning s In Mem xix. 12 
For private sorrow's barren s, . tr xxi. 14 

Or breaking into s by fits . . rr xxiii. 2 
In dance and s and game and jest 1: xxix. 8 
A merry s we sang with him . 11 xxx. 15 

To lull with s an aching heart, . ir xxxvii. 15 
darken'd sanctities with s.' 11 .24 

in the s's I love to sing . . tr xxxviii. 7 

Then are these s's I sing of thee . tr . ji 

Short swallow-flights of s, . . tr xlvii. 15 
slightest air of s shall breathe , t» xlviii. 7 
blame not thou thy plaintive s, r . tr li. 5 

s of woe Is after all an earthly s ; it lvi. 1 

round thee with the breeze of s . 11 Ixxiv. 11 
if the matin s's, that woke . . 11 Ixxv. 9 
With fifty Mays, thy s's are vain ; tr .14 

a musing eye On s's and deeds . rr Ixxvi. 3 
dance and s and hoodman-blind . tr Ixxvii. 12 
flood a fresher throat with s. . *t lxxxii. 16 

noise Of s's, and clapping hands, . tr lxxxvi. 19 
now we sang old s's that peal'd . tr xciv 13 
With sport and s, in booth and tent tr xcvii. 28 
A s that slights the coming care . tr xcviii. 10 
boyhood sung Long since its matms rr ci. 10 

Be neither s, nor game, nor feast ; rr civ. 21 

And sing the s's he loved to hear. rr cvi. 24 

The lark becomes a sightless s. . «r cxiv. 8 
thes's, the stirring air, The life re-orient 11 ex v. 5 

if the s were full of care, . . tr cxxiv. 9 
He breath'd the spirit of the s; . tr .jo 

Is music more than any s . . m Con, 4 

In dying s's a dead regret, ■ 11 .14 

makes appear the s's 1 made " .21 

A martial s like a trumpet's call ! . Maud, I. v. . 5 
And old s vexes my ear ; . . tt II. ii, 47 
descend From the realms of light and s, ir iv. 82 

I turn'd and humm'd a bitter s . The Letters . 9 
And ever-echoing avenues of s . Ode on Well. 79 
s that Enid sang was one Of Fortune Enid . . 345 
by the bird's s you may learn the nest' tr . . 359 
and half singing a coarse s, . tt 1377 

Far other was the s that once I . Vivien . 255 

such a s, such fire for fame, tr . 267 

such a noble s was that. tt . 283 

howe'er you scorn my s, . . tr . 294 

says the s, ' I trow it is no treason.* tt . 573 

told in tale, Or sung in s .' . . ir . 708 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



3S3 



FORM. LINE. I 

graces of the court, and s's, . . Maine 

in those days she made a little s . •< . oy8 ! 

call'd her s ' The J>" of Love and Death,'" 

chanted snatches of mysterious s . o i"i/? ' 

even in the middle of his s . Guinevere . 300 ] 

it were the burthen of a s. En. Ant, • 
while she sang this baby j . . Sea Dreati, 
that strange s 1 heard Apollo sing Tithonus . 62 I 
Let him hear my s The Captain 4 1 

My fame in s has done him much wrong Spi tefut Let 3 I 
glory of orator, glory of s, . Wage* . il 

girt With s and flame and fragrance Lucretius . 134 I 
Bird s love and bird's s (rep 1 The Window 62 | 

Ay is the s ol the wedded spheres 11 . 112 | 

soot/lake 
(The J of so many a summer still Sen Dreams 33, 

soothe. 
How should I s you anyway, . To J S. . 58 

S him with thy liner fancies . Locksley H. 54 

for thy voice to s and bless ! . In Mem. Iv. 26 
influence-rich to j and save . . » Ixxix. 14 
hurt Whom she would s, . Guinevere . 353 
One spiritual doubt she did not s ? Ay liner's F. 704 

soothed 
This fiat somewhat s himself . Aylmer's F. 26 

sophist. 
Low-cowering shall the ,S sit: C tear-headed 'friend '10 
Dark-brow' d s, come not anear ; . Poet'i Mind 8 

lophisier 
every s can lime. . ' Lore thou thy land,' etc. 12 

sorcerer, 
s whom a far-off grandsne burnt, Princess, 1. 6 

1 have no s's malison on me v ii. 388 
1 remembci'd that burnt s's curse 11 v 464 

sore. 
old s breaks out fiom age to age Walk, to the M. 71 



Dying Swan 23 
Miller's D. 178 j 
II . 2-- 4 I 

CF.none . 39 | 

: Lolos-E's . 63 , 
D of F. Worn. 91 j 
Margaret . 



sorr. 
with joy Hidden in s: . . 

2 unst me In s and in rest: 
they had their part Of t: 
build up all My s with my song. . 
Still from one s to another thrown 
The star-like j'rof immortal eves, 
dainty s without sound. 
Your 1, only s's shade, Keeps real s 
fai away. ..... 

Rise from the feast of s, lady, 
Stole from her sister .!>'. 
high dial, which my s crowns— . 
a s's crown of s is remembering 
Whatever crazy s saith, 

S, cruel fellowship, . 
Or j such a changeling be? . 

1 brim with s drowning song 
For private s's barren Sony, : 
sometimes in my s shut. 

ring me s touch 'd with joy, 
brief lays, of i' born 
Av nu. the s deepens down. 

It thou live with me . 

ilt thou rule my blood, 
11 can s wane ? . 
D at the s in my blood, . 
trust in things above He dimm'd of s, 
what fruit may be Of s 
'Tis held that s makes us wise !cxii 1 ) 
Yet less of s lives in me 

1 here be s for me ? 

me if ever that light 
j darkens hamlet and hall. . . Pile on Well. 7I 

and the x dimm'd her sight, . . Elaine . 8851 
Comfort your s's ; for they di • not flow. Guinevere 186 
1 your r'x with our lord the King's, 11 . 180 

my s broke me down : . . . En, Ant 
one* and she shared it not t . . Aylmer't F, - ■■-■ 

t.irm'd fiom s, . 11 

gray hairs with 1 tot he grave — . 11 . 777 

Hei ci.unpt-up s pain'd her, . 



I 


. 


43 


1 




62 


Gardened % D 


2>1 


sts 


Stylites 


04 


LocksUf //. 


76 


Two 


Voices 


394 


In Mem. in. 


1 


11 


XVI. 


4 


ir 


XIX. 


12 


11 


XXI 


>4 


n 


XXlll. 


X 


11 


XXVlll. 


JO 


II 


xlvii. 


1 


H 


xlviii. 


14 


M 


lviii. 


1 


II 




s 


11 


lxxvii. 


'S 


II 


Ixxxii. 


14 


f S, II 


Ixxxiv. 


10 


ll 

■) .■ 


cvn. 


14 

'5 


•I 


cxv. 


11 


. Maud. 1. 1. 


57 



Boo 



roE.M. 1 
And makes it a s to be ' . . The Islet . 36 
'O hush, my joy, my s.' 'II ome they brought him' 10 
sound of human s mounts to mar . Lucretius . 109 

sorrcnu (verb.) 
And he should s o'ci my state . InMem.xiv. 15 
L feel 11, when I * most : . •■ xxvii. 14 

1 after The delight of early skies; afaud.ll.iv. 24 
In a wakeful doze I J " .26 

who most have cause to s for her— Aylmer's F. 078 

sorrowed. 
1 felt it, when I s most . . . IiiMeniAxxxW. 2 
those who s o'er a vanish'd race . Aylmer's T . £.44 

sorrozvest. 

s thou, pale Painter, for the past Coquette, iii. 3 

sorrowing. 
Came Psyche, x for Aglaia. . . Princess, vi 1 3 
s in a pause I dared not break . " vii. 233 

s Lancelot should have stoop'd so low, Elaine . 720 

sort. 
older s, and murmur'd that their May Princess, ii. 439 

sought. 
You s to prove how I could love L.C. V. de Vere 21 
s to strike Into that wondrous track D. of F. Worn 270 
xtosowthcm-elveslikc winged seeds Gardener's!). £4 
She s her lord, and found him, . Godiva ^ . 16 
Still moving alter truth long s, . Two Voices 62 

1 J but peace : No critic I — . . Princess, i. 143 
grace Concluded, and we s the gardens: •■ ii. 429 
some hid and s In the orange thickets : 11 . 435 
twice I s to plead my cause, . 11 iv. 530 
and I — I s for one— All people . » vi. 220 
s far le^s for truth than power . " vii. 221 
s but Duty's iron crown . . Ode on Welt. 122 
though they s Thro' all the provinces Liud . . 729 
Yivien ever s to work the charm . Vivien . 64 
for men s to prove me vile, . . " . 345 
j To make disruption in the Table Guinevere . 17 
nor s. Wrapt in her grief, for housel " . 146 
s and found a witch Who brewed Lucretius . 15 

sought" st. 
Who s to wreck my mortal ark, . Two Voices 3S; 

soul. 
an 1 my whole s grieves ' A spirit haunts' etc. 16 
He saw thro' his own s. . . The Poet . 6 

Heaven flow'd upon the s in many dreams " . 31 

took the s Of that waste place . Dying Swan 21 
Controlleth all the s and scum; . Eleanor* . 113 
With summer lightnings of a s . Miller's D. is 
Look thro' my very J with thine 1 . 11 . 218 

With one long kiss my whole J . Fatuna . 20 
My whole s waiting silently, .11 . 36 

P.eaiitiful-brow'd (Knone, my own s, CEnoue . 69 
the hippy s's, that love to live : . 11 . 236 

shadow all my s, that I may die. . 11 . 238 

s possess'd of manygifts. To With Pal. of Art 3 

built my s a lordly pleasure house. Pal. of A rt 1 

' ( ) S, make merry and carouse. Dear s, 11 

My j would live alone unto herself n .11 

my s made answer readily : . . » -17 

the livelong day my s did pass, n •• 

every mood And change of my still s. •• .60 

my s to hear her echo'd song . 11 . 175 

riwei of movement, scem'd my s, 11 . 246 

heard them call my s. . . May Queen, w.*$ 
that way my s will have to go. . " . 42 

with those just s's and true — . " _ • 55 

into my empty j and frame . . D.o/F.Wom. 78 

j laments, which hat] I.. » • 281 

ir x hath fall'n asleep. ToJ.S. . 34 
Sleep, holv spirit, blessed s. ■ .11 -7° 

Sleep till the end, true s and sweet 11 
Thy brothers and immortal s's. 'Love thou thy iaitd'S 
All but the basis of the s. . . » .44 

.1 race the ri-ing wind : n . ' 7 

our s's with talk of knightly deeds M.d Arthur 1 > 
see my face again, Pray for my s. « ■ 247 

about my senses and my j, • . . Gardener'sD. 66 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Gardener sD 267 

StS. Styhtes 45 

. 65 

ir . 70 

ir . 146 

Talking 0. 55 
Love and Duty 44 



46 



Raise thy s ; Make thine heart 

it thou wilt not save my s, 

spake not of it to a single s, . 

that my s might grow to thee, 

O my s, God reaps a harvest 

In which the gloomy brewer's s 

my brain, my senses and my si 

S's that have toil'd, and wrought Ulysses 

* Good s / suppose I grant it thee, Two Voices 38 

Not less swift s's that yearn for light, 11 . 67 

wide in 5 and bold of tongue, . 11 .124 

With this old 5 in organs new? . 11 . 393 

truth that sways the s of men? . Day-Din. . 72 

May my s follow soon ! . . St Agues' Jive 4 

So shows my .9 before the Lamb, . 11 . 17 

And he cheer'd her 5 with love. . L. of Burleigh 68 

Like ,s\? that balance joy and pain Sir L.cuidQ.G. 1 

they vext the s's of deans ; . . Princess, Pro.161 

a. double growth of these rare s's, 

S of mincing mimicry ! . 

Our echoes roll from s to s, . 

secret laughter tickled all my s. . 

And satisfy my 5 with kissing her : 

Not only he, but by my mother's s, 

charm' d Her wounded 5 with words : 

sadness on the s of Ida fell . 

shall not blind his 5 with clay.' 



163 
...• 4°3 

ui. 362 
lv. 248 
v. 100 
vi. 315 
. 3 26 

. 3 12 



VII 



mind and s, according well, . . In Mem. Pro. 
half conceal the S within u v. 

What s's possess themselves so pure, tt xxxri. 
So that still garden of the s's . u xlii. 

Rewaken with the dawning s. , if 
Remerging in the general S, . tr xlvi. 

shall still divide The eternal s . ir 
The likest God within the s? a if liv. 

The passing of the sweetest ^ . tf Ivi. 

He past : a s of nobler tone : . » lix. 

The 5 of Shakspeare love thee more. 11 lx. 

Sweet 5, do with me as thou wilt ; it lxiv. 

thro' a lattice on the 5 ... if lxix. 

Hadst thou such credit with the s ? tr lxx. 

Fade wholly, while the s exults, . ?t Ixxii. 
And take us as a single j. . . tr lxxxiii, 

solemn ghost, O crowned s! 11 Ixxxiv. 
His living s was flash' d on mine, . tt xciv. 
To-day they count as kindred s's . 11 xcviii. 
The feeble s, a haunt of fears, . it cix. 
On s's, the lesser lords of doom. , n cxi. 8 
A s on highest mission sent . . tr cxii. 10 
Wisdom heavenly of the s . . tt cxiii. 22 
A sphere of stars about my s. . it exxi. 7 
all we flow from, s in s. . . m cxxx. 12 
A s shall draw from out the vast . it Con. 123 
5 of the rose went into my blood, Matid } I. xxii 33 
sweet s, had hardly spoken a word, u II. i. 11 
to see The s's we loved . tt iv. 15 
weep My whole s out to thee it .98 
guard the eye, the s Of Europe . Ode on Well. 160 
What know we greater than the s ? n . 265 
own Earl, and their own s's, and her Enid 1425 
whose s's the old serpent long had drawn ir 1480 
For agony, who was yet a living s. Elaine . 253 
Pray for my s, and yield me burial (rep ) 11 * 2 73 
Pray for thy s ? Ay, that will I. . n 1386 
the Powers that tend the s, . . Guinevere . 65 
do thou for thine own s the rest. . » . 541 
and so thou purify thy s, tt . 557 
not a smaller s, Nor Lancelot, . 11 . 562 

1 cannot kill my sin If s be s ; ti . 615 
little innocent s flitted away . En, Ardeu . 269 
Kept him a living s. ... tt . 805 
'Ay, ay, poor s' said Miriam . tr . 808 
So past the strong heroic s away . it . 914 
adulteries That saturates with body. Ay liner's P. 377 
s to s Strike thro' a finer element tt . 578 
passing thro' the fire Bodies, but s's— tf . 672 
mortal s from out immortal hell . Lucretius . 259 
s flies out and dies in the air.' . it . 270 

soul-stricken. 
Ss at their kindness to him . . Aylme? J s P. 525 



sound (adj.) poem. line. 
healthy, s, and clear and whole v . Miller's D. 15 
What ails us, who are s, . Walk, to the M. 95 
that hypothesis of theirs be s . Princess, iv. 2 
felt it s and whole from head to foot »t vi. 194 
Oh, If we held the doctrine s . In Mem. lii. 9 

How pure at heart and s in head . tr xciii. i 
only for a moment whole and s ; . Ayhner's P. 2 
let your sleep for this one night be s .* Sea Dreams 302 
blind or lame or sick or s . . The Voyage 93 

sound fs. ) 
the s Which to the wooing wind . Mariana . 74 
Full of the city's stilly s, . . Arabia7tN's.\oi 
mirth Is here or merry-making s. Deserted H. 14 
Springing alone With a shrill inner s The Mermaid 20 
Died the s of royal cheer ; . L.ofShalott, iv. 48 
There came a s as of the sea : Mariana in the S. 86 
With dinning s my ears are rife, 
as I hear Dead s's at night . 
a s Rings ever in her ears 
Mov'd of themselves, with silver s, 
the dully s Of human footsteps 
or a s Of rocks thrown down, 
With s's that echo still. 
s's of insult, shame, and wrong, 
song of bird or s of rill ; 
fill'd with light The interval of s. 
organ rolling waves Of s 
With that sharp s the white dawn' 
tell o'er Each little s and sight, 
Of dainty sorrow without s, . 
sent to sleep with s, . . M 
That with the s I woke 
s of funeral or of marriage bells ;- 
that morn with all its s, 
with the freshness and the s. 
r Of pious hymns and psalms,. 
I took the swarming s of life — 
The s of minster bells. . 
and the winds are laid with s, 
bade him cry, with s of trumpet, 
With twelve great shocks of s 
no s is made, Not even of a gnat 
a s Like sleepy counsel pleading 
A gentle s, an awful light 



. Eleanore 


115 


CEn07ie 


245 


n 


260 


; Pal. of Art 


130 


II 


27S 


II 


281 


D.qfF. Worn 


. 8 


11 


IQ 


n 


66 


ti 


172 


• 1 . 


192 


S 11 


261 


11 


277 


. ]\Iargaret . 


18 


.d' Arthur, Ep. 3 



Gardeuer'sD. 36 
1, .82 

Ed. Morris 99 
StS. Stylites 32 
Talking O. 213 



Docks ley H. 
God iv a 

it 
Day -Dm. . 
A mphion 
Sir Galahad 



272 
104 
36 
74 
40 
73 
4i 
By grassy capes with fuller s Sir L. andQ. G. 14 
methought I heard a mellow s, . Vision of Sin 14 
Ran into its giddiest whirl of s, . if . 29 

the s of a voice that is still! l Break, break/ etc. 12 
to the s Of solemn psalms . . Princess, li. 452 
one deep chamber shut from s . tr vi. 355 

a s arose of hoof And chariot „ tr . 358 

and sweet is every s, (rep ) . ir vii. 203 

Calm is the morn without a s, . In Mem. xi. 1 
shut between me and the s: . u xxviii. 8 

streets were fill'd with joyful s, . it xxxi. 10 
The s of streams that swift or slow tr xxxv. 10 
( The s of that forgetful shore .it . 14 

up thy vault with roaring s . tr lxxi. 25 

s to rout the brood of cares . 11 Ixxxviii. 17 
growing upon me without a s, . Maud, I iii. 7 

1 heard no s where I stood . . 11 xiv. 28 
To the s of dancing music and flutes : tr II. v. 76 
There comes a s of marriage bells The Letters 48 
Let the s of those he wrought for, Ode mi Well. 10 
s of the sorrowing anthem roll'd . 11 .60 
In that dread s to the great name, ir . 71 
compass'd round with turbulent s, Will . . 7 
heard instead A sudden s of hoofs Enid . . 164 
the tender s of his own voice . if . "97 
s of many a heavily-galloping hoof »t . 1296 
s not wonted in a place so still . Elaine . 814 
Lancelot knew the little clinking s; it . 977 
A sort of absolution in the s . Sea Dreams 61 
How fresh was every sight and s . The Voyage 5 
Phantom s of blows descending . Boadicea . 25 
Nor s of human sorrow mounts . Lucretius . 109 

sound (to make a noise.) 
the waterfall Which ever s's . Ode to Mem. 52 

The wind s's like a silver wire, . Fatima . 29 



TENiVYSO.V'S WORKS. 



3S5 



5 all night long, in falling . . D.of F.lVotn. 183 
t upon ihe bugle horn . . . Locksley II. 2 
how thy name may s Will vex thee 'I wo Voices no 
Like strangers' voices here they s In Mem cm. 9 
S on a dreadful trumpet, summoning her ; Enid 1232 

sound fto sink a plummet.) 
to s the abyss Of science, . . Princess, ii. 159 

sounded. 
Then the voice Of Ida s, . . Princess, vi. 352 

sounding". 
call me, s on the bugle-horn. . Locksley IT. 145 

Breathing and s beauteous battle . Princess, v. 154 
The great city s wide ; . . . Maud, II. iv. 64 
Made answer, s like a distant horn. Guinevere 247 
empty hall, A on the morrow. ' Home tney brought 'him '5 

sour. 
Slipshod waiter, lank and s, . Vision of Sm 71 

little grain of conscience made him s.' 11 . 218 

source. 
A teardrop trembled from its s, . Talking O . i6t 
The very s and fount of Day . InMetn xxiv. 3 
Like torrents from a mountain s . 'I he Letters 79 
Pra)er fiom a living s within the . En Arden . 802 

soured. 
she J To what she is: . . IValk.totheM. 53 

south. 
The palmsand temples of the 9. 'Vouaskmewhy* 28 
at school— a college in the .J: Walk, to the if. 75 
fierce and fickle is the S, . . Princess, iv. 79 
I do but wanton in the S . . 11 -9' 

brief the moon of beauty in the 5*. 11 . 95 

iong Dree2es rapt from inmost .y . n .411 

Rosy is the West, Rosy is the S. Maud,\ xvii 6, 20 
looking to the .S", and fed . . 11 xviii. 20 
My fancy fled tc the S again . The Daisy . J08 
As fast we fleeted to the 5: . . The Voyage 4 
Thine the North and thine the S . Boiidicea . 44 
palmy highlands Far within the •£. The Captain 24 
Down in the •? is a flash and a groan The Wmdcnu 42 

south-breeze. 
The full s t around thee blow . TalkingO. . 271 

Soiithsea-isle. 
under worse than Ss-t taboo, . Princess, iii. 261 

south-west, 
s-m that blowing Bala lake . . Enid . 1777 

south-wind 
whisper o r the s-w rushing warm . Locksley II. 125 

sow (s. ) see swine. 
He had a s, sir. . . . IValk.totheM. 78 
we haled the groaning s, it -83 

range of prospect had the mother j, 11 
never s was higher in this world . " .88 

all the swine were s ;, Andall the dogs — Priucess,i 190 

sow (verb.) 
.V the seed, and reap the harvest . I otos-Fs. . 160' 
to s themselves like winged seeds, Cardener'sD. 64 
He s's himself on every wind . 'Two Voices 294 

(The dust of continents to-be ; . InMeni xxxv. 11 
s the sky with flying boughs, . 11 lxxi. 24 

soired 

S all their mystic gulfs . . . Cardener'sD 257 

He s a slander in the common ear, Emit . . 450 

s her name and kept it green . Aytmer's F. 88 

i> it far and wide By every town . The Flower 13 

towing 
Dispensing harvest, i the To-be, . Princess, vii 273 
s hedgerow texts and passing by, Ay Inter I I. 171 

town, 

having s some generous seed, . 'two Voices 143 

pi irmur'dj s With happy faces . Princess,! to. 53 

seed wc two long since had j; . 11 iv. 291 

had the wild oat not been j, . In Mem. hi. 



POEM. LINK. 

the one true seed of freedom s . Ode onWell. 162 
.S in a wrinkle of the monstrous hill, Will . .it 
robe of jasmine s with stars : . Aytmer's F. 153 

spai e. 
Oh ! narrow, narrow was the s, . Priana . 40 
Overlook a j of flowers, . . L.q/Shalolt,i. 16 

Lancelot mused a little s: . . » iv. 51 

There all in s s rosy-bright Mariana in the S. 8g 

In some fair s of sloping greens . Pal. 0/ Art 106 
time and s to work and spiead. f )'ou ask mewhy 1 16 
Free s for every human doubt. . Two Voices 137 
Pure s's clothed in living beams, . Sir Galahad 66 
little s was left between the horns. Princess, iv. 189 
ask d but s and fairplay for her scheme ir v. 272 

leave her s to burgeon out of all ip vii. 255 

Thro* all the silent s's of the woilds n Con. 114 
all the starry heavens of s . . IuMem.\xxv. 3 
breathing bare 1 he round of s . 11 lxxxv. 5 
roll d the floods in grander s, . ir cii. 26 

whispers to the worlds of s, . . 11 exxv. 11 
countercharm of s and hollow sky Iilaud,l.x\m. 43 
It is but for a little s I go : . . 11 -75 

The height, the s, the gloom, . The Daisy . 59 
Painted, who stare at open s, . Enid . 1118 

after tarrying for a s they rode, . " . »8ot 

bode among them yet a little s . Elaine . 917 

The s was nan ow, — having order'd En Arden. 177 
The ever silent ii of the Last, . Tithonus . 9 

spake. 
He s of duty : that the dull . . A Character 7 
He s of virtue: not the gods . 11 .13 

when she s, Her words did gather The Poet . 43 
Her eyelid quiver'd as she s. . Miller's D. . 144 

Still shcron, and still she s of power U-.none . 119 

She s some certain truths of you. L.C V.deVere 36 
if his fellow s, His voice was thin . Lotos-Fs. . 33 
I Heard Him, for He J,. . . D. o/F.lVom. 22 7 
5 he, clouded with his own conceit M. if Arthur no 
5 not of it to a single soul, . . St S. Stylites 6s 
While I i then, a sting of shrewdest pain " . 195 

A still small voice s unto me, . Two Voices 1 

It s, niotcover, in my mind : . . 11 . 31 

Again the voice s unto me : . . 11 .46 

on the fourth I s of why we came Princess, i. it8 
companion yestcrmorn : Unwillingly we 1. '>• iii. 1P3 
but to one of whom we s tt . 185 

She s With kindled eyes : . 11 . 315 

a moral leper, I, To whom none s, tt iv. 204 

Stood up and s, an affluent orator 11 . 272 

such as her ! if Cyril 5 her true, . 11 v. i6r 

' Nay, nay, you s but sense' . 11 . 197 

Yea, tho' it s and made appeal . In Mem xci. 4 
Yea, llio' it s and bared to view .11 9 

Dumb is that tower which s so loud tt Con. 106 



s no slander, no, nor listen'd to it ; Ded of Idylls 9 

none s word except the hoary Karl: Enid . 

S to the lady with rum and proclaim'd tt 

Loudly j the Prince, 'Forbear: . tt 

none s word, but all sat down at once. 11 

s so low he hardly heard her speak, << 

He never .r word of reproach tome, Elaine 

has ci me Despite the wound he s of, it 



openly she s and said to her : 
and bow"d her head nor s. 
while he s to these his helm . 
mock'd me when he s of hope 

span [s ) 
every s of shade that steals, . 

span (verb.) 
She strove to s my waist : 

S/'.ir 

the s dances in bight and bay 
pelt me with starry s's and shells, 

spangle Jvcib ) 
To s all the happy shores 

spanu'd. 
a bridge that s a dry ravine : 



369 
55» 

• 555 
1452 
1491 

• i-5 
■ 565 

. 324 

• 3°8 
- 587 

. C.'4 



luMem. cxvi. 10 

Ta thing O. .13". 

Sea-Fairies 24 
The Merman 23 

InMetn. Con. 120 



T. 11 id 
2 Y, 



■ 



;86 



CONCORDANCE TO 



spar. 
upon floating: tackle and broken s's 
S's were splinter'd, 

spare (adj ) 
But far too s of flesh.' . 

spare (verb.) 
if thou 5 to fling Excalibur . 
Smite, shrink not, ^ not. 
kindly word, Not one to s her : . 
S thee, sacred bark : 
And yet I .? them sympathy . 
A little .? the night I loved . 
If the wolf s me, weep my life away, 

scared. 
tho' T 5 thee all the spring, . 
and they j To ask it. 
s to lift his hand against the King 



POEM. LINE. 

En. Arden . 552 
The Captain 45-9 

Talking O. . 92 

M ' d' 'Arthur 131 

StS.Styhie& 178 

Princess, vi. 242 

ZuMem.xvii. 14 

tt lxii. 7 

11 civ. 15 

Vivien . 734 

The Blackbird 9 

Guinevere . 143 

11 . 434 



spa7-haivk. 
Sometimes the s wheel'd along SirL. andQ. G. 12 

spark. 

the haft twinkled with diamond is, M. d' Arthur 56 

As this pale taper's earthly s, , St Agnes' Eve 15 

She lit the 5 within my throat, . Will Water. 109 

Mix'd with cunning ss of hell. . Vision ofSi7i 114 

5 Of glowing and growing light . Maud, I. vi. 15 

Like a sudden j Struck vainly . tt ix. 13 

However weary, a j of will . . it II. ii. 56 

sparkle fs ) 
sent a blast of is up the flue 
With one green 5 ever and anon 
Caught the s's, and in circles, 
nature's prideful s in the blood 

sparkle (verb.} 
I wake : the chill stars s ; . 
The silver vessels 5 clean, 
forefinger of all Time S for ever : Princess. 
maiden moon that s's on a sty . t; v. 17b 

And s out among the fern, . . The Brook . 25 
city s's like a grain of salt. . . Will . . 20 
s like a gem Of fifty facets' . . E7ud . 1143 

watch' d their arms far-off S, . Elaine . 395 

flame and ^ and stream as of old, . The Ri7iglet 8 



M. d'A rtfiur, Ep. 1 5 
. Andley Ct . 86 
. Vision of Sin 30 
. Enid . 1675 

StS. Stylites 113 
Sir Galahad 34 
357 



34 
63 
129 



speak. poem. 1. 

Smiling, never s's ' . . . Liha7i 
kiss sweet kisses, and s sweet words; Sea-Fairies 
\ Thou smilest, but thou dost not s, Oria?ia 
I when at last I dared to s . . Miller s D. 
Hear me, for I will s, and build up all (Euone , 
it may be That, while I 5 of it, . n . 42 

that I might s my mind And tell her n . 223 

Tho' I cannot speak a word MayQueen,\\. 39 

And then did something s to me — n in. 34 

on noble things, and strove to s . D. of F. Worn 42 
Still strove to s ; my voice was thick . . 109 

14 
5° 
4 



sparkled. 
shield That J on the yellow field L. of Sluilott, iii. 8 
5 keen with frost against the hilt . M. d' Arthur 55 
From Allan's watch, and 5 by the fire. Dora . 133 
yule-log s keen with frost, . . f7i Jlfeui.lxxvu. 5 

on the burnish'd board 5 and shone : E71. Arde?i 744 
when some heat of difference .? out, Aylmers E, 705 

sparkling. 
the snows Are s to the moon : . St Ag7ies y Eve 2 

sparrow. 
The s's chirrup on the roof, . . Mariana a 73 
The very s's in the hedge . . Amphwn . 67 
the sspear'd by the shrike, . . Maud,\. iv. 23 
() wretched set of s's, one and all, E7iid . . 278 
And swallow, and s, and throstle . The Window 157 

sfa rrow-hawk. 

toldhim, scouringstill "Ihes-h!*. E7iid . . 260 

answer'd gruffly, ' Ugh ! the s-h I " 11 . . 265 

he that labours for the s-h tt 271 

thousand pips eat up your s-h I . u . . 274 

pipe of nothing but of s-h's ! ,* " • ■ 2 79 

* So that you do not serve me s-k's it . . 304 

curse this hedgerow thief, the s-h: rt . - 309 

This s-h, what is he, . . it . 404 

The second was your foe, the s-h, 11 . . 444 

over that is placed the s-h . ?t . 4 Q 4 

earn'd himself the name of s-h, tt 402 

over that a golden s-h. . u . 550 

Spartan. 

play The 5" Mother with emotion Princess, ii. 

spawn. 

Thro* slander meanest s of Hell . The Letters 



263 



Margaret 
D.oftheO Year 



45 
You ask J7U, why 8 



The very smile before you s . 

come down, and hear ine 5 ; 

And tread softly and s low, 

tho' his foes s ill of him, 

.S out before you die . 

may speak the thing he will 

some old man s in the afterthne . M.d' 'Arthur 107 

•Vout! what is it thou hast heard . it . 150 

if you ^ with him that was my son Dora . . 41. 

Si is there any of you halt . StS. Stylites 7, 140 

let him 5 his wish. ... it . 142 

.9, if there be a priest . . . n .211 

To alien ears, I did not j to these Love a7id Duty 51 



was it not well to s, To have spoken once 

s, and ^ the truth to me, 

sweetly did she .? and move : 

'Twere better not to breathe or s, 

on the mouth, he will not s. . 

' I may not 5 of what I know.' 

O, Lady Flora, let me 5 • 

Her lips are sever'd as to s: 

S a little, Ellen Adair 



Said Lady Clare ' that 3'e 5 so wild?' Lady Clare 22 

I j the truth ; you are my child. 

I 5 the truth, a^ I live by bread 

I will i" out, for I dare not lie. 

And they 5 in gentle murmur 

letters, was he bound to si . 

he heard her j ; She scared him 

scarce could hear each other j 

for three years to $ with any men 

my vow Binds me to .?, 

but prepare : Is; it falls.' . 

^ little ; mix not with the rest ; 

Abate the stride, which s's of man 

some classic Angel $ In scorn of u 

she s's A Memnon smitten . 

she replied, her duty was to s, 

s, and let the topic die.' 

surely she will s ; if not, then I : 

made a sudden turn As if to s, 

there she lies, But will not s, 

she of whom you s, My mother, 

to our lines, And s with Arac : 

So often that I 5 as having seen. 

Or ^ to her, your dearest, 

yet 5 to me, Say one soft word 

Is it kind ? S to her 1 say : . 

brother, help ; s to the king : 

cannot s, nor move, nor make one 

And I can 5 a little then.^ 

Who j their feeling as it is, . 

sometimes harshly will he s; 

Behold ye s an idle thing 

Urania s's with darken'd brow 

' 1 am not worthy ev'n to s . 

My guardian angel will s out 

Noi s it, knowing Death has made 

1 hear the sentence that he s's; 

"We cannot hear each other s. 

A part of stillness, yearns to ? 

Still 5 to me of me and mine 

and thought he would rise and J 

this is the day when I must s 

I am sure I did but .? . 

To ^ of the mother she loved 

Chid her, and forbid her to s 

s to her all things holy and high, 

for she never s's her mind 

& no more of his renown, 



Locks ley H. 

Two Voices . 

it 
Day-Din. . 



Ed. Gray 



54 



50 



If 


24 


tt 


26 


II . 30 
L. oj Burleigh 49 


Princess, i. 


170 


it . 


183 


tt 


212 


n ii. 


58 


it 


185 


it 


206 


tt 


339 


M 


407 


s, 11 iii. 


54 


tt 


99 


tt 


135 


it _ . 


189 


?! iv. 


32s 


«t 


376 


" V. 


5° 


II 


18+ 


1' 


217 


11 vi. 


5 


11 


169 


11 


201 


H 


232 


tt 


2S6 


sign, tt vii. 


138 


InMem.xxx. 


16 


It XX. 


5 


ti xxi. 


6 


it 


21 


11 xxxvii. 


1 


tt 


ir 


tt xliii. 


13 


? 11 lxxiii. 


11 


tt Ixxix. 


10 


it lxxxi. 


16 


tt lxxxiv. 


73 


11 cxv. 


12 


Maud, I. i. 


59 


It xvi. 


7 


It XIX. 


18 


it 


27 


11 


63 


-f II ii. 


7 s 


11 v. 


67 


Ode on Well. 


278 



TEXXYSOXS WORKS 



3S7 



POEM. LINK 

the cause because I dare not j . Enid . . 89 

ait not worthy ev'n to* of him:' 199 

.S",ifyoubenothketherest, hawk-mad" . . zHo 

They would not hear me s : v 421 

Nor s I now from foolish flattery ; " . . 433 

lift an eye nor s a word, " 528 

Whatever happens, not to s to me 11 . . 866 

would only J and tell me of it.' -i 903 

I laid upon you, not to s to me 11 927 
That she could s whom his own ear 11 . . 962 

must I s, and tho' he kill me " . . 986 

I leave to s {' . . .11 . . 989 

and s To your good damsel there " . 1147 

'Get her to s: she docs not s to me. << . 1150 

I apart, you do not s to him, 11 . H7oi 

dumbly s's Your story . . . 11 . J177 ' 

s the word : my followers ring him 11 . 1185 

the word : Or s it not : . n . 1191 

that you s not but obey.' " 1266 

so low he hardly heard her s, « . 1491 

Kind's own car S what has chanced . " . 1657 

I I 1 one S's of a service done him; 11 . 1695 
did I care or dare to s with you . « . 1719 i 
one verse more— the lady s's it — . Vivien . 295 '. 
let her eyes 5 for her, glowing on him," . 466 
Urged him to s against the truth, . Elaine . 93 
to 1 him true, You know right well, " . 154 
little need to * Of Lancelot in his glory :» . 462 
.£ therefore : shall 1 waste myself 11 . 667 
ithc wish most near to your true heart 11 . 910 
!ike a ghost without the power to j. " . 915 

" Delay no longer, s your wish, . » . 920 

*.S": thai I live to hear,' he said . 11 . 924 

surely 1 shall s for mine own self, " 1119 

none of you can s for me so well, . 11 1120 

So cannot s my mind. An end to this ! ■■ 1216 

* He is enchanted, cannot s — 11 1247 

S. as it waxes, of a love that wanes? it 1392 
j no slander, no, nor listen to it, . Guinevere . 4< | 

could s Of the pure heart, nor seem 11 . 497 
he forgave me, and I could not s. n 
came to s to you of what he wish'd En. Arden . 290 

' Tired, Annie ?' for she did not » » . 387 

still be living : well then — let me s: n . 402 

who s's with Him, seem all alone, " . 621 

turning now and then to s with him, n . 756 

miM 1 not s to these? ..." . 7R9 

understand, While I have power to s. >• . 878 

j before the people of her child, . Aylmer's F. 608 

I bid to J of such a one . . " . 677 

him t was not bid to *— . " . 710 
' Love, forgive him:' but he did not s; .Sen Dreams 45 
s of you well or ill ; . . Grandmother 51 

' but I needs miht s my mind, " • S3 
j to me not without a welcome, Heudecasyllalncs 11 
My tongue Trip,, or I s profanely. Lucntiut . 74 

speaking. 
And I ran by him without j, May Queen'\. iS 

The voice, that now is s, n 111 54 
make a man feel strong in s truth ; I.ovr and ' Dutybi 

He sail, ' You take it, s, ' . . Enid . . 090 

s not, but leaning over him, . . Vivien . 327 

Suddenly r of the wordless man, . Elaine . 271 

Dark-splendid, s in the silence, . n . 337 

£ a stilt good-morrow with her eyes. •■ 1027 

is your beauty, anil I sin In s, . 11 1181 
spear. 

O'erthwarted with the brazen-headed eCEnone . 137 

and, the buckler, and the »— Two Voltes 120 

hoofs bare on the ridge of s's . Princess,y. 478 

and thrice they break their i'i. . Enid . . 562 
the long < a cubit thro' his breast . n . . 935 
flesh and wine to feci his f*J 11 . 1449 

down I it a touch. . RMnt . 149 

CouchM theirx'rand prick'd their siccds-i . 478 

a* Down-glancing lamed the charger, " .486 

it-ply his own rnir. ■ . 487 

iwn before his s at a touch, ■> . 577 

summer s's . Ay liner's F. 1 1 1 
brought him slain with s's. 'Home they brought htm ' 



spear'd. 
the sparrow s by the shrike. 



I INF. 

Maud t I. iv. 23 
spearman. 
Hut left two brawny spearmen . Enid . 1406 

H is lusty spearmen fbUow*d him . n . 1441 
And mingled with the spearmen . 1, . 1447 

the brawny s let his cheek Bulge . n . i 4 ;j 

spear-shaft. 
The splinter'd s-s's crack and fly . Sir Galahad 7 

spec I;. 
little pitted s in garner' d fruit . Vivien . 144 

spectre. 
There stands a s in your hall : L. C. V. de I 'ere 4 2 
Nightmare of youth, the s of himscW: Eovc and JJitlyi 2 
He faced the s's of the mind . InMem.xcv, 15 

fled Yelling as from a s, . . Enid . 15S1 

speculation. 
for a vast s had failed. . . . Maud, I. i. 9 

speech. 
God's great gift of s abused . . A Dirge . 44 
full-flowing nver of S . . . . Giuune . t 7 

hear each other's whisper'd s ; . Lotos-Es. . 104 
with surprise Fioze my swift s: ; . D.cJ I .Worn. 90 
He flash'd his random s'es : . Will Water. 198 

address'd to s. Who spoke few words Pr1utess.C01t.s3 
EieThought could wed itself t0»S ; In Mem.xxiw. 16 
But in dear words of human s . " Ixxxiv. 83 
In matter-moulded forms of s, . " xciv. 46 

Again the feast, the s, the glee . « Con. :oi 

There jand thought and nature failed En. Arden 793 
Joyful came his s ; . . . The Captain 30 

speed. 
writhed Iimbsoflightning s; ' Clear-headed Jriend' '.--, 
a favourable s Kullle thy mirror'd In Mem ix. 6 

speedwell. 
The little i'i darling blue . In Mem. Ixxxii. 10 



spelts) 
I feel with ihec the drowsy s. 



Maud, I. xviii. 7; 



spelt verb.) 
A trifle, sweet ! which true love si Miller's D. 187 
face is practised, when 1 s the lines, I 'men .217 

spent e. 
Bluff Harry broke into the s . Talking O. 47 

spend. 
Where they twain will s their days. L 0/ Burleigh 36 

spent. 
passion shall have s its novel force I.ocksley If. n> 
fear, indeed, you * a stormy time Prtncess, v. 116 
I scarce have s the worth of one I ' Enid . 1260 

the storm, its burst of passion s, . Vivten . 810 

latest breath \\ as s in blessing her En. Arden 

sphere 's. ) 
Dark-blue the deep s oveihead. . Arabian X's. So 
Sure she was nighcr 10 heaven's s's, I hie to Mem. «.o 
from the hollow s of the sea, . Tht Mermaid 54 
Deepening thro' the silent s's, Mariana in the S 91 
daughterofacottager, Outofher* Il'ntk. tothe M. ;-• 
centred in the s Of common duties, Ulyttet > 

in dark purple i'i of sea . . Loeksln II. 104 
In yonder hundred million s's t ' . Two 1 oit M 
men, thro' novel i'i of thought . " '1 

The s thy fate allots: . . . Will Water. 218 
orient ivory s in s, . . . Princess, Pro »o 

An eagle clang an eagle to the s . " iii. 90 

. to tread, •■ 
He mixing with his proper s, . In Mem.Yix. 5 
A 1 of stars about my soul . . " exxi. 7 
Ay is the song of the wedded s's . The Window lis 

sphere verb.) 
.9 all your lights around, above ; . In Mem. ix. 1 3 

sphered. 
and 1 Whole in ourselves . . Princess, iv i?t 

I had you been S up with Cassiopeia, » . 4' a 



3 8S 



CONCORDANCE TO 



sphere-music, poem. line. 
S-m such as that you dream'd about Sea Dreams 248 

spheroid, 
Cf sine and ate, s and azimuth . Princess, vL 239 

spice (s.) 

Dripping with Sabscan 5 . . Adeline . 53 

A summer fann'd with s. . . Pal of Art 116 
silks, and fruits, ands's, clear of toll. Golden Year 45 

Bring me s's) bring me wine ; . Vision of Sin 76 

With summer s the humming air . In Mem. c. 8 

like the sultan of old in a garden of 5 Maud, I iv. 42 

spice (verb.) 
*S" his fair banquet with the dust of Maud, I. xviii. 56 

spider. 
the bastion'd walls Like threaded s's. Princess, i. 107 
in a great old tyrant s's web, . Vivie?i . 10S 

spied. 
came into the field and s her not : Dora . . 73 
i her, and he left his men at work, <> . .84 
Uncared for, s its mother . . Princess, vi. T20 
Arthur ^ the letter in her hand, . Elaine 1263 

passing by 6" where he couch'd, . Guinevere . 32 

spigot. 
merry bloated things Shoulder'd the s, Guinevere 266 

spike. 
silvery s's are nighest the sea. . The Mermaid 37 
High up, in silver s's! . . . Talking O. 276 
he had climb'd across the s's, . Princess, Pro. 11 r 
darted s's and splinters of the wood Vivien . 7S6 

spiked. 
and grimly 5 the gates . 



poem. Mid 
Life in dead stones, or s in air ; . A Character 8 
riving the 5 of man, . . . The Poet . 51 

She thought, 'My s is here alone, Mariana mtheS 4.7 
Touch' d by thy 5 's mellowness, Eieanore . 103 

all the 5 is his own. . . . Miller's D jqo 
wrought Two s's to one equal mind— n . 236 

In my dry brain my > soon, . . Fatima . 26 

thought of power Flatter' d his s, . (Enoue . 733 
Music that genther on the s lies, . Lotos-E's. . 50 
harken what the inner s sings, . 11 67 

lend our hearts and s's wholly . 11 . 308 

to name my s loathes and fears : . D.ofF. Worn. 106 
Sweetens the s still 11 . 236 

Your s is the calmed sea . . Margaret . 25 
from the s thro' the brain, . . To J. S. . 38 
Sleep, holy s, blessed soul, u 70 

Whose s's falter in the mist t Yon ask meivhy' etc. 3 
The .V of the years to come 'Love thou thy land,' etc. 55 

Gardener'sD. 14 
St S. Stylites 26 

Ulysses . 30 

Locks ley H. 28 

. 38 

" . 1*5 

i» . 187 

Two Voices 115 

»r . 287 

Day-Dm. . . 28 

»i . 129 

St A gnes Eve 9 



Princess, iv. 1S 



spikenard. 
Sweet ! sweet ! s, and balm, . . StS. Stylites 208 
With costly s and with tears. . fnMem. xxxii 12 

spill. 
slope, and 5 Their thousand wreaths Princess, vii. 197 
To s his blood and heal the land. . T/ie Victim 46 

spilt. 
have died and s our bones in the flood — Princess, iv. 5 1 1 
A little grain shall not be s.' . I?iMem.\x\\\ 4 

the true blood -y had in it a heat . Maud,\. xix. 44 
the red life s for a private blow . n II. v. 93 
burst in dancing, and the pearls were s; Vivien . 302 

spin. 

Sometimes I saw you sit and s ; . Miller's D, 121 

Let the great world s for ever . Locksley H. 182 

S's, toiling out his own cocoon. . Two Voices 180 

spindling. 
The s's look unhappy. . . . Amphion , 92 

spine. 

stiff 5 can hold my weary head, . StS. Stylites 42 

The three-decker's oaken 5 . . Maud, II. ii. 27 

to crate and basket, ribs and J. . Vivien . 475 

spire. 

Looks down upon the village 5 ; , Miller's D. 36 
And tipt with frost-like ss. . . Pal. of Art 52 
With s's of silver shine.' . . D.ofF JVom.iSS 

To watch the three tall s's ; . . Godir:a . 3 
he, by farmstead, thorpe and s, . Will iVater. 137 
like a s of land that stands apart . Princess, iv. 162 
a star upon the sparkling s ; . . 11 vii. 182 

Bring orchis, bring the foxglove s InMem lxxxii. 9 
The J* J of ice are toppled down, . n exxvi. 12 
With delicate 5 and whorl, . . Mated, II. ii. 6 
the well known stream and rustic s, The Brock . 188 
A mount of marble, a hundred s's ! The Daisy . 60 
blazing wyvernweathercock'd the s, Aylmers F. 17 
Utter your jubilee steeple and si . IV. to Alexan. 17 

spirit 

translucent fane Of her still s ; . Isabel . , 5 
To the young s present . . Ode to Mem. 73 

A 5 haunts the year's last hours 'A spirit haunt s, 'etc. 1 
Some s of a crimson rose . .Adeline . 41 



so light of foot, so light of 5 — 

crush' d My s fiat before thee. 

this gray 5 yearning in desire 

All the s deeply dawning , 

And our s s rush'd together . 

And his ? leaps within him . 

promise of my s hath not set. 

Go, vexed S, sleep in trust ; . 

That read his 5 blindly wise. 

To s's folded in the womb. . 

His s flutters like a lark, 

Make Thou my s pure and clear 

My 5 before Thee ; 

My 5 beats her mortal bars . 

found My s's in the golden age. 

And her s changed within. . 

Tho' at times her s sank : 

That her 5 might have rest. . 

Encarnahze their s's : . 

freedom, force and growth Of s 

on my s's Settled a gentle cloud 

My s closed with Ida's at the lips 

A S, not a breathing voice. . 

For I in s saw thee move 

So much the vital s's sink 

But they my troubled 5- rule . 

Survive in s's render'd free, . 

look on Ss breath'd away, . 

Thy 5 ere our fatal loss. 

That stir the s's inner deeps, 

And every s's folded bloom . 

Before the s's fade away, 

The J)' of true love replied ; . 

' What keeps a s wholly true 

The s does but mean the breath 

My s loved and loves him yet, 

I loved thee, S, and love 

From state to state the s walks : 

Thy s shouldfail from off the glob 

Thy 5 up to mine can reach ; 

A hundred s's whisper ' Peace.' 

fierce extremes employ Thy s's 

Thy j in time among thy peers ; 

No s ever brake the band 

he, the S himself, may come 

S to -S", Ghost to Ghost. 

call The s's from their golden day 

My s is at peace with all. 

And of my S as of a wife. 

Two ss of a diverse love 

Thro' which the s breathes no more? 

The churl in s, up or down . 

The churl in s, howe'er he veil 

But in my s will I dwell, 

He breathed the s of the song ; 

While thou, dear s, happy star. 

Let all my genial s's advance. 

lust of gain, in the s of Cain, 

And the s of murder works . 

a 5 bounded and poor ; . 

Peace, angry j, and let him be 

When all my s reels 

Would the happy s descend . 



Sir Galahad 46 

To E. L. . 12 

L. of Burleigh 64 

11 . 70 

11 . 300 

Princess, iii. 298 

11 iv. j 24 

■> . 546 

143 



ti VII. 

In Mem,x\\\. 
tr xvii. 

11 XX. 

11 xxviii. 
n xxxviii. 

11 xxx ix. 

xl. 

xli. 

11 xlii. 

m xlvi. 

11 Ii. 

,'r lv. 

.. hx. 

Ix. 

ti Ixxxi. 

: 11 Ixxxiii. 

11 Kxxiv. 

1 1 ixxxv. 

11 lxxxvii. 

11 xc. 

11 xcii. 



IF 


S 


ir CXX1I. 


9 


II CXX1V. 


10 


II CXXVJ. 

:■ Con. 
laud, I. i. 


18 
77 
23 


11 iv. 


40 
38 


II XIII. 


44 



TFXXYSOX'S WORK'S. 



3S9 



POEM. LINE. 

Touch a t among things divine, . Ode on Well. 139 
like a household S at the walls, . Enid . 1252 

heard the. Vs of the waste and weal J Guinevere . 128 
beheld three si mad with joy . " . 250 

so glad were 11 and men . . » . 267 

ill prophets were they all. S's and men: u . 271 

round him bent the s's of the hills •> .281 

lifted up in s he moved away. . En. Arden . 327 
all her vital s's into each ear . . Aylmer'i F. 201 
they that cast her s into flesh, . 11 . 481 

meek. Exceeding 'poor in j' — . '• . 754 

hear it, S of Cassivciaun ! . . Boadicea . 20 

spin l-lhritling. 
1 hose s-t eyes so keen and beautiful Ode to Mem. 39 

spirt. 
upjettcd in s's of wild sea-smoke . Sea Dreams 52 

spirted 
Princes blood s upon the scarf, . Enid . . 208 

spit (s.) 
Lit; of roasting ox Moan round the i Lucretius . 132 

spit fverb ) 

1 hate, abhor, s, sicken at him ; . Lucretius . 156 

spite. 

Delicious s's and darling angers . Madeline . 6 

half in love, half s, hewoo'dand wed Dora . , 37 

Fill'd 1 was with folly an J r, . I. t Cray 15 

sins of emptiness, gossip and r . Princett, ii. 78 

The civic slander and the s ; . /u Ment. cv. 22 

Nor ever narrowness or s, . 11 ex. 17 

a city, with gossip, scandal and s ; Maud, I. iv. 8 

His face, as I grant, in i ol >, ., xiu. 8 

all our churchmen foam in ; . To /■. D. Mauriceq 

'A ship ol fools' he shn:k'd in s . The Voyage 77 

I hate the f"i and the foiti -s . . Spiteful Let. ii 

hate and pity, and 5 and scorn . Lucretius . 77 

spin n't. 

and the I and stir Of foiiiiuiiiis . Princess, i. 214 

spteeu. 

They are fill'd with idle s: ; . . VaionofSin 124 

cook'd lus *, Communing with his ■ Prvuest, i. 65 

with the least little touch of i. . Maud, 1. ii, 11 

Geraint Rash d into sudden 1 ; . Enid . . 273 

is your i fioth dout, or hive ye more ';' Vanen . C17 

spleen born. 

S-b, I think, and proofless . Vivien . 552 

nful, 

rode Geraint, a little i yet, . . Enid . .29! 

splendid. . 

Sees whatever fir ami i . . L. of Burleigh 17 
So j in r * i — ,. \a Mid hisattire. . Enid . . 620 
people cried '.!>' is the flower. . The Flower 16 

tplendour. 

A sudden j from behind . . Arabian .Vs. 81 

The maiden it of the morning star D.o/F. lr'ow.$y 

Made lightnings in the 1 of the moon Af. a Arthur 137 

The r falls on castle walls . . Princess, lii. 348 

I I. iiited o'er a press n iv. 457 

ig s's and the golden scale 11 v. 39 

A flying r out of brass and steel, . 11 vi. 345 

suck a blinding r from the sand, . 11 vii. -:s 

height and cold, and the s of the hills? .■ . 171 

d the 1 of the sun : . In Stem.Vm. B 

All her f seems No livelier . . 11 xcvii. 6 

And breaking let the s fall . . 11 Con. no 

1 saw the treasured s, her hand, . Maud, I. vi. 84 

whose e plucks Die slavish hal .11 x. 3 

U toft it " xviii. •;•) 

! 111 all her s. . " xix. 50 

And -a dewy t falls . . . "II iv. 32 

1 lonely r . Ded of Idylls 40 

daily fronted him (n some fresh j; Enid . . 14 
1 low 1 in the world, " 

e.i.i aside A i dear to wonie.i Uxi 

splenetic. 

And ihcrefoic r, personal, base, . Maud, I x. 33 



POEM. LINT. 

Princess, v. i ; 
/ 'mien 

Guinevere 19 

Sea Dreams 127 

. Enid . . 938 
The Captain 45, 4 j 

Audley CI. 



The Daisy . 86 
Lu. Arden , 442 



136 

218 



splinter (s.) 
into fiery' it leapt the lance . 
darted spikes and s's of the wood . 

splinter (verb. ) 
and to s it into feuds 
gay navy there should s on it, 

splinter d. 
A lance that s like an icicle 
Spars were s, ... 

split. 
upon the corn-laws, where we s, . /* unity Ct. 34 
wild figtree s Their monstrous idols Princess, iv. 61 
takes, and breaks, and cracks, and s's, 11 v. 516 

Splugen. 
j And up the snowy ^ drew, . 

spoil 5.) 
I the children laden with their s ; 

spoil verb 
to slay the WV, and s the land, 
and s's My uuss in being ; 

spoiTd. 
still the foeman s and burn'd 

spoiler. 
loud sabbath shook the s down ; 

spoilt. 
You have * this child : . . . Princess, v. 112 
thou hast s the purpose of my life Guinevere . 45O 

spoke. 
She s at large of many things . Miller's D. 155 
at the last she r of me . . " -156 

Last night, when some one s his name, Fatima 15 
She rand laugh' d : I shut my sight (Mnone . 184 
.V slowly in her place. . . . D.o/F. Worn </? 
We s of other things : we coursed Gardener's D. 217 
in that time and place, I s to her, " . 221 

I s, while Audley feast Huiniu'd . Audley Ct . 
Poet-like he s . . . . E.t. Morris 

mcthing like to this he s. 11 

I s her name alone. ... 11 

Whether he s too largely : " 

So j 1 knowing not the things that were. 



Guinevere 

Lucretius 



The Victim 17 
Ode on Well. 1 2 3 



3 
27 
41 

73 

89 

'4 

294 

4-5 



I s without restraint, . . . TalkingO. 

And mystic sentence s ', " 

I s, but answer came there 1 
Sweet Emma .More-land } 10 me : 
Petulant she s, and at herself 
s of those That lay at wine . 
it was duty s, not I. 
i of war to come and many deaths 
I s not then at first, but watch'd . 
then stood up, and s impetuously 
being caught, feign death, S not . 
Vet she neither s nor moved . •■ 

Ida s not, rapt upon the child . 11 vi 

Ida 5 not. gazing on the ground, . 11 

Old studies failed : seldom she *; » vii. 

Hortensia s against the tax ; . »» 
Who s few words and pithy, . 11 Con. 

liut s not, rapt in nameless reverie 11 

I with as fierce an anger f . . Maud. 1 1. 1. 

And s of a hope for the world . ..III. vi 
sweet seventeen subdued me ere slier The Brook 1 1 3 
while she s, I saw where James . »» .116 

I s with heart, and he. it and force The Letters 37 
Hcramongyou.and the Manwhoj; OdeonWell. 178 
Who never « against a foe . . " . 185 

llalfinwardly, half audibly she s . Laid . 
He 4 and fell to work again . u . 202 

Piince and Earl Yet * together, . •• . 
if he s at all, would break perforce '• . . 861 
lie .1 111 words part beard, . Vivien .688 

I s And ansuer'd bun .it full. Elaine . 285 
.t. he answer'd not. Or short and coldly " . 88a 

While he s She neither blush'd . o . 959 

and Enoch I his love, . . . Ln Arden. 40 

1 till the morrow, when lie r . . M 

Philip coming somewhat closer s. 11 . 359, 



/ 'oices 
Ed. Gray . 
Pnneest,Fro.iji 

11 ii. 112 

. 283 
lii. 1 h 

iv. 320 

. 3,3 

• 

. 213 
vii. 16 

I . -• 
9* 

108 
>7 



CONCORDANCE TO 



ir 


444 
668 


Aylmers F. 


9'3 
213 


Sea Dreams 


722 

2il 


" 


259 
27O 



POEM. LINE. 

answer* d Annie . tenderly she s ; . En. Arden . 419 

gently * Annie, when I 5 to you, . 

Enoch y no word to anyone, 

so fell back and s no more. . 

I know not, for he s not 

While thus he 5, his hearers wept 

5 with me on the shore ; 

"were you silent when I ^ to-night 

youi rough voice {You s so loudi 

I started, and s I scarce knew how ; Grandmother^^ 

spoken. 
would have 5, hut he found not words M.d~ Arthunj?. 
well to speak, To have s once? . Love and Duty '55 
would haves. And warn'd that madman Vision o/S in 5 5 
so she would have s, but there rose Princess, iv. 454 
sweet soul, had hardly s a word, . Maud, II. i. ti 
z to her. And loosed in words . Enid . . 954 
half her realm, had never s word . Elaine , 7} 
Has Arthur s aught? »i . n8 

had not his poor heait .S with That, F,?i Arden 620 
3 f ou .-hall say that having 5 with me Aylmers F 311 
Down they dropt— no word was s — The Captain 51 

sponged. 

S and made blank ofcnmeful record StS Stylites 156 

spon^y-tuet 
Is hoar with rime, or s-70 ; ToF. D. Maurice 42 

sport !s. J 
But take it — earnest wed with s, . Day-Dnt . 279 
s Went hand in hand with Science ," Princess, Pro. 79 
otherwhere Pure s: ... 11 . 8r 

Li ha, wild with s, . 11 . 100 

Or master'd by the sense of s, . n iv. 138 

— the striplings !— for their s .'— . 11 v. 389 

The j half-science, fill me with a faith »i Con. 76 
He mixt In all our simple s s ; In Mem. Ixxxviii. 10 
and loud With s and song, . . ir xcvii. 28 

The s of random sun and shade. . 11 Con. 24 

to Dreak her s's with graver fits , Vivien . 36 
pretty s's have brighten' d all again <r . 154 

on love And s and tilts and pleasure, Guinevere 384 
Me the s of ribald Veterans, . Boadicea . 50 

sport (verb.) 
To s beneath thy boughs . . Talking O. too 
hence, indeed, she s's with words, In Mem. xlvii. 9 

spot. 

A * cf dull stagnation . 
So find I every pleasant .s 

spouse. 
"Worthy a Roman s. f 
If ever maid or s, . 
With only Fame for .? . 
Hope and Memory, 5 and bride. 



spray ifoam.) I'OEM. i.isz. 
tender curving lines of creamy s; Lotos-E's. . 107 



lorn from the fringe of s. 



D. of E. Worn. 40 



Talking O . 190 
Poet's Song ro 
Princess, v. 228 



, Pal. of Art 245 
. In Mem. viii. 9 

D. ofF. Wnm. 164 
. Talking O . . 34 
. Princess, in. 226 
. On a Mourner 23 



SpOuKs.) 

little wide-mouth'd heads upon the S Godi'va . 56 
s whereon the gilded ball Danced Princess, Pro. 63 

spout (verb 1 
S from the maiden fountain in her Lucretius . 237 

scouted. 

golden gorge of dragons s forth . Pal. of Art 23 

_? his foam-fountains in the sea . Eolos-E's. , 152 

the fountain s, showering wide . Vis ion of Sin 21 
fountains s up and showering down Princess, i. 215 

spouting. 
as a stream that 5 from a cliff 



392 

4 

14 

5 



. Guinevere . 602 



sprang. 

Out I s from glow to gloom : . Princess, iv. 

out of stricken helmets 5 the fire. . >i v. 

Psyche as she s To meet it, . . 11 vi. 

6 up for ever at a touch, . . J « Mem. cxi. 
and the blood .V to her face . _ . Elaine 
.STrom the midrirfofa prostrate king Ay liner's F. 
To the altar-stone she s alone, . The Victim 
jNo dragon warriors from Cadmean Lucretius . 
yell'd again Half-suffocated, and 5 up " 
And from it s the Commonwealth, if 



spray (twig, 
From s, and branch, and stem, 
The snake .slipt under a s, 
a song on every s Of birds . 
touchwood, with a single Jlourishings Aylmers F. 512 

spread, 
s his sheeny vans for flight ; . Love ^nd Death 8 

time and space to work and s. 'VouasknteivhySetc.ib 
So muscular he s, . . . . Gardeners D. 8 
A cedar s his dark-green layers . u . 115 

S the light haze along the river-shores ir . 259 

hope ere death S's more and more StS Stylites 15^ 
The life that ss in them, . . Talking O. . 192 
close and dark my arms I s, . . i< . 225 

S upward till thy boughs discern . ir . 247 

light shall s, and man be hker man Golden Year 35 
sees the sacred morning s . . Two Voices 80 
every cloud, that s's above 11 . 446 

o'er the dark a glory s' s, . . Sir Galahad 55 
To s into the perfect fan, . Sir L. audQ. G. 17 
The chap-fallen circle s's: . . Vision of Sin 172 
branches thereupon S out at top . Princess, iv. 188 
A rampant heresy, such as if it 5 . 11 

S thy full wings, and waft him o'er. In Mem. ix. 
.9 his mantle dark and cold, . . - 11 x.\u. 

Proclaiming social truth shall s . 11 exxvi. 
o'er the friths that branch and ^ . ir Con. 

over whomthy darknessmust have s Maud,l. xv'iii. 25 
boil'd the flesh, and s the board, . Enid . 39T 

he rose, he ^ his arms abroad . En Arden . 911 
s the Word by which himself had . Sea Dreams 193 

spreadeth. 
Which the moon about her .r 

spreading, 
s made Fantastic plume 

sprig, 
ss of summer laid between the folds, Enid . 

spring (fountain, etc.) 
Do beating hearts of salient s's . Adeline 
The s's of life, the depths of awe, . Two Voices 
f If Death so taste Lethean s's) . luMem.xWn. 
While yet beside its vocal s's , 11 Ixiii. 

Nor ever drank the inviolate s , 11 Ixxxix, 
The bitter s's of anger and fear ; . Maud, I. x. 
In mine own lady palms I cull'd the j Vivien . 122 
sets her pitcher underneath the s. En. Arden . 207 

Spring (season.) 
.V Letters cowslips on the hill ? . Adeline . 6r 
thebreathing-sOfHopeand Youth. The Poet . 27 
Sweet as new buds in S. . . D.ofF. Worn. 272 
tho* I spared thee all the s, . . The Blackbird 9 
Caught in the frozen palms of .9. . " .24 

'tween the s and downfall of the light StS. Stylites 10S 
in these latter ss I saw . . Talking O. . 75 

Like those blind motions of the S, " . 175 

Inthe 5"afuller crimson comes(rep.) Locks ley H. 17 
my pulses with the fullness of the S. ir . 36 

The maiden 6" upon the plain SirL. andQ.G. 3 
She seem'd a part of joyous .V ; . 11 . 23 

a thousand rings of 5 In every bole, Princess, v. 227 
strip a hundred hollows bare of 6" rr vi. 49 

And all the secret of the 5 . In Mem. xxiii. 19 
The herald melodies of s, . . 11 xxxviii. 6 
And men the flies of latter $■ . . ir xlix. 

And every winter change to s . n liji 

I dream'd there would be S no more, ir lxvii" 
6* that swells the narrow brooks . 
As not unlike to that of S. . 
in my breast •$ wakens too : . 
earnest in it of far s's to be. . 
My s is all the nearer, . 
6" is here with leaf and grass ? 

spring 'verb.) 
s's on a level of bowery lawn, 
ringing, s's from biand and mail ; 



, Margaret 



■_ T/ie Voyage 43 



26 
140 



49 



16 



lxxxiv. 



H cxiv. 

Vivien 
The Window 



407 
59 
. 12S 



Poet's Mind 31 
Sir Galahad 54 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



•}n[ 



TOEM. LINE. 

she whose elfin prancer j\s . Sir L.andQ G 33 
a tiger-cat In act to s. . . .Princess, u. 4^7 
as prompt to s against the pikes . n m. 269 

n the clowning race of humankind " vii. 279 
as a dove when up she ss . . fit item xu. 1 
the wiser man who s's Hereafter, . " cxuc. ? 
sober freedom out of which there s's Ode mi ! Veil 164 
Ready to s, waiting a chance : . Guiuezeic . ri 
Wilt f to me, and claim me thine, .1 . 561 

springing: 

took root, and s forth anew . 
J alone With a shiill inner sound, 
sprinkled. 



The Poet . 21 
T/ie Mermaid '19 



stunted s's of West or La_st : 



POEM. LINE. 

Priiuess, ii. £4 

squeezed. 
he had s himself betwixt the bars Princess, Pro. ira 

squire. 
Lale-left an orphan of the s. . Miller's D 34 

slain with laughter roll'd the gilded .5'. Primes' v. 51 
Our ponderous j will give . . Maud. I. \.\. ?.i 
the four-year-old I sold the S.' . The Brook 1 .17 
the .9 had seen the colt at grass . •■ . 1 | 

shook his diowsy s awake . . Enid . . 125 
page, and maid, and s. and seneschal < 
and hurl'd it toward the s . .1 
and the s Chafing his shoulder : 



and the blood Was s on your kirtle. Princess, ii 255 In silence, did him service asai; 



710 
872 

675 



household Fury .r with blood 
jewels on it .i' about in gold . 

sprouted. 
manlike, but his brows-Had s, 
sprung. 
tall flag-flowers when they s . 
spun. 



. Maud, 1. xix 32 
. Aylmer's F. 2.-1 



a fair young s who sat alone, 
twice to-day. 1 am your S.' 



I 'ivien 
Elaine 



squireling. 

Princess, iv. 1S7 dinner To half the s's near : . 

squirrel. 

Miller's D. 53 i And snared the jof the glen? 



Maud, I. xx. 26 



Princess, ii. 231 



squotre. 

wheels of Time .? round in station, Lore and Ditty 74 \ Thofaknaws I hallus voated wi" .S -V farmer 

1 he petty cobwebs we have s : . Ik Mem exxm. 8 I wi" haaie oonderd haacre o* ,S*i . » 

An' S ull be sa mad an' all . . 11 

spur[s.) ] I 'a monaged for -V come Michaelmas n 

From J to plume a star of tournament Md' Arthur 121 , lhey t„j„ s w h a t I bciin to S . n 

jp we rose, and on the j we went. Gardener's D. 32 ■ ] j one my duty b y 5 



on the J she fled : and more We know not Princess,\ 150 
it seems my j\s are yet to win. . Enid . .120 
from s to plume Red as the rising sun Elaine 
Set lance in rest, strike s, 11 

spur 'verb.) 
i's an imuaiive will 



3°7 

455 



In .Weill, cix. 



desire That 

spurn ' d. 
S by this heir of the liar— . . Maud, I. xix. 7 3 

spurred. 

s at heart with fieriest energy . To J. M. A". 7 

East I s: 1 lelt n.y veins Sncich . Princess, v. 526 

■S with his rembie war-cry ; . . Enid . 1019 

by liis own stale devil s, . . A} liner s F. 290 

spurt. 
A sudden r 0:" woman 'sjealousy — Vivien . 374 

</j 

harry me, petty s And liaiuess.' . Gmnezere 



J" 
48 

56 
57 



35S 

spy (verb.) 
embower the nest. Some boy would s Princess, Pro. 148 

ime secret scandal if he might Gmnezere . 271 
she thought ' he spies a field of death . 1 . 133 | 

". .V out my face . En Arden . 216 . 
to s I he weakness of a people . Aylmer's F. 369 

squadron 

,S'« and square* of men in brazen D of F ll'onl. 33 
cm batilcdsnuarcs, And .ii of tl'cPrhcc :/'/•//««!, v.237 . 

squall 

s nor storm Could keep me from Gardener's D. 186 

the gray skills of a lifting s . En. Arden . 830 

sqitail'd. 

The parrot scrcam'd, inc peacock s, DayDm. . 144 

square, 
s's of men in brazen plates, . . /' 0/ F.ll'oiu. 33 
/Ml the land in flowery s's, . . CardeneVs D. 75 
s s of tropic summer shut . . Amphson . 87 
Muses of the cube and j . . Princess, Fro.xji 
casement slowly giows a glimmering s; n iv, 31 
embattled fs And squadrons of the " v .. r 3° 
They call'il me in the put lie s's . In Mem l.wiii j 1 
ina/e ot quick About the flowering i's, 11 cxrv. 3 
And I loathe the •>'» and streets . Maud, 1 1 >v. c.-. 
Dash'd on every rocky 1 . . OdeonWelU 12, 
le s of his heroic breast, . Enid . . 75 
A 1 of text that looks a little blot, Vivien . 521 
every r ol text an awfui chaim, . << . 523 

.Uhe ruddy s hi" compilable light, Ett. A nit 11 • 7-7 



S's in Lunnon, an summun I reckons -r 

staa'te. 
voated wi" Squoirc an' choorch an' s .V. Farmer 1 3 

stab [s. 1 
deathful i's wcie dealt apace, . Oriana . 53 

stab iverb ) 
lutle boys begin to shoot and s . Princess, Con. 6i 

stabbed. 

should have s me where I lay . Oriana . 55 

1 hree times I j hull thro' and thro' The .Sisters . 29 

She would have s him : . . Vivien . 702 

.S" thro' the heart's affections . " . 717 

stable. 
ran To loose him at the s s, . . Aylmer's F. 126 

stable -went h. 
A plump-aim'd Ostleress and a s-iu Princess, i. 223 



staff. 
struck his s against the rocks 

staler. 
I s in the stream : . 
And is blindly ere she sink? 

ttaggeVd. 
S' and shook, holding the branch 
staggering'. 
and s back With stroke on stroke . Princess, 



. Golden Year 3; 

. Princess, vi. 301 
. In Mem. \\\. 1 4 

. En. Arden . 768 



5" 



/iiMem. xw'ii. ir 



. Enid 






stagnate, 
s's in the weeds of sloth , 
let foul u long s and be, 

stagnation. 
A spot of dull s, without light 

stain 
Some for blemish in a name of note, Vt\ 

to have !u\cd One peerless, without*.' Elaine 

stain [verb.] 
And I, 'Can clouds of nature s 

stair. 
r.toad-based flights of marble s's . 
'1 he luck lose clear, or winding s. 
up the coiksciew s With hand and " 'at 
his footsteps smite the threshold is St S. Sty lit 
adown the * Stole on : . . . Godtva 
up a flight of J 1 * into the hall. . Princess, ii. 17 
A column'd entry shone and marble s's «• 
me they boie up the broad is, . 11 



Pal. of Art 245 



. 68r 

1003 



feitflrm.buxiv.85 

Arabian .Vs. 117 



392 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

high above a piece of turret s, , Enid . . 320 

All up the marble s, tier over tier, Elaine 1241 

ghostly footfall echoing on the s, . Guinevere . 503 

golden feet on these empurpled s's Lucretius . 735 

stake 
I'll s my ruby ring upon it , - Princess,Pro. 168 

stalk. 
he boweth the heavy s's ' A spirit haunts,' etc 7 
these are but the shatler'd u . InMem Ixxxi. 7 

stall. 
and even beasts have s's, . . StS.Stylites 107 

The s's are void, the doors are wide Sir Galahad 31 
A man upon a s may find, . . InMem.lxxvi. 9 
'Jake him to s and give him corn, Enid . . 371 
Enoch took his charger to the s, . u . . 382 

stalling: 

chamber for the night, And j for the horses Enid 10S8 

S ' tamford-iown. 
Burleigh house by S-t . . . L of Burleigh 92 

stammer 
made my tongue so s and trip , Maud, I. vi. 83 
left him leave to s, ' is it indeed?' Elaine . 419 

stammer d, 
I s that I knew him— . . . Princess, iii. 190 

stammering. 

they sat S and staring : . . Guinevere . 101 

j 'scoundrel' cut of teeth that ground Ay liner's F. 328 

stamp . 
s's the caste of Vere de Vere L C V, de Vere 40 
to s him with het master's mark ; . Vivien - 609 

stamped. 
And the leaf is ^ in clay. . . Vision of Sin 82 

stanched. 
bare him in, There s his wound, . Elaine . 519 

stand, 
s beside my father's door, . * . Ode to Mem. 57 
Where you j you cannot hear . Poet's Mind 19 
s s in the distance yonder : , ?f . 30 

S's in the sun and shadows all Love and Death 11 
I will s and mark, . . . To J. M. K. 14 

at the casement seen her s? . L. ofShalott, i. 25 

j s before thee, Eleanoie ; . . Eleanor e . 69 
To 5" apart, and to adore, . . n -79 

Gargarus S s up and takes the morning CEnone 31 
s's a spectre in your hall . L. C. V. de Vere 42 
charm'dand tiedlo wherehes'.?, — D. ofF.Wom. 194 
her fair form may 5 and shine, *OJ old sat Freedom' 21 
half j J up And bristles ; . Walk, to the M. 23 
saw An angel s and watch me, . St. S. Stylites 34 
That s within the chace. . . Talking O. 4 
That here beside me s's, u . 342 

Than that earth should s at gaze . Locksley H. 180 
when the tide of combat s's, . . Sir Galahad 10 
See the lordly castles s : . L. of Burleigh 18 

Ring'd with the azure worldhe s's. The Eagle . 3 
like a spire of land that $\y apart . Princess, iv. 262 
beat to battle where he s's; if . 555 

*S, who goes?' Two from the palace 11 v. 3 

this is all, I 5 upon her side : . ir . 281 

see how you 5 Stiff as Lot's wife . n vi. 223 

all the phantom, Natme, s's— . /;; Mem. iii. 9 
D?.tk house, by which once more \ s m vn. t 
we may s Where he in English . 11 xvm. 1 

in the furrow musing s's; . . <f Ixiii. 27 

jet this holly s: . . . »■ civ. 2 

From form to form, and nothing s's; >i cxxn. 6 
Six feet two. as I think, he s 's ; . Maua,\xn\. 10 
Yet I thought I saw her s . . » II. 1. 38 
Did he s at the diamond door . >r 11. 16 

glory of manhood s on his ancient u III. vi. 21 
all the wood s's in a mist of green The Brook , 14 
and there *S".i Philip's farm . » -38 

Let his great example i Colossal . Ode on Well 220 
To break the blast of winter, j ; ToB.D Maurice 22 



POEM. LINE. 

ride with him to battle and a" by, . Enid . . 94 
so bold, and could I so j by .11 . . 102 

good knight's horse s's in the court 11 . . 570 
6' aside, And if I fall . . n tooo 

if a man who s'? upon the brink . >• . 1321 

Set up the charge you know, tosorfall! Vivien . 553 
-S" High on a heap of slain, . . Elaine . 306 
seem'd to s On some vast plain , Guinevere . 76 
S's in a wind, ready to break and fly, n . 363 

S's at thy gate for thee to grovel to — Ay liner's F. 652 
at Beauty's call would perch and s Coquette, i. 3 
Shall s: ay surely: then it fails . Lucretius . 260 
and I s on the slope of the hill . The Window 9 

standard (ensign. ) 
With the s's of the peoples . . Locksley II. 126 

standard (tree.) 
espaliers and the s's all Are thine ; The Blackbird 5 

standest. 
Thou J in the rising sun, . In Mem. cxxix. 3 

sta?ideth. 
That s there alone, . . D. of the O. Year 50 

standing. 

lilies, snear Purple-spiked lavender : Ode ic Mem 109 
Joined not, but stood, and s saw . Pal of Art 254 
Stiller than chisell'd marble, s there ; D.oj F. Worn. 86 
Memory s near Cast down her eyes. To J. S. . 53 
wicket-gate and found her s there Gardener 'sD. 20S 
He, j still, was clutch' d : . . Princess, iv. 241 
S like a stately Pine ... 11 v. 336 

And s, muffled round with woe, . InMem xiv. 5 
she is s here at my head ; . . Maud, IJ. v. 65 
The maiden j in the dewy light. , Elaine . 351 

5 by the shield In silence, tr . 393 

thro 1 the casement ^ wide for heat 11 1227 

Philip s up said falteringly . . En. Afden . 283 
The Virgin Mother s with her child Sea Dreams 2-14 
j loftily charioted, . . . Boddicea 3. 70 

stannin . 
What atta s theer for, . . . N Farmer 65 

stanza. 
those three s's that you made . Talking O 135 

star. 
Distinct with vivid s\? inlaid . . Arabian N'z. 90 
Sole j of all that place and time, . y . 152 

Was cloven with the million s* s . Ode to Mem. 35 
With golden s's above . . The Poet . 2 

shepherd who watcheth the evening j. Dying Sivan 3s 
There would be neither moon nor sv 1 he Merman 21 
Like to some branch of s's we see L. qfShatotl,i\\ 11 
a s, in inmost heaven set . . Eleanors . 89 
white-breasted like a .? . . . (Euoue . 56 
wanton pard Eyed like the evening 5 n . 196 

the loud stream and the trembling jV tr . 9.1$ 

into Troy, and ere the a's come forth n . F.58 

Sole as a flying .T shot thto' the sky Pal. of Art 123 
Crown' d dying day with s's, . ?i . 184 

A ^ that with the choral starry dance tf . 253 

happy J* J above them seem to brighten MayQnecn,\.^ 
up to Heaven and die among the s's i< iii. 40 

the hollow dark, like burning s's, . D. of F. Worn. 18 
large white s's rise one by one . 11 . 223 

You are the evening s, alway . Margaret . 27 
What songs belcw the waning s's . 11 . 33 

th\* s Rose with you thro alittleaic To % S. . 23 
While the s's burn, the moons increase u . 71 

if Nature's evil s Drive men ' Love thou thy laud' 73 
bump'd the ice into three several j'j The Epic . 1.2 
cry that shiver'd to the tingling j'j M. d' Arthur 199 
From spin to plume a s of tournament u . 223 

ere a s can wink, beheld her there. Gardener sD 121 
and Love's white y Bean-'d » . t6i 

all their mystic gulfs with fleeting s's; u . 257 

1 wake ■ the still sV sparkle : . StS.Stylites 112 
paused Among her s s to hear us ; Love and Dutyj-z 
ss that hung Love-charm'd to listen : 1* . 72 

follow knowledge like a sinking s, Ulysses . 31 
the baths Of all the western Vs, ir , 61 



TEA'JVySOV'S IVORK'S. 



393 



POEM LINE. 

o'er them many a slrding r. . . Day-Dm. . 177 
On secrets of trie brain, the s's. . 11 . 223 

■ ne, thy bride, a flittering 4, St Arties' Eve 23 
star-like mingles with the s's . Sir Galahad 48 
on my cradle shone the Northern s Princess, i. 4 
without a 4, Not like a king : . 11 . 116 

vvingYI horses dark against the s's : " . 20S 

In shining draperies, headed like a s. 11 it 94 

elonous names Wei e fewer, scatter'dx's, > . 140 

The 4. the bird, the fish, the shell •■ . 3C1 

in the while wake of the morning s » iii. 1 
the nebulous s we call the Sun, . " iv. 1 

Now ponng on the glowworm, now the s, -i . 193 

leader wildswan in among the is . >» . 414 

those three s's of the airy Giant s zene, 11 v. 250 

The tops shall strike from s to s, . 11 \i 41 

S after 4, arose and fell : , . 11 vu. 35 

lie the Earth, all Danafi to the s's •■ . 167 

sit a s upon the sparkling spire , . >t . 182 

*The s's, 'she whispers, 'blindly run;//; Mem- iii. 5 
Slide from the bosom of the if. . 11 xvn. 16 

orr. into the perfect s . . ■» xxiv. 15 

Look also. Love, a brooding s, . ir xlv. 15 

grapples with his evil s, ; . . 11 lxni. 8 

clouds that drench the morning s . •« Ixxi. 22 

1o where in yonder orient s . . t lxxxv. 15 
Hefore the crimson-circled s . . » lxxxvm. 47 
He reaas the secret of the r, . n xcvi. 23 

And one trie shaping of a s . . , 11 cu. 36 

A sphere of s's about my soul, . n exxi. 7 
While thou, dear spirit, happy s, . <• cxxvi. 18 
liut tho I seem in s and flower . 11 exxix. 6 
brighten like the s that shook . 11 Con. 31 

s and system tolling past I . 122 

if ever that lrght be ruy leading s ' Maud, I iv. 12 
you fair s's that crown a happy day ir xviu. 30 
Beat, happy *' s, timing with things n , 81 

like a silent lightning under the s's •• III. vl. 9 
1 murmur under rr.oon and s's . T/ie Brook . 178 
holds her head to other is, u . 1^5 

sweetly gleam d the s's . . . The Letters 41 
Lavish Honour shower'd all her it Ode on Well. 196 
J\--inembcringallihebeautyoflhal4 Ded oj Idylls" $-, 
With moon and trembling s's ■ Enid . . 8 
charger trampling ni.tny a prickly s t« , . 3r^ 
as the wnuc and glittering s of morn n . . 7>4 
Kiss dthc white jupon hisnoblcfronl," . 1605 

lather scem'u a lovely baleful s . Vivien . 111 

misty J.Whrchisthesccondinalineofj'ji' . 358 

her bard, her siher 4 of eve, , n . 8ot 

like a s in blackest night. . . Elaine 
the great s s that globed themselves En Arden 5,; 
Shone Irke a mystic s . . . Ay Inters P. 72 
robe of jasmine sown with s's : . 11 . 158 

,S to s vibrates light : 11 . 578 

such a 1 <»t morning in their blue, 11 , 692 

every s in heaven Can make it fair : Sea Dreams 82 
I saw one lovely x Larger and larger. ,1 . 9r 

crown'd with tt and high among the it, " . 233 

Cose over us, the srlvcr s . , Jlthonus . 25 
Eie yet they blind the it . . \< . 39 

New f'x ail night above the brim . The Voyigt 25 
Am' nil her it decay ' . . The Ringlet 10 

Melt into s's for the land's desire Wei toAlc.iau 21 
the j'jabmitihe moon Lookbeautllul, Spec o) Iliadw 
all the j J Shine, and the Shcpheid gladdens 11 . 15 
Fancy sadder than a single s . Coouette, i. 1 , 
Thio' silence and the trembling is On a Mourner 28 
falls the least white t of fcnow, . Lucrttius . 107 
Taken the it ft om the night . The Window ,9 

And >ou are his morning s 11 . 18 j 

sta>- \etb ) 
i The black earth with brilliance . Ode to Mem. 19 

starloard 
Roll'd to s, toll'd to laiboaid . Lotos-Es . 1 51 

starlroidcr'd 
Tho silk l-j coverlid . , . Day-Dm. . Si 



stare (s ) poem line. 

last, you fix'd a vacant f, . L.C. y' de I'ere 47 
With a stony lintish s. . . . Maud, 1. xiiL 22 

stare 'verb ) 
Painted, who r at open space, . Enid . 1 1 1 7 

stared. 
Whereat he t, replying, half-amazed, Codiva . 21 
Fantastic gables, crowding, s ' 11 , 61 

And s, with his foot 011 the prey. . Poet's Song . 12 
s As blank as death in marble : . J'nncess, i. 174 
S with great eyes, and laugh'd . 11 iv. ror 

Fear S" in her eyes, ... 11 . 358 

aghast The women s at these . n vi. 342 

j On eyes a bashful azure, . . The lirook . 205 
he started up and s at her. . . Enid . 1238 

unswallow'd piece, and turning t; n . »4-y 
full-busted figure-head? o'er the ripple En Ardeu$i> 
as I s, a fire, The fire that left . Lucretius . C4 

staring-. 
and thou art s at the wall, . . Locksley II. 79 
All s at her 111 her faded silk : . Enid . . 61 7 
men and women s and aghast, . •> . ?(^? 

Linger'd that other, s after him ; . Elaine . 717 

they sat Stammering and t : . Guinevere . 101 

.i for ever from their gilded walls Ay blur's F. S33 

stark, 

but when she saw me lying s . Princess, vi. S| 

starlight. 
Thro' all yon J keen, . . . St Agnes' Eve 22 

star-like. 

The s-l sorrows of immortal eyes, DofP Worn 91 
And s-l mingles with the stars. . Sir Galahad 48 

starred. 
S from Jehovah's gorgeous armouries Milton . 6 

starry. 
The night is s and cold, my (nend D. of the O. I 'cur ; 1 

star-shme. 
By s-% and by moonlight . . Oriaua . 24 

star-sisters. 
S-s answering under crescent brows : Pruuess, ii. 400 

star-stroivn. 
Mv shallop thro* the t-t calm, . Arabian N't. 36 

star-siccet. 
ss orr a gloom profound . . Maud, I. in 4 

Star! 

given to s's and bursts Ol revel . Prmctss, 



53 

start ,'veio.) 
I started once, or seem d to s in pain. D.o/E H'0111.41 
as the .vaterlily s s and slides . hrintea, iv. 230 
Would j and trembie under her feet, Maud,l.xx\\. 7j 
s from their fallen lords, . . Enid , 13,1 

started. 
I s once, or seem'd to start 111 pain, D. of F Worn 41 
Hut in a pel she s up. . . . Talking < '. 

Then they 4 from their places, . Vision oj Sin 3) 
s on his feel, 1'oie the king's letter Princess, i. 59 
Back t she, and turning round we saw " 11, .;> 
smote him on the breast , he s up , 11 iv. 146 

many a bold knight s up in heat . 11 v. 

Up s from my srde The old lion, . 11 vi. 82 

DOW and then an echo s up, .... . 349 

seized on her, And I'. mil j waking, Enid . . '. - \ 
and cither 4 while the door, i> nil 

he 4 up and stared at her . . " . 1238 

Vet blank from sleep, she 4 to him I. lame . 8t6 

Forward she 4 with a hippy cry, . En. Arden . 151 
.s from bed, and struck herself a light 11 . 41,0 

knew not wherefore, * up Shuddering, •- . t.17 

of the latest fox— where 1 — . . Aylmer's . 
Out into the road 1 4, . . . Grandmother 4 3 

startled. 
neither selfpossess'd Nor 4, . . Gardener sD.\%z 



394. 



CONCORDANCE TO 



starve. poem. 

clamouring. ' If we pay, we sV . Godivt 
'If they pay this tax, they s.' . ti 

stale (condition, etc.) 
soften'd light Of orient s. . . Ode to Mem. 
revenue Wherewith to embellish 
The slipping thro' from s to s. 
if our 5 were such As one before. 
His s the king reposing keeps. 
Built for pleasure and for s. . 
Here he lives in 5 and bounty, 
and the woman s 5 in each, „ 
And bow'd her s to them, 
still she rail d against the 5 of things 
Summon'd out She kept her s } 
reasons drawn from age and s, 
in some mystic middle s I lay. 
withdrew from summer heats ands, n 
And he should sorrow o'er my s . In Mem.x'xv 



CEnone . tii 

Two Voices 351 

" ■ 355 

Day- Dm. . 59 
L. of Burleigh 32 

11 mm . 57 

Princess, ii. 115 

750 



The lowness of the present s 

If, in thy second s sublime . 

From s to s the spirit walks ; 

range above our mortal s, 

There she walks in her s, 

Something far advanced in S, 

loved her in a s Of broken fortunes, Enid 

yea by your s And presence if 

In silver tissue talking things of s ; n 

by your s And presence I might . Elaine 

go in s to court, to meet the Queen. 



. 213 

v. 347 



ir XXIV. II 

lx. 1 

m lxxxi. 6 

11 lxxxiv. 22 

Maud,l.x\v. 3 

. Ode on Well. 275 

* 12 

. 430 
. 663 
. 182 
1118 



InMemAx'm. 

5» lxxxviii. 35 
Maud, I. x. 40 
Ode on Well. 200 



Two Voices 29 



doubts and fears were common to her J. En. Arden 517 

state {commonwealth.! 
Tho* every channel of the S ""You ask vie why* etc. 23 
And work, a joint of s, ' Love thou thy land,' etc 47 
New Majesties of mighty S's— . t, .60 

Who'd serve the s ? for if I carved Audley Ct . 47 
Visions of a perfect 6" ; . . . Vision of Sin 148 
the 5", The total chronicles of man Princess, ii. 358 
mould a mighty s's decrees , 
Or touch'd the changes of the s, . 
the s has done it and thrice as well 
But as he saves or serves the s. 
statelier. 
Could find no 5 than his peers 

stateliest. 

nor end of mine S, for thee ! . . Princess, vii. 155 

Adored her, as the s and the best . Enid . . 20 

sit the best and 5 of the land 'i . Lucretius . 172 

stateliuess. 
harmony Of thy swan-like s, . Elcdnore . 47 

Who see your tender grace and s. Guinevere . 188 

stately. 

But she is tall and s. . . . Ma ud, I. xii. 16 

stately-set. 

the fair hall-ceiling s-s . . . Pal. of .Art 141 

sta te-orac le. 

O friends, our chief s-o is mute : . Ode on Well. 23 

statesman, 
statesmen at her council met . To the Queen 29 

No blazon'di"he r nor king. * You might haz'e ivon : 24 
a s there, betraying His party -secret, Maud,\\. v. 35 
O Statesmen, guard us, guard the eye Ode on Well 160 
keep the soldier firm, the spure : . 11 . 222 

sta tesma n-warriGr. 
The s-w, moderate, resolute, . Ode on Well. 25 

station. 

wheels of Time Spun round in s, . Lot e and Duty 74 

to and fro Between the mimic s's; Princess, Pro. 79 

thro* his cowardice allow'd Her s, Guinevere . 513 

stationed. 



Ida i theie Unshaken 



statuary, 

break the works of the s. 



high on every peak a s , 



Princess, v. 
Boddicea 
Pal. of Art 



333 



64 



POEM. LINE. 


Princess, Pre. 99 


" ii. 


62 


rr IV 


182 


" 


570 


" V. 


403 


" 


499 


if vi. 


5i 


ir 


346 


alph ir Con. 


"7 


hi Mem cii. 


12 


11 Con. 


IS 


The Daisy 


6? 


Elaine 


1165 


Sea Dreams 


217 


Boddicea 


3° 


Gardener sD. 158 


Princess, v. 


499 



broken s propt against the wall . 
Look, our hall ! Our s's ! 
two great s's Art And Science 
Half turning to the broken s 
your s's Rear'd, sung to. 
highest, among the s's, statue-like 
April of ovation round Their s's . 
o'er the s's leapt from head to head 
Disrobed the glimmering s of Sir R 
In the centre stood A s veil'd ; 
But like a s solid-set, . 
I stood among the silent s's, 
She might have seem'd her s, 
s's, king or saint, or founder fell ■ 
down their s of Victory fell. . 

statue-like, 
s-l, In act to render thanks, 
highest, among the statues, $ 

stature. 

her full height her stately s draws ; D. ofF. Worn. 102 
Her s more than mortal . . Princess, Pro. 40 

statute 

an officer Rose up, and read the s's, Princess, ii. 55 

statute-book, 
According to your bitter s-b, . Princess, iv. 434 

stave (s.) 
Chant me now some wicked s, . Vision of Sin 151 

stave (verb ) 
s off a chance That breaks upon them Enid 1202 

stay. 
Thou, willing me to s . . . Madeline . 37 
S's on her floating locks the lovely Ode to Mem. 16 
Whither away? listen and si . Sea-Fairies 42 
A curse is on hei if she 5 . L.ofShalott,\\. 4 
sunset glow, That s's upon thee? . Elednore . 56 
And now it seems as hard to s . MayQ?teen,\\\. 10 
Here s's the blood along the veins. Day-Dm. . 24 
,S\j all the fair young planet . Princess, vii. 248 

Like her I go ; I cannot s ; . . In Mem. xii. 
s's thee from the clouded noons . 11 Ixxxii. 
s's him from the native land, . n xcii. 

At least to me? 1 would not y. . 11 cxix. 
who s to share the morning feast . n Con. 
W hy should 1 J? can a sweeter chance Maud, I. i. 
may s for a year, who has gone for a week 11 xvi. 
Let it go or s, so I wake . . n Ill.vi. 

' Pray s a little ; pardon me ; . The Brook 
could make me s — That proof of trust Vivien . 
' S with me, I am sick ; . . Elaine 

he pursued her calling * 6" a little ! n 
and a remnant s's with me, . . Guinevere . 440 
I have not long to s ; . . Grandmother 15,108 
To those that s and those that roam Sailor Boy 14 
My sisters crying * s for shame ; . n . iS 

here he s's upon a freezing orb . Lucretius . 139 
s's the rolling lxionian wheel, . 11 . 257 



5 
5 
3 

8 

75 

62 
6 

38 
210 
768 

88 
680 



siay'd. 
sbeneath the dome Of hollow boughs. Arabian N's.qi. 
Would they could have s with us ! Deserted H. 22 
s the Ausonian king to hear . . Pal. of Art 111 
I had not s so long to tell you all Garde?ter's D. ixj 
rummaged like a rat : no servants; Walk. to the M. ^o 
But, as for her, she s at home, . Talking O. 1T3 
In these, in those the life is s. . Day-Dm. . 38 
seven s at Christmas up to read ; . Princess, Pro. 176 
there s; Knelt on one knee, — . ir vi. 74 

But sin peace with God and man. InMemAxxix. S 
1 s the wheels at Cogoletto . . The Daisy . 23 
on a little knoll beside it, s . . Enid . . 162 
she s a minute, Then made a sudden Elaine . 389 
s ; and cast his eyes on fair Elaine : 11 . 637 

have fall'n But that they shim up: Guinevere . 303 
Philip s (His father lying sick . En. Arden . 64 
6* by this isle, not knowing where she lay tr . 6ar 

He s his arms upon his knee : . The Victim 



Stiles where we s to be kind, 



The Window 184 



T£.V.VVSOX'S WORKS. 



395 



stays. roEM. link. 

all-too-full in bud For puritanic s : Talking 0. . 60 

steak. 
Among the chops and s's .' . Will Water. 148 

steal. 
Like soften'd airs that blowing s . T700 Voices 406 
idual fingers s . . . Will Water. 26 
As slowly s's a silver flame . In AleniAxvi. 6 

every span of shade that s's, . »» cxvi. 10 
ever ready to slander and s; . Maud, I. iv. 19 

It lightly winds and s's n II. iv. 18 

I s. a wasted frame, ... 11 .69 

1 s by lawns and grassy plots, . The Brook . 170 
I cannot s or plunder, no nor beg : Enid . 1 336 
And i you from each other ! . Aylmer's F. 707 

the old mysterious glimmer s's . Tithonus . 34 

stealest. 
j fire From the fountains of thepast, Ode to Mem j 

stealing. 
to reprove her For s out of view . Maud, I. XX. 9 

stealth. 
And sent it them by s . . . Dora . . 51 

stealthily, 
s In the midwarmth of welcome . Enid . 1 1 :3 

steam. 
Old boxes, larded with the s . Will Water. 223 

dozen angry models jetted $ : . Princess, Pro. 7 3 
The dust and din and f of town : In Mem. Ixxxviii. 8 
all the hall was dim with s of flesh : Enid . 1451 
making all the night a s of fire . Guinevere . 593 
s Floats up from those dim fields . Tithonus . 68 

steam. 
ater meS mayhap wi' 'is kittle o' I .V farmer. Ci 

steamer. 
clock-work s paddling plied . , Princess, Pro. ji 

steamed. 
s From out a golden cup . . Talc/Art . 40 

steaming. 
centred in a doleful song 6' up, . Lolos-Cs. . 163 

steamship. 
In the s, in the railway, . . Locksley II. 166 

steed. 
heard the s's to battle going, . Oriana . 13 

mounted our good s' s, And boldly . Princess, i. 201 
On his haunches rose the s, . . 11 v. 482 
The towering car, the sable s's: . Ode on 1 1 'ell. 55 
couch'd their spears and prick'd their if Elaine . 478 

steel. 
The hard brands shiver Oil the s, . SirCalahad 6 
red-faced war has rods of s . . Princess, v. 11 j 
A flying splendour out of brass and s, 11 \i. 343 

steep (s. 1 
adownthcjlikeawavc I would leap The Mermaid w 
below the milky s home ship In F, D. Maurice 25 

steep (vab.\ 

j our brows in slumber's holy balm ; Lotos- E s. 69 

steeped. 

art not s in golden languors, . Madeline . 1 

irtsojin misery, . . Two i'oues 47 

steeple. 
your jubilee, rand spire ! ilel.toAle.xan.i-; 
steer [1 ) 
The s forgot to gra?e, . . Gardener's D. 84 

steer (verb.) 
Heap nn board : no helmsman > > : Sir Galahad 39 
aiunu Go witli me, lie c.in 1 uul row Elaine 

tteer'd. 
We /her toward a crimson cloud . InMent. cii. r, 
and the dead S by the dumb . Elaine 114S 

steeriir -. 

#, now, from a purple cove . . The Daisy . ;o 



stem. POEM. LINE. 

upbearing parasite. Clothing the s Isalel . . 33 
Branches they bore of that enchanted s, Lotos-El's 28 

as a funeral scarf from s to stem . M. d' Arthur 194 
1- rum spray, and branch, and s, . Talking O, 
Between dark s's the forest glows Sir Galahad 27 
the J Less grain than touchwood . Princess, iv, 313 
The two remaining found a fallen s; En.Arden 568 
That coil'd around the stately s's, 11 . 578 

step 

And with the certain s of man. . Miller's D. 96 
lo follow flying s's of Truth ' Lo^-e thou thy land' 75 
with slow s's. With slow, faint s's, St S. Stylites 179 
No more by thee my s's shall be, k rcp.) A Earewetl 3 
A s Of lightest echo, . . . Princess, iv. 195 
down the s's, and thro* the court . .1 . 533 

scaleswiihmanTheshiningi'sof Nature n vii. 24'j 
With weary s's I loiter on, . iuj/eui.xxxv'ni. 1 
measuring out The s's of Time — 11 xciv. 42 

By a shuffled s, by a dead weight Maud, Li. 14 
There were but a s to be made. . 11 iciv. 22 

I will cry to the s's above my head, 11 II. v. lot 
First as in fear, s after s, she stole Elaine . 341 

made a sudden s to the gate, . 11 . 390 

and regret Her parting s, •< . 86j 

listening till those armed s's were gone Guinevere 579 

step (verb. ) 
S from the corpse, and let him in, D. o/theO. Vear^t) 
S deeper yet m herb and fern . Talking O. 245 
S's with a tender foot, light as on air Priiicess,\\. 72 
some one s's across my grave ; . Guinevere . 57 
S's from hei airy hill, . . . On a Mourner 8 

Stephen. 
Like S, an unquenched lire. . Two Voices 219 

stepping'. 

He, * down By zig-zag paths . M. d' 'Arthur 49 

Come j lightly down the plank, . InMem.xiv. 7 

s lightly, heap'd The pieces . . Enid . 1222 

stepping-stones. 

Below the range of s-s, . . , Miller's D. 54 

That men may rise on s-s , . In Mem. i. 3 

slept. 
forth there s a foeman tall, . . Oriana . 33 
s she down thro' townand field ' O/old sat Ereedom 9 
from the ruin'd shrine he s . . M. d' Arthur 45 
And out I s, and up I crept : . /:'./ Morns 111 
S forward on a firmer ieg, . . //-'/// Water. 123 
Down s Lord Ronald from Ins tower : Lady Clare 65 
In robe and crown the king s down. Beggar Maid 3 
Then r a buxom hostess forth . Princess, i. 225 
Lightly to the warrior j, ■ . 11 v, 541 

found a little boat, and s into it . Vivien . 47 
close behind them s the lily in.nd . Elaine . 176 

into that rude hall ^ with all grace, 11 . 263 

S the long-haired long-bearded solitarv, En.Ara 
S thro' the stalely minuet . . Aylmer's I. 207 

stern 'adj ) 
Or gay, or grave, or sweet, or j, . Pal. of Art 91 
The j were mild when thou Wert by, In Mem. cix. 9 
r and sad (so rare the smiles . '1 he Daisy . 53 

('.rave, florid, >. a . far as ej e could see Sea Dreams2ii 
S he was and rash ; . . . 'The Captain 1, 

stem s ) 
as a funeral scarf from stem to s . M.d' Arthur 104 

steward. 

The wrinkled * at his task . Day-Dm. . 47 

The butler drank, the * scrawled, •• . 141 

"lis but a j of the can, . . . Will Water 1 , 

iiiit. 

on thy ribs the limpet s's . . Sailor Pay . 10 

stiff. 

or r with crackling frost. . . St S. Stylites \f\ 

My joints ."• ,1 to. . Day-Din, 

stood S as a viper fro/en • . . / 'ivien 

stiffen. 

1 into stone, . . . In Mem. c 



3^6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



stiffening. poem. line. 

Sir Aylmer Aylmer slowly s spoke : Aylmers F. 273 



stiffer. 
My nerves have dealt with s. 



Will Water. 78 



stiff-stricken. 
She sat S-s, listening ; . . . Guinevere . 409 

stifled. 
low-folded heavens S and chill'd at Aylmers F. 613 

stile. 

Or simple J from mend to mead . InMem. xcix. 7 

So Lawrence Aylmer, seated on a s The Brook . 197 

ever bided tryst at village s, . . Vivien . 228 

S's where we stay'd to be kind, . The Wiudozv 184 

By meadow and -s and wood . . 11 . 391 

Over the meadows and s's . . 1; . 199 

still. 
The pool beneath it never s, . . Miller's D. 100 
'ill be fresh and green and s, . May Queenly. 37 

and all the world is S . . 11 ii. 24 

not so deadly s As that wide forest. D. o/F. Worn. 68 
thesoundof a voice that iss! ' Break, break* etc. 12 
The moon is hid; the night iss(ciii. 2} InMem. xxviii. 2 
When all his active powers are s, . tt Ixiii. 18 

Looks thy fair face and makes it s. m lxix. 16 

sitting here so stunn'd and s, . Maud.W. i. 2 

storm was coming, butthewindswere-y Vivien . 1 
hard and S as is the face that men Elaine 1244 

to the dead earth, and the land was J. Guinevere . 8 
took and bare him off And all was j ; m . 109 

There came a day as s as heaven, m . 290 

strong on his legs, buts of his tongue Grandmother 13 

still'd. 
Hath s the life that beat from thee In Mem. vi. 12 
Who .sthe rolling wave of Galilee ! Aylmers F. jog 
bees are s and the flies are kill'd . The Window 52 

stiller. 

S than chisell'd marble, . . D. qfF. Worn. 86 

5 world of the dead, S, not fairer . Aland, II. v. 70 

but now .5", with yet a bed . . En. Arden . 699 

still-lighted. 
S-l in a secret shrine, . . Mariana in theS. 18 

stillness. 
That into 5 past again, . . . Miller's D. 
Sang to the s, till the mountain-shade (Enone 
breaks thro' the ^ of this world: . Pal. of Art 
murmur broke the ^ of that air 
rounded by the 5 of the beach 
moving toward the s of his rest, 
beauty doth inform 6" with love, 
a half-consent involved In 5 . 
A part of s, yearns to speak . 
The S of the central sea. 



227 



59 

Gardener sD. 146 
. Audley Ct. . 9 
. Locks {ley H. 344 
, Day- Dm. . 92 
. Princess, vii. 67 
InM em.Xxxx'w . 78 
it cxxii. 4 



still-recurring. 
chased away the s-r gnat, 



Coquette, i, 



sting (s.) 

prick'd with goads and s's; . . Pal. of Art 150 

a^of shrewdest pain Ran shrivelling StS Stylites 195 



and draw the ^ from pain ; 



Princess, vii. 49 



-(verb.) 



Princess, vi. 320 
. InJIIem.xlix. 11 
. Maud, II. 1. 47 
. Elaine , 140 

. StS. Stylites 58 



stv^ 
She fain would s us too, 
lay their eggs, and 5 and sing 
s each other here in the dust ; 
we scorn them, but they s.' . 

stinted. 
I had not s practice, my God. 

stir (s. J 
to feel the truth and s of day, M. d* Arthur, Efi.io 
and the splash and J Of fountains. Princess, i. 214 
came a little 5 About the doors . ir iv. 354 

I scarce could brook the strain and s hi Mem. xv. 3 2 

stir (verb.) 

So fleetly did she s, . . . Talking O. , 130 

Blow, flute, and s the stiff-set sprigs Amphion . 63 

Let Whig and Tory s their blood . Will Water. 53 



roEM. LINE, 

secret, seem'd to s within my breast ; Princess, iii. 28 
for those That s this hubbub — . 11 iv. 488 

But will not speak, nor s.' . it v. 50 

6" in me as to strike : it . 258 

That 5 the spirit's inner deeps . In Mem. xli. 30 
To 5 a little dust of praise. . . u lxxiv. 32 
That made it 5 on the shore. . Aland, II ii. 35 

s's the pulse With devil's leaps . Guinevere . 517 
Yet dared not s to do it, . . Aylmer's F. 806 

siirrd. 

It s the old wife s mettle : . . The Goose . 26 

5 with languid pulses of the oar, . Gardener sD . 41 

^ her lips For some sweet answer, ti . 155 

But yet my sap was s : . . Talking O. 172 

The fragrant tresses are not s . Day-Dm. . 95 

The mountain ^ its bushy crown, . Amfthhn . 25 

for the roots of my hair were 5 . Maud, I. i 33 

has the casement jessamine s . n xxii. 15 
s this vice in you which ruin'd man Vivien . 212 

stirring. 

It was the s of the blood. . . Two Voices 159 

.5" a sudden transport . . . Princess, iv. 11 

Little about it s save a brook ! . Aylmer's F\ 32 

stitches. 
In coughs, aches, s, ulcerous throes StS. Stylites 13 

stoau. 
a niver rembles the s's, . . N. P'awner to 

stock. 
like an oaken s in winter woods . Golden Year 62 

stock-stilt. 
stood S-s for sheer amazement. . Will Water. 136 

stoic. 

like a s, or like A wiser epicurean Maud, I. iv. 20 

stole (s. ) 
With folded feet, in s's of white, . Sir Galahad 43 

stole (verb.) 
Then s I up and trancedly Gazed Arabia?i N' '■$". 133 
Prevailing in weakness, the coronach j- DyiugSwa?i26 
S all the golden gloss . . Gardener'sD. 129 

O'er the mute city 5 with folded wings tt . 182 

S from her sister Sorrow. 11 . 251 

we s his fruit, His hens, his eggs ; Walk.toiheM. 76 
a silent cousin 5 Upon us . . Ed. Morris 135 
adown the stair S on ; . . . Godiva . 49 

5 from court With Cyril and withFlorian./V/wf 5^,1.301 
Away we s, and transient in a trice it v. 37 

S" a maiden from her place . tt 540 

Psyche ever ^ A little nearer, . n vi. 136 

giay dawn 5 o'er the dewy world Enid . 1234 

wily Vivien s from Arthur's court : Viinen . 6 

First as in fear, step after step, she £ Elaine . 341 
Lady of the Lake, S from his mother it 1396 

5- Up by the wall, behind the yew ; En. Arden 740 
S the seed by night. . . . The Flower 12 

stolen. 
dawn's creeping beams, -S" to my brain D, ofF. Worn. 262 
Because her brood is s away . InMem.xxX. 28 

5 away To dreamful wastes . Maud, I. xviii. 68 
some s, some as relics kept. . . Vivien . 303 
down the long street having slowly s, En. Arden 683 

stomach. 
Less having 5 for it than desire . Enid , 1062 

stomacher. 
He cleft me thro' the s , . . Princess, ii. 385 

stone (mineral substance 1 
j Life in dead s's, or spirit in air ; . A Character 9 
lizard, with his shadow on the 5 . CEnoue . 26 
on this hand and sitting on this s ? h . 229 

foreground black with s's- and slags, Pal. of Art 8t 
Throb thro' the ribbed ^ ; . . tt . 176 

A rolling 5 of here and everywhere, Audley Ct. 77 
all my limbs drop piecemeal from the s St S. Stylites 43 
in a roofless close of ragged s's ; . tt 73 

cursed and scorn'd, and bruised withsV; TwoVoices222 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



397 



Cn the mossy s, as I lay, 
TUtterly wept 1 over the s: . 
'.tread a measure on the s's, 
On thy cold gray s's, O Sea ! 
Carved s's of the Abbey-rum 
One rear'd a font ol s And drew 
sandy footprint harden into s 



TOEM. LINE. 

. Ed. Gray . 26 

11 • 33 

. Vision of Sin 180 

Break, Break, ' etc. 2 

Princess, Pro. 14 

11 • 59 

111. 254 



via. 
xiv. 

xxii. 



11. 



37 



SIS. Sty I ties 5° 



Aylmcr's F. 746 



Old Yew, which graspest at the $'* In Mem. il. 

From scarped cliff and quarried i' " IV. 

lest I stiffen into s, . . ■ " evil. 

On a heart half-turn'd to s . . Maud, 1. VI. 

O heart of s, are you flesh . . " 

Wept over her, carved in s; 

Maud, like a precious s 

Low on the sand and loud on the s 

Courage poor heart of s ! (rep.) . 

slopes a wild brook o'er a little s, Enid 

sprouted thistle on the broken s's. 11 

suck'd the joining of the s's, " 

o'er a mount of newly-fall'n s's, • " 

when she heard his horse upon the s's, Elaine 

A little bitter pool about a i . Guinevere 

eyes upon the s's, he reach'd the home En.Ardeub&s 

or one s Left on another . . Aylmer's F. 788 

men of flesh and blood, and men of sSea Drea»iS2y> 

stone (disease.) 
Past earthquake— ay, and gout and s, Lucretius 151 

stone-cast. 
About a s-c from the wall . . Mariana 

stoned. 
either they were s, or crucified, 

stone-shot. 

He show'd a tent A s-s off . .Princess, V. 51 

stonest. 

thou that s, had'st thou understood Aylmer's F. 7 f o 

stoning, 

no s save with flint and rock? 
stood. 
neaven's mazed signs* : still, ' Clear-headed friend' 28 
s aloof from other minds . . A Character 23 
She s upon the castle wall, . . Oriana . 28 
Pallas where she $ Somewhat apart CEnone . 135 
of great rooms and small the palace s, Pal. of Art 57 
in dark corners of her palace s . 11 . 237 

That s against the wall . . » • 244 

Join'd not, but s, and standing saw 11 _ .254 

above the valley s the moon . Lotos-Es. . 7 

pinnacles of aged snow .y sunset-flush' d ■• . 17 

1 appeal'd To one that s beside D. o/F. Worn. 100 
so s I, when that flow Of music . 11 . 194 
she left me where I s: . . 11 .241 
Losing her carol I s pensively, . " . 245 
s Between the rainbow and the sun Margaret . 12 
s on a dark strait of barren land. . M.d' Arthur 10 
his eyes were dazzled, as he s, 11 • 59 
Long s Sir licdivcre Revolving . " . 269 
those that s upon the hills behind it F.p. 25 
s, Leaning his horns into the . Gardener's D. 85 
Holding the bush, to fix it back, shcr 11 .126 
Half light, half shade, She s, . .1 .140 
to Mary's house, and* Upon the threshold. Dora 108 
while we s like fools Embracing .Fid. Morns 118 
brothers of the weather s Stock-still Will II 'titer. 1 35 
turn'd and kiss'd her where she s : J.ady Clare 82 
wild hawk s with the down on his beak Poet's Song 11 
in the presence room I s With Cyril Princess, i. 50 
1 a bust of Pallas for a sign, . 11 ... 219 
while They s, so rapt, we gazing . 
Lady Blanche's daughter where she s, 
s that same fair creature at the dour 
'1 here while we s beside the fount 
She s Among her maidens, higher 
Alone I s With Florian 
s her maidens glimmeringly group d 
Lady Hlanchc erect .Sup and 1 
j in your own light and darken d mine 
then s u-i and spoke impetuously 



16 



POEM. LINE. 

s The placid marble Muses . . Princess, iv. 467 

I *andsecm'dtohear,AsinapopIargroven v. 11 

storming in extremes S for her cause 11 . 169 

high upon the palace Ida s . . » vi. 1 4 

J>' the unhappy mother open-mouth'd 11 . 127 

slowly from me, J Erect and silent; 11 . 135 

had you * by us, The roar that breaks 11 . 31!* 

in the centre s The common men . " . 339 

we saw Sir Walter where he s. . 11 Con. 81 

of those That * the nearest— . •• 

In the centre s A statue veil'd 

^ up and answer'd ' I have felt.' 

He * on the path a little aside ; 

And * by her garden gate ; . . 11 

6' behind, and waited on the three. Enid . 

Enid* aside to wait the event, . " 

now they saw their bulwark fallen, s; 11 

in a manner pleased, and turning, J. <i 

great charger s, grieved like a man. " ( . 

s Stiff as a viper frozen ; . . Vivien 

and * A virtuous gentlewoman . 11 

Lancelot, where he s beside the King. Elaine 

she drew Nearer and s. . . " 

silent, tho' he greeted her, she.? . 11 

His honour rooted in dishonour s, 11 

S grasping what was nearest . 11 

all the place whereon she s was green ;n 

There two J armed, and kept the door: 11 

man-breasted things* from the sea, Guinevere 

s before the Queen As tremulously 11 

sad nuns with each a light S, 

while he * on deck Waving, . 

he s once more before her face, 

Her son, who s beside her . 

S from his walls and wing'd . 

* from out a Stiff brocade 
under his own lintel s Storming . 
to the lychgate, where his chariot s, 
I ilikeone that hadreceiveda blow: Sea Dreams 157 
for Willy s like a rock . . . Grandmother 10 
and s by the road at the gate. . 11 • 3 8 
Willy s up like a man, . . . " • 45 
champing golden grain, the horses* Spec, of Iliad 21 
I s on a lower in the wet . . 1865-1866 . 1 

* out the breasts, The breasts of Helen Lucretius 60 
stool. 

like a crow upon a three-legg'd s . Audley Ct. . 44 



In Mem. cii. 

11 exxiii. 

Maud, 1. xui. 7 

11 xiv. 6 

392 

1002 

1017 

1305 

3384 

693 

759 

86 

■ 349 

354 

872 

. 961 

"94 

1240 

. 244. 

. 361 

• 585 

. 242 

. 454 

757 

18 

204 

331 

24 



En. Ardeu 



Aylmer's F. 



Fatima . 32 
. L.C.V.deVerezo 
D.ofF.Wom. 57 
Day- Dm. . 130 
Princess, vi. 365 
11 vii. 135 
Enid . . 395 



11. 297 

. 300 

. 308 

iii. 7 

. 162 

iv. 152 

• "7 2 
. 272 

. 205 

• ' 



stoop. 

The skies * down in their desire : 

I could not s to such a mind. 

elmrree-boles did * and lean . 

He s's— to kiss her— on his knee. . 

The cloud may * from heaven 

J>' down and seem to kiss me 

s and kiss the tender little thumb . 
stooped. 

He*andclutch'd him, fair and good, Will Water 133 

s To drench his dark locks . . Princess, iv. 168 

* to updrag Melissa : . " • 347 

you s to me From all high places, 11 . 409 

My father s, rcfather'd o'er my woundsi' VI. 1 1 ; 

She turn'd ; she paused ; She*; . " vii. 140 

s With a low whinny toward the pair: Enid . 1603 

Lancelot should have s so low, . Elaine . 728 

S, took, break seal, and read it ; . 11 1264 

o'er her second father s a girl, . En. Arden . 748 

stopl. 
The swallow s as he hunted the bee, Poet's Song 9 
S, and then with a riding whip . Maud,l.xm. j8 
when he s we longM to hurl together, Vtvien 270 

All of a sudden he s : . . . Grandmother 4 1 

store (s.) 
Love, then, had hope of richer s . InMem.Uxx. 5 
We wish them j of nappy days . ■■ Con. 84 
Hi n be it to help the Blender <. To F /> Maurtct .7 
f of rich apparel, sumptuous tare, Find . . 700. 
what -.lie brought Buy goodsand*"*— Sn. Ara, 

and s's, ■ i " 
shelf and cornet fur the goods and s s. 11 .:7t 



39S 



CONCORDANCE TO 



store (verb.) toem. line. 
to .r and hoard myself, . . . Ulysses . 29 

stored. 
all things in order j, . . . Pal. of Art 87 
S in some treasure-house of mighty M. d Arthur 101 
Dora j what little she could save, Dora . . 50 
eloquence S from all flowers ? . Ed. Morris 27 
I s it full of rich memorial : . . Princess, v. 381 

storing, 

S j^early little dues of wheat . Lotos-E's. . 167 

stork. 
Went by me, like d.s: . . . Talking O. . 56 

sto rm. 
retired From brawling s's, . . Ode to Mem. 112 
Henceforward neither squall nor .s Gardener 'sD.186 
once more, close-button'd to the s; Ed. Morris 136 
gates of heaven with s's of prayer, StS.Stylites 7 
shaken with a sudden .? of sighs — Locksley H. 27 
blessed forms in whistling s'j . Sir Galahad 59 

green malignant light of coming s. Princess, iii. 116 
fire on a mast-head Prophet of ^ : n iv. 256 

Fluctuated, as flowers in s, . . n . 461 

On me, me, me, the ^ first breaks : n . 478 

When .j is on the heights . ?r v. 338 

at which the 5 Of galloping hoofs . 11 . 477 

let our girls flit Till the ^ die ! . n vi. 318 

The touch of change in calm or s . hi Mew. xvi. 6 
O thou that after toil and s . v xxxiii. 1 

lash with ^ the streaming pane ? . ?» lxxi. 4 

j their high-built organs make, . 11 lxxxvi. 6 
A pillar stedfast in the s, 11 cxii. 12 

The seeming prey of cyclic s's, . 11 cxvii. n 
Well roars the s to those that hear m cxxvi. 3 
A deeper voice across the s, ir -4 

burst and drown with deluging s's Maud, II. i. 42 
s and blast Had blown the lake . The Daisy . 70 
world's loud whisper breaking into 5 Enid . 27 

wheel thro' sunshine, s, and cloud n . 348 

skirts are loosen'd by the breaking 5 ir 1308 

A s wascoming, but the winds were still Vivien . 1 
5 Broke on the mountain and I cared not m . 352 
lash'd it at the base with slanting s ; 11 . 485 

dark wood grew darker toward the s n . 739 

* Come from the s' and having no reply, »r . 744 
now the s was close above them) . ti . 784 

now the s, its burst of passion spent ir . Sio 

(Sea washer wrath, yet working after s) Elaine 1300 
s of anger Brake from Guinevere . Guineve?-e . 359 
S, such as drove her under moonless En. A rdeti 543 
like a s he came, And shook the 

house, and like a s he went . Aylmer*s F. 215 
Caught in a burst of unexpected s it . 285 

reddening from the 5 within, . if . 322 

but presently Wept like a s: . 11 . 403 

but fork'd Of the near s, 11 . 727 

when the wordy s Had ended, . Sea Dreams 31 
s never wakes on the lonely sea . The Islet . 33 
*S" in the night ! for thrice I heard Lucretius . 26 
S, and what dreams, ye holy Gods it . 33 

nobler from her bath of s, 11 . 175 

cloud in my heart, and a s in the air ! The IVindow 40 
No is trouble and cloud and s . it . 113 

stormed. 
S in orbs of song, a growing gale ; Vision of Si?i 25 
and j At the Oppian law . . Princess, vii. 108 
.5" at with shot and shell, . Lt. Brigade 22,43 

sto rm iug. 
s in extremes Stood for her cause Princess, v. 16S 
s a hill-fort of thieves He got it, Aylmer's F. 225 
stood S with lifted hands, .r . 332 

stormy. 
Morning arises 5 and pale, . . Maud, I. v'u 1 

story (narrative, etc.) 

We forged a sevenfold 5 . Princess, Pro, 198 

here I give the .j and the songs . 11 . 239 

so, my mother said, the S ran . <i i. 11 

And snowy summits old in .? ; . it iii. 349 

yet to give the s as it rose, . . 11 Con, 26 



toem. u::^. 
in all lands and thro 3 all human s . Ode on Well. 223 
dumbly speaks Your j, - . Enid . H78 

let the ^ of her dolorous voyage . Elaine 1333 

Stole from her mother— as the jruns— n 1356 

— all the j- of his house. . . En. Arden . 705 

Here is a 5 which in rougher shape Ayhne> J s F. 7 
but as he told The s, n . 225 

All for a slanderous s, . . . Grandmother 22 

name Of his vessel great in s, . The Captain 19 

story (floor ) 
And, set in Heaven's third s, . Will Water. 70 

stout (adj.) 
S, rosy, with his babe across his knees, En. Arden 747 

stout (s. ) 
To each his perfect pint of s, . Will Water. 115 

sto7ved. 
Or s (when classic Canning died) . Will Water. 101 

straddling, 
s on the butts While the wine ran ; Guinevere . 266 

straight. 

If ^ thy track, or if oblique, . . Two Voices 193 

S, but as lissome as a hazel wand ; The Brook . 70 

as by miracle, grow s and fair — . Aylmer's F. 676 

strain (s.) 

An echo from a measured s, . . Millers D. . 66 

scarce could brook the s and stir . In Mem. xv. 12 

strain (verb. ) 
cordsthatbind and s The heart ' 'Clear-headed friend' '4 
Shudderest when I £ my sight, . Fatima . 3 

strained. 
a Httle in the late encounter s, . Enid . 1007 

straining. 
In the stormy east-wind s, . L.ofShalolt,W. 1 

strait. 

on a dark 5 of barren land . . M.d' Arthur 10 

I'll serve you better in a .? ; . . Princess, i. 84 

hovering o'er the dolorous 5 In Mem. lxxxiii. 39 

sir a it-besieged. 
being s-b By this wild king . . Princess, Pro. 36 

straitened. 
The shackles of an old love s him, Elaine . 871 

strait-laced. 
S-l, but ah-too-full in bud . . Talking O. 59 

strand (shore. ) 
Here on the Breton si . . . Maud, II. ii. 29 
as a ground-swell dash'd on the ^ W. toAlexan. 23 

strand (twist of a rope.) 
'The duskysofDeathinwoven here Aland, I.xviii. 60 

stranding, 
s on an isle at morn . . . En. Arden . 553 

strange. 
The broken sheds look'd sad and j Mariana . 5 

sweet and 5 it seems to me . May Queen, \u. 51 
sons inherit us : our looks are s : . Lotos-E's. . 118 
'Tis 5 that those we lean on most, To J. S. . 9 
Nothing comes to thee new or s. v . 74 
So ^ it seems to me. . . . Lady Clare 52 
s was the sight . . . Princess, Pro. 54, 89 
we give you, being s, A license : . ?r iii. 188 
^ as in dark summer dawns . . n iv. 31 
so s, the days that are no more. ir * 35 
things grew more tragic and more s ; if vi. 7 
j that soon He rose up whole . n vii. 49 
so j do these things seem, . . In Mem.xm. 15 

1 should not feel it to be s. . . v xiv. 20 
and s Was love's dumb cry . . 11 xciv. 26 
S, that I hear two men, . . Maud, I. vii. 13 
How 5 was what she said, . .11 xix. 34 
S ; that I felt so gay, S, that I tried tr xx. 1 
S, that the mind, when fraught . n IT. ii. 58 
'That were s. What surname 1' ' The Era,,* ♦ 211 



TEXXYSON"S WORKS. 



*^«^ 

■>,! 



POEM. LINE. 

there was a boon, one not so s — . Vivien . 136 

this boon so s and not so s.' 11 . 159 

not so s as my long asking it . 11 . 161 

so s as you yourself are t " . 162 

so s as that dark mood of your;. . « . 163 

nothing wild or s, Orseeming shameful 11 . 709 

—this, however s, My latest : . Elaine 1106 

An end to this ! A s one ! . 11 1217 

strangeness. 
feels a glimmering s in his dream The Brook . 216 

si ranger (adj.) 
nor s seem'd that hearts So gentle, PrinceiS, vii. 51 

stranger (s. ) 
Two s's meeting at a festival ; . Circumstance 3 
There strode a s to the door . The Goose 2, 39 

God forget the s ! ' . . . 11 .56 

The first-fruits of the s : . . Princess, ii. 30 
'seize the s's* is the cry, . . » iv. 201 
grow Familiar to the s's child . In Mem. c 20 
Like s's' voices here they sound, . 11 ciii. 9 

We live within the s's land . . 11 civ. 3 

A s meeting them had surely thought Enid . 883 
Shriek'dtothei, 'Slay not a dead man !' 11 1627 

I bid the s welcome. . . . Vivien . 119 

s's at my hearth Not welcome . Lucretius . 158 

strange-sta tried. 
under the s-s gate, Where Arthur's wars Elaine 796 

strata. 
dip of certain s to the North . Princess, iii. 154 

stray. 
ficynnd the bounding hill to s, In Mem.\xxx\\\\. 30 
lands where nut a memory is, . 11 ciii. to 

stray'tl. 
Thy feet have s in after hours . In Mem ci. 14 

streak (s. ) 
smote The s's of virgin snow . CEuotie . 55 

fades the last long s of snow . In Mem. cxiv. 1 

streak (verb. ) 
while vapour s the crowned lowers Princess, iii. 3*6 
lines of green that * the white . 11 v. 188 

stream is.) 
And the far-off s is dumb, . . The Oml, I. 3 
broad s in his banks complaining . L. ofShalott,\v. 3 
broad s bore her far away, . . 11 . 1 7 

bble of the s Fell, . Mariana in theS. 51 

Like two s's of incense free . . Elediune . 58 
Like those long mosses in the s. . Miller's D. 48 
1; ide the mill-wheel in the s, . !\ . 167 

loud s and the trembling stars . CEnoue . 215 
like a downward smoke, the slender */.£)/«-.£**. . 8 
A land of s's ! .... 11 .10 

in the s the long-leaved flowers weep 11 . 55 

sweet it were, hearing the downward s. 11 . 09 

wash'd by a slow broad s, . . Gardener's!). 40 
s of all her soft brown hair . 11 . 127 

it slid down one long s . , 11 . 262 

In many s's to fatten lower lands, Golden Year 34 
Who rowing hard against the s, . Two Voices 211 
And all the long-pent s of life . Day-Dm. . 147 
it from wall to wall ; Princess, ii. 449 
Ss that float us each and all . 11 iv. 52 

I ;er in the s : ... 11 vi 301 

inst the s and all in vain 11 . 375 

The shimmering glimpses of a s ; . « Con. 46 
The sound ofrj that swift or slow IitMem xxxv. 10 
A secret sweetness in the *, . . 11 Ixiii. 20 
the s beneath us ran, . . 11 Ixxxviii. 43 

On winding j or distant sea : . 1. cxiv. 12 

The mi; onthei, . 11 cxx. 13 

never an end to the x of pa ting feet, Maud.N.v. n 
bythcwell-knownranaru«ticspire, The Brook . : ; 
let the turbid s's of rumour flow . Otfeon Well. 181 
slipt and fell into some pool or s, . Elaine .. 214 
to that J whereon the barge, . 11 1135 

of Arthur's palace toward the s, . u 1172 

down they llasli'd, and smote the s. 11 1228 



poem. LINE. 
Far-ofT, a blot upon the s . . Elaine 1383 

as a s that spouting from a cliff . Guinevere . £02 
burst away In search of s or fount En. Arden . 636 
with the sun upon the s beyond . Sea Dreams 95 
drifting up the s In fancy, . . 1. . 104 

s that Hastiest white, . . V. o/Cauteretz 1 

many a lire between the ships and s S/ec. 0/ Iliad 17 

stream 'verb.) 
A thousand suns will s on thee, . A Earewell 13 
crowds that j from yawning doors InMemAxr 
breeze that s's to thy delicious East, Maud,\.\ 
flame and sparkle and s as of old, . The Kinglet 8 
6 j o'er a rich ambrosial ocean isle, Milton . 14 

streamed. 

s Upon the mooned domes aloof . Arabian A"s. 126 

the mountain s below . Pal. 0/ Art 34 

S onward, lost their edges, . . D of E. IVo/n. 50 

j thro' many a golden bar, . . Day-Dm. . 1- , 

The vine s out to follow, . . Amphion . 46 

in we J Among the columns, . Princess, ii. 411 

and in groups they j away . . 11 Con. 105 

half the pearls away, S from it still: Elaine . £04 

How swiftly s ye by the bark ! . The Voyage 50 

streamer. 
Shot like a J of the northern morn M.d" Arthur 139 

streaming. 

On leagues of odour s far, . . IuMern.\xxxv. 14 

The torrent vineyard s fell . . The Daisy . 10 

— all her bright hair J down— . Elaine 1150 

people, from the high door s, . » 1337 

streamlet. 
For us the same cold s curl'd . /uJA-w.lxxviii. 9 

street. 

till noon no foot should pace the s, Godiva . 39 

The s's are dumb with snow . . Sir Galahad 52 

Till, where the s grows straitcr, . // ';// // 'ater. 142 

p:iss\l by the town and out of the x Poet's Song . 2 

A little s half garden and half house; Princess, i. 211 

heave and thump A league of j . 11 iii. 112 

cr .s-Al the i and gaiu'd a petty mound 11 iv. 5^3 
rights or wrongs like potherbs in the s n 

Here in the long unlovely . 1, . In Mem vii. 2 

On the bald j breaks the blank day, n . 12 

The field, the chamber and the s . 11 viii. ii 

xxxi. 10 

3 

11 cxvni. 4 

11 exxii. 3 

. Maud, 1. vi. 10 

11 xiii. 26 

11 II. iv. 83 

. .. . 92 



were fill'd with joyful sound 
s's were black with smoke and frost, 11 Ixvin 
1 smell the meadow in the s ; 
There where the long s roars, 
At the head of the Village s, 
only once, in the village x 
In the chamber or the s 
I loathe the squares and s's, 
Only a yard beneath the s . . 11 

lifted hand the gazer in the f. Ode on Well. 33 
Till, in a narrow s and dim, . . The Daisy . 22 
Beheld the long s of a little town Enid . . 242 
down the long s riding wearily, 11 254 

many a voice along the .v, . . 11 . 1:19 

fioach'd filth that floods the middle s, Vivien . 647 
ong j climbs to one tall-towcr'd million Arden 5 
narrow s that clamher'd toward the mill. 11 . to 

I 1 . |i taut corners of the s they ran 11 
The climbing s, the mill, the leafy lanes ., 
down the long s having slowly stolen, 11 . C83 

Philip's dwelling fronted on the f, 11 . 732 

down the long and narrow x he went 11 . 796 
I mind him coming down the s; . 11 • ' , 843 

'.iv I met him suddenly in {hcs,SeaDrea 
I Ded him down the s, t. .it 

thundering cheer of the s! . . IV. to Alexan. 7 

strength. 
i* not this my place of *,' . . Pal. of Art 333 
With all my s I pray'd for both May Quern, iii. 31 
to me that equall'd my desire D.o/I'.ll , , 

rofsomc diffusive thought ' You ask me -.thy,' etc. I ■; 
A tlow-dcvelop'df awaits ' I.e. •■<• thou thy lam/,' etc. 57 
not now that s which in old days . Liysscs . 65 



400 



CONCORDANCE TO 



sin against the s of youth ! . 
cry for s, remaining weak, 
My s is as the s of ten, 
He took advantage of his 5 . 
in my grief a s reserved 



roEM. LINE. 

. Locksley H. 59 
. Two Voices 95 
. Sir Galahad 3 
. Princess, \\. 136 
In Mem lxxxiv. 52 



fought his doubts and gather'd s . n xcv. 13 

The maidens gather'd s and grace h cii. 27 

fall'n at length that tower of s . Ode on Well. 38 
What Roman 5- Turbia show'd . 7 he Daisy . 5 
the s of heaven-descended Will, . Will , .11 
aid me, give me s Not to tell her En. Ardeu . 786 
and truth and love are 5, . . Ay Inters F. 365 
wonder'd at her s, and ask'd her . Sea Dreams 109 

strengthen 
S me, enlighten me I . . Ode to Mem. 5, 43, 122 

strelth. 
The garden s'es southward. . . Gardener's D 114 
I felt my veins S with fierce heat; Princess, v. 527 
I s lame hands of faith . . .In Mem. liv. 17 
free to o his limbs in lawful fight, Enid . 1602 

stretched 
S wide and wild the waste enormous Ode to Mem. toi 
s out beneath the pine. . . Lotos-E's, . 144 

^ out And babbled for the golden seal, Dora . \\i 
the Lady s a vulture throat . . Princess, iv. 344 
s her arms and call'd Across the tumult >i . 475 

s out her arms and cried aloud . Guinez'ere . 600 
long arms s as to grasp a flyer : . Ayimer's F. 588 

stretching. 
A bounded field, nor s far ; . . InMem.xlv. 14 

stricken. 
s by an angel's hand, . . . Sir Galahad 69 
Was cancell'd, s thro' with doubt. Jn Mem. xciv. 44 
then were I s blind That minute, Elaine . 425 

stride (s ) 
parted, with great s s among his dogs. Godiva . 31 
Abate the s, which speaks of man, Princess, u. 407 
fain To follow, strode a s . . Enid . . 376 

stride (verb ) 
hard heir s's about their lands In Mem, lxxxix. 15 

strife. 
The flattery and the s ; . D. ofF. Worn. 148 

To hear the murmur of the s . Margaret . 23 

we hear with inward s ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 53 
pulsation that I felt before the s> . Locksley H. 109 
Waiting to strive a happy 5, . 7'wo Voices 130 

maid and page renewed their s % . Day- Dm. . id5 
Half fearful that, with self at j> . WillWater. 161 
To point the term of human s, In Mem. xhx. 15 
Are God and Nature then at s t , ir hv. 5 

loved to handle spiritual s, . . n lxxxiv. 54 
ancient forms of party 5 ; . . " cv. 34 

fruitful s's and rivalries of peace — Ded. of Idylls 37 
see my dear lord wounded in the 5", Enid . . 103 
from famine And plague and s I s The Victim 10 

strike, 
s within thy pulses, like a God's , CEnone . 159 
great thought s's along the brain, D. of F. Worn. 43 
s Into that wondrous track of dreams if . 278 

s, and firmly, and one stroke: ' Love than thy land '92 
That under deeply s's ! . . . Talking O. . 274 

Shadows thou dost s, Embracing . Two Voices 194 
s's him dead for thine and thee . Princess, iv. 561 
Stir in me as to 5 .* . . . tr v. 258 

Fight and fight well : ^ and s home. » . 399 

shadowing down the champaign till it s's ir . 515 

The tops shall s from star to star, ir vi. 41 

let thy nature s on mine . . " vii. 330 

Should s a sudden hand in mine, . In Mem. xiv. j 1 
The sunbeam s's along the world : m xv. 8 

s" s by night a craggy shelf . . 11 xvi. 13 

s his being into bounds . . » C° 7 \' 12 4 

s. if he could, were it but with his Maud, I. i. 52 
my God. and s, for we hold Thee just 11 II. i. 45 
S dead the whole weak race . . tr _, 46 

Suddenly s on a sharper sense » " ii. 03 

Then to s him and lay him low, . n v. yo 



POEM. 

without remorse to s her dead, . Enid . 

lets the day 6' where it clung : . i» 

yet should s upon a sudden means Vivien 

morning's earliest ray Might s it , Elaine 

Set lance in rest, s spur, . . T t 

that will s my blossom dead. . tr 

will I s at him and s him down . it 

good fortune, I will j him dead, . >r 

S down the lusty and long-practised u 

must s against my sister's son, . Guinevere 

s him dead, and meet myself . n 

till he madly s's Against it, . . En. Arden . 

S thro' a finer element of her own ? Ayimer's F. 

s's thro' the thick blood Of cattle . Lucretius . 

riot underneath S's thro the wood, tf . 



1NE. 

9 5 3 
-I54I 

509 

6 

455 
966 

1064 
1065 

1 351 
568 
570 
730 
579 
98 
186 



striking. 

blow Eefore him.s on my brow . Fatima . 25 

^ with her glance, The mother, me Princess, vi. 136 

his mightful hand s great blows . Enid . . 95 
strongly 5 out her limbs awoke ; . n . 1229 

help herself By s at her better, . Vivien . 349 

s onhugestumbhngulocksof scorn Ayimer's F. 538 



string. 
to harp on such a moulder' d s ? 
send it slackly from the s ; 
I cannot all command the s's ' 



. Locksley H. 147 
InMem lxxxvi.26 
. if lxxxvn. 10 



strip, 
s a hundred hollows hare of Spring Pri7icess, vi. 49 
shall we s him there Your lover? . Enid . 1337 

striped. 
his brow S with dark blood : . M. d* Arthur 212 

stripling. 
the s's!— for their sport! — . . Princess, v. 389 

siript. 

walks were s as bare as brooms, , Princess, Pro 182 
S from the three dead wolves . Enid . . 943 
barr'd her door, ^S" off the case, . Elaine . 16 

rose the maid, S off the case, tr t . 973 

strive, 
s and wrestle with thee till 1 die : St S. Styliies 117 
strong m will To s, to seek, to find Ulysses . 70 
Waiting to s a happy strife, . . Tivo Voices 130 
But for one hour, O Love, I s . InMem xxxv. 6 
When on the gloom I s to paint . u ]xix. v 2 
To s, to fashion, to fulfil . , / cxu. 7 

striven: 
T cannot hide that some have s, . Two Voices ' 208 
These two have s half the day, . In Mem. ci. 17 
lily maid had s to make him cheer, Elaine , 326 

strode. 
There s a stranger to the door, . The Goose .- 3,39 
s he back slow to the wounded M.d' Arthur 65, 112 
swiftly s from ridge to ridge . . ir . 281 

s About the hall, among his dogs, Godiz'a. . 16 
fain To follow, s a stride, . . Enid . . 376 
s the brute Earl up and down his hall, m . * 1560 
shook his hair, sofT, and buzz'dabroad Elaine . 718 
S from the porch, tall and erect . Ayimer's F. 825 

stroke. 
strike, and firmly, and one s: ' l Love thou thy land' '92 
Then dying of a mortal 5, . . Tivo Voices 154 
A j of cruel sunshine on the cliff" . Princess, iv. 503 
pardon ask'd and given For s and song tr v. 45 

With s on s the horse and horseman tr . 512 

beating, with one full s. Life.' . ti vii. 289 

Struck for himself an evil s ; . Maud, II. 1. 21 

fits of prayer, at every s a breath. Enid . 1004 

God's mercy what a s was there ! . Elaine . 24 

For twenty s's of the blood, 11 . 716 

stroked. 
Sat on his knee, 5 his gray face . Elaine . 745 

stroll. 
all that from the town would s, ■ . Talking O. 53 

siroll'd. 
then we s For half the day . _ . Princess, ii. 340 



I'EAWyson 's works. 



401 



strong. roE.M. line. 

tale of little meaning tho'the wordsare/; Lotos-E's. 164 
Thro' many agents making s, ' Love thou thy land* 39 
I was s and hale of body then ; . StS. Stytites 28 
make a man feel s in speaking truth LoveandDuty 68 



Ulysses 
Princess. 



1 1 



n CXX1V. 

Maud, I. x. 
Will . 
En. A rden . 
Aylmer's F. 446 



»4 



757 



/ in will To strive, to seek 

.S, supple, sinew-corded 

O fair and s and terrible ! 

More s than all poetic thought : In Mem.xxxvi. 

thou wert s as thou wert true '! •• lxxii. 

The wish too s for words to name : 11 xcii. 

if the words were sweet and s 

S in the power that all men adore 

well for him whose will is s ! 

stood beside her tall and s, . 

disproof of scorn, and s in hopes, 

Ruddy and white, and s on his legs Grandmother 2 

6' of his hands, and s on his legs . 11 . 13 

stronger. 
daughters of the plough, s than men, Princess,\v. 239 
heavier, s, he that smote. . u v. 525 

these are two more terrible And s. 11 vi. 149 

No i than a wall : ... Enid . 1190 

. Elaine . 462 

: wings are s. . Sea Dreams 2R6-94 
My rhymes may have been the s. SpiteJ itl Let. 10 

stronger-made. 

Enoch s-m Was master : 

strongest. 
where two fight The i wins, . 

strove. 
Resolved on noble things, and s to D.o/F.Wom. 42 
blinded with my tears, Still s to speak :: •■ . 109 

She s to span my waist : . . TalhittgO. . 138 

unbecoming men that s with Gods Ulysses . 5; 
in other days to pass, . Day-Dm. . no 
! / against her weakness, . L.oJ /lurleightq 
s to buffet to land in vain . . Princess, iv. 167 
I s against the stream and all in vain : 11 vi. 375 
Shall he for whose applause I s, . In Mem. I. 5 
But ever j to make it true : . 
she wept, and I s to be cool, 
And still they / and wrangled 



hurl'd into it Against the /: . 
Till the little wings arc s. 



En. A rden 



Aylmer's F. 365 



.. xcv. 8 
Maud. II. i 13 
He a Dreams 222 



strow. 
And r s her lights below, 



St Agues' Eve 2S 



strenving. 
the happy people j cried 'Hosanna En. A rden . 301 

striken. 
would have s it, and are fall'n . Princess, vi. 26 
s With gold and scatter'd coinage Enid . . 874 

struck. 
S up against the blinding wall Mariana in the 9. 36 
S thro' with pangs of hell. . . Pal. of Art 220 
lvrcof widest range^by all passion, I). o/F. iv'om. 166 
And s upon the corn-laws . . AudleyCt. . 34 
he s his staff against the rocks . Golden Year 59 
i up with Soldier-laddie, Princess, Pro. 86 
•wrong him more than 1 That s him : 11 iv. 227 
1 such warbling fury thro' the words ; 11 . 363 

Till 1 5 out and shouted . . i* v. 529 

enemies have fall'n, have fall'n ; they s ;<i vi. 32 
day. Descending, 1 athwart the hall m . 344 

/ With showers of random sweet . n vii 70 
I the bell 1 in the night ; . In Mem. \. ? 

the dark hand r down thro' time, •• l.\xi. ig 

spark A vainly in the night, . . Maud, I. ix. 14 

i me, madman, over the face, . " II 1. 18 
S me, before the languid fool , 11 .19 

S for himself an evil stroke ; .it .31 

I by the public foe, >i v. 89 

S at her with hi» whip, . Enid 301-7,413 

.S thro' the bulky bandit's corselet •■ . 1008 

5 with a knife's haft hard ■• 1448 

/Furrowing 1 . Vivien . 784 

,s up and lived along the milky ror.fs ; Elaint 
j it thrice, ami, no one opening, En. Ard 
Started from bed, and/ herself a light 11 . 490 



roE-.i. 
The Islet 

Lucretius 



LINE. 

7 
• -) 



Wages 
Dora . 
Amphion 
N. Farmer 



s the keys There at his right 

5 out the steaming mountain-side, 

/ the dateless doom of kings, 

struggle. 
Glory of Virtue, to fight, to s 

struggled 
boy, that cried aloud And s hard. 

strumming. 
With s and with scraping, 

stubb'd. 

an' I'aj Thornaby waaste . . N. Farmer 28 

Kut I i un oop wi' the lot, . . 11 • 3- 

an' I meand to 'a s it at fall, . 11 .41 

stubble. 
Fire in dry s a nine days' wonder Elaine . 731 

stubborn. 
' S, but she may sit Upon a king's Princess, v. 428 

s lubboru -shafted. 
Before a gloom of s-s oaks, . . Enid . .969 

stuck, 
s out The bones of some vast bulk Princess, iii. 276 
5 and he clamour'd from a casement Tin Brook 85 

studded, 
s wide With disks and tiars . . Arabian. Vs. 63 

student. 
half the 1' j, all the love. . . Princess, iii. 23 

What r came but that you planed 11 iv. 2,', 

To cramp the s at his desk In Mem. exxvii. 1 i 

Drove in upon the s once or twice, Aylmer's F. 462 

study. 
Old studies failed ; . . . Princess, vii 16 
Back would he to his studies, . Aylmer's F. 394 

stuff "s.) 
and chairs, And all his household s ; II 'all: to theM. 32 
Man is made of solid/. . . Ed Morris 49 
What /is this! Old writers push'd Golden Year 64 
household s, Live chattels, . . Princess, iv. 493 

stuff (verb.) 

5 his ribs with mouldy hay, . Vision o/Sin 66 

stumble. 

my mind S~s, and all my faculties Lucretius . 123 

stumbled. 

Ran Gaffer, s Gammer . . The Goose . 34 

We yon a stationary voice . . Princess, v. 2 

Part s mixt with floundering horses. 11 . 487 

stumbling. 

S across the market to his death, Aylmer's F. 820 

stu mbliug. bloc k. 
Striking on huge s-b's of scorn . Aylmer's F. 538 

stumped. 

with clamour bowled And s the wicket Princess, Pro 8a 

stunned. 
s mc from my power 10 think 
Sitting here so s and still. 
and s the twain Or slew them, 
and so I'-ii him s or dead. 



■> 



hi Mem. xvi. 
Maud, II. i. 
Enid . . 040 

" '3*3 

hurl'd him headlong, and he fell S, Guinevere 

Stllfiid. 

felt so blunt and s at the heart 



Enid 






stv 



so return'd unfarrow'd to her /. Walk to theM. 02 
maiden moon that sparkles on a s. Princess, v. 178 

style. 
the t of those heroic times .' . 
What s could sun .' 

hark ! thev shout ' ■=! Simeon .V.' . 
by surname, ,■>, ainui^ men ; 



The Epic . 35 
/ 't in, ess, I 

StS.Stylites 14S 

• 1 J 

2 C 



402 



CONCORDANCE TO 



subdue. roEM. line. 

to s this home Of sin, my flesh, . StS.Styliles 56 
.S them to the useful and the good. Ulysses . 38 

subdued. 
I s me to my father's will ; . D. ofF. Wom.234 

prace Of sweet seventeen s me . The Brook . 113 
6" me somewhat to that gentleness, Enid . 1715 

subject (adj.) 
s to the season or the mood . . Ayimer's F. 71 

subject (s.) 
Held me above the s, . . . D.o/F.Wom. 10 
coursed about The s most at heart Gardener 's D '.218 
She rapt upon her s, he on her : . Princess, iii. 267 
My s with my 5*5 under him, . Enid . 1764 

sublime. 

my lover, with whom I rode s . D.ofF Worn. 141 

Name and fame ! to fly s . Vision of 'Sin 103 

raillery, or grotesque, or false s . Princess, iv. 565 

In his simplicity j. . . . Ode on Well. 34 

submit. 
S, and hear the judgment of the King.' Enid 1647 

submitting. 
S all things to desire. . . . InMem.cxiii. 8 

subscribed. 
which hastily s, We enter'd . .Princess, ii. 59 

subserve. 
Or but j'i another's gain . . In Mem. liii. 12 

subsist. 
Within this region Is. ' 1 'on ask me, iv/iy,' etc. 2 

substance. 
island princes over-bold Have eat our s, Eotos-E's. 121 
know The shadow from the s . Princess, i. 9 
do I chase The s or the shadow ? . 11 ii. 387 

I know the s %vhen I see it. 11 . 391 

rolling as it were the s of tt . . Ayimer's F. 258 

subtle-paced. , 
silver flow Of s-p counsel . . Isabel . . 21 

subtie-tlwughted. 
S-t, myriad-minded. . . . Ode to Mem. 118 

suburb. 
By park and s under brown . . In Mem. xcvii. 24 

succeed. 

I know that age to age s's, . . Two Voices 205 

' The many fail : the one s's.' . Day -Dm. . 116 

from the board and others ever s ? Maud, I. iv. 27 

succ eeder. 
The sole s to their wealth . . Ayimer's F. 294 

succession. 
make One act a phantom of s : . Princess, iii. 312 

successor. 
be dissipated By frail .s's. . . Princess, iii. 250 

suck. 
from all things s Marrow of mirth Will Water. 213 
s the blinding splendour from the sand Priucess,vu. 24 

sucked. 
Have s and gather'd into one . Talking O. 191 
i" from the dark heart of the long hills Priucess,v. 339 
s from out the distant gloom . In Mem.xciv. 53 

s the joining of the stones . . Enid . . 324 

sucking. 
S the damps for drink, . . . StS.Stylites 76 
Flaying the roofs and s up the drains Princess, v. 514 

sudden. 
in thee Is nothing s, nothing single ; Elcauore . 57 

sudden-beaming. 
a s-b tenderness Of manners . Elaine . 327 

sudden-curved. 
drops down A s-c frown : . . Madeline . 35 

suddenly. 
I enrno among you here so s, . Enid . . 794 



sudden-shrilling 
woke with j-i mirth An echo 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, Pro. 2 1 o 



s me, and woo me, and flatter me, The Mermaid 43 
Not one word ; No! tho' your father s's:Priticess,vi. 223 

suffer. 
theys— some, 'tis whisper' d— down 

in hell 6" endless anguish . . Lotos-E's. . 168 
not as we, But s's change of frame. Princess, v. 453 
I do not s in a dream ; . . . luMem.xni. 14 
When all that seems shall s shock, 11 exxx. 2 
He s's, but he will not s long ; . Will . . 2 
He s's, but he cannot s wrong : . 11 . .3 
Had suffer'd, or should s any taint Enid . . 31 
my lord thro' me should s shame. it . 101 

1 seem to s nothing heart or limb, 11 . . 472 
my lord should s loss or shame.' n . .918 

suffer'd. 
but all hath s change ; . . . Lotos-E's. . 116 
the man hath s more than I ? . SIS. Stylites 48 
thou hast s long For ages and forages !' h . 97 

I have enjoy 'd Greatly, have s greatly, Ulysses . 8 
Truly, she herself had s' — . . Eocksley H. 96 
Who loved, who s countless ills, . hi Mem. Iv. 17 
loved and did, And hoped and s, . it Con. 135 

Katie, what I s for your sake ! . TJte Brook . 119 
Had s, or should suffer any taint . Enid . .31 
each had s some exceeding wrong 11 . . 885 

suffering. 

1 go, weak from s here, . . Two Voices 238 
s thus he made Minutes an age ; . Enid . , 963 

suffice. 
.9 it thee Thy pain is a reality. . Two Voices 386 
Maynot that earthly chastisements? Ayimer's F. 784 

sufficed. 
touch of their office might have s, Maud, II. v. 27 

suffused. 
She look'd: butal! -S 1 with blushes — Gardener 1 'sD. 151 
S them, sitting, lying, languid shapes Vision oj Sin 12 

sugar-plum. 
I hoard it as a s-p for Holmes.' . The Epic . 43 

suggesting. 
Recurring and s still ! . 

suggestion. 
track ^ to her inmost cell 



Will 



14 



. InMem.xcxv. 32 

suit (clothes, etc.) 
In summer s and silks of holiday. Enid . . 173 
(His dress as of fray'd magnificence, it . . 296 
in her hand A s of bright apparel 11 678 

unwillingly have worn My faded s, it .. . 706 
robed them in her ancient s again 11 . . 770 
The three gay s's of armour . .it . 944, 1030 
bound the s's Of armour on their horsestt . . 945 
and three goodly s's of arms, 11 . 973 

suit (petition, etc.) 
My s had wither'd, nipt to death . Ed. Morris^ 101 
second s obtain'd At first with Psyche Princess,v\i. 56 
Lightly, her s allow'd, she slipt away, Elaine . 774 
Leolin's rejected rivals from their s Ayimer's F. 493 

suit (verb. ) 
something it should be to s the place, Princess, Pro. 206 
made to s with Time and place, . u . 224 

What style could s ? , . . it Con. 9 

Calm as to s a calmer grief, . . In Mem. xi. 2 
s The full-grown energies of heaven, u xxxix. 19 
Nor can it s me to forget . . it lxxxiv. 59 
Could not fix the glass to shereye; En. Arden . 240 

suited. 
A meaning s to his mind . . Day-Dm. . 208 
How gay, hovvstothehouseofone, Enid . 1531 

suiteth. 
only silence s best. . . . To J. S. . 64 

suitor. 
Every gate is throng'd with s's, . Lockslcy H. rot 



TEAWYSOX'S WORKS. 



403 



Like the Ithacensinn i'i inold time, 
a pair Of s's as this maiden : 
Her i in old years before Geraint 
Philip, the slighted s of old times . 

1 ul leu. 
first as s as a beast new-caged, 
seem'd so s, vext he could not go : 
S, defiant, pitying, wroth. 

sullen-purple. 
And over the s-p moor . 

sullen-seeming. 
for s-s Death may give . . . Maud, I.xviii. 46 

sultan. 
like the s of old in a garden of spice Maud, I. iv. 42 

4 
39 



POEM. I. INK. 

Princess, iv. 100 

Enid . . 440 

M . 1125 

En. Arden . 746 

Enid . 1 704 

Elaine . 210 

Ayhner's F. 492 

Maud, I. x. 21 



POEM. 

Princess, 



LINE. 

,46 



The .S', as we name him, 

with the S's pardon I am all as well 

if he had not been a ^ of brutes, . 



II. v. Si 



Two Voices 81 

Vision of Sin 220 
Princess, lii. 349 
/// Mem. tii. 7 
7 he Daisy . 87 
Elaine . 482 



The glory' of the s of things . In MeniAxxxvu.n 

sumrnd. 
all grace .Sup and closed in little ; Gardener s D. 13 



summer. 
S herself should minister . . Eleanorc . 32 
A s fann'd with spice. . . . Pal. of Art n6 
comeback again withfo'er the \va\Q May (Jneen,\l.iQ 
Smelt of the coming s . . . Gardener's D. 77 
The good old S's, year by year . Talking O. . 39 
Old S's, when the monk was fat, . 11 . 41 

Thro' all the s of my leaves . . 11 .211 

It was last s on a tour in Wales . Golden Year 2 
s's tosuch lengthof years should come Locksley H. 67 
The woman of a thousand s's back, Godiva . 11 
A s crisp with shining woods . L)ay*Dm. . 8 

Till all the hundred s's pass, .11 .53 

When will the hundreds'^ die, .11 .69 

A hundred s's! can it be? . . 11 189 

ares of tropic J shut . . A mphion . 87 
grew fat On I.usitanian is. . . Will Water 8 
all a s's day Gave his broad lawns Princess, Pro. 1 
kill him m the s too,' . • • 11 . 202 

1 Why not a s's as a winter's talc ? it . 204 

did a compact pass Long s's back 11 i 123 

The s of the vine in all iiis veins — 11 . 1S1 

hitliersidc,orsoshclook'd,Oftwenty s's 11 ii. 93 

made to gild A stormless s.' . u . 216 

brief the sun of $ in the North, . 11 iv. 94 

frow A night of S from the heat . 11 vi. 38 

hit S' on the steaming floods In Mem. Ixxxiv 69 
s's hourly-mellowing change . 11 xc. 9 

o'er the sky The silvery haze of s n xciv. 4 
! ■ sleeps the s in the seed . 11 civ. 26 

Than in the s's that arc flown . 11 Con, 18 
S 1 many a s since she died . . Maud, I. vi. C6 
Norwillbewhenouryjhavedeceased.il xviii, 14 
in branding s's of Bengal, . , The Brook . 16 
in s's that we shall not see : . . Odeoit Well. 234 
To lands of s across the sea : . Tlie Daisy . 92 

The bitter east, the misty s . i» , 103 

sprigs of j laid between the folds. Enid . . 138 
now the wine made s in his veins 11 . , 398 
flaws in s laying lusty corn : 1. 764 

that s, when you loved me first. . Elaine . 105 

in a tilt, come next, five s's back, Guinevere . 319 
My pride in happier s's, . 11 . 532 

slipl across the x of the world . En, Arden . 527 
tflakc of so rfiany a s still Sea Dreams 35 
after many a s dies the swan. . Titkonus . 4 
i if sweet little it or so.' The Islet . 2 

1 the lands of lasting s, . Boltdicea . 43 

The child was only eight 11 old . The Victim 34 

summer-blanched. 
here was one that, si', . . . Ayhner's F. 152 



In Mem cii. 16 



Talking O. 



summer-morn. 
many a sheeny s-m, . . . Arabian X's. 
Chewing a gaudy t-m, . . . I "al. of Art 



summer-palace. 
a boon, A certain s-p . 

summit. 
The silent s overhead. . 
faint not, climb : the s's slope 
Cry to the s, ' Is there any hope?' 
And snowy s's old in story : . 
From hidden s's fed with rills 
ere we reach'd the highest s 
Green-glimmering toward the I, . 

summon, 
s me their King to lead mine hosts Guinevere . 5CS 

summon 'd. 
Then J to the porch we went. . Princess, iii. i f > 
S' out She kept her state, . . 11 . 212 

summoner. 
Far-sighted s of War and Waste . Ded. of Idylls 36 

summoning. 
on a dreadful trumpet, s her , . Enid . 1232 

summons. 
And brought a s from the sea : 

S umner-diace. 

Broad oak of S-e 

Made ripe in S-c : . 

And shadow S'-c '. .... :i . 150 

Sumner-place. 
The roofs of S-p (rep. 96, 152/ . Talking O. . '2 
The front of S-p 11 . 243 

sumptuously. 
and i According to his fashion . Enid . 2133 

sun Is.) 
a lily which the i Looks thro' . Adeline . 12 
in the s and shadows all beneath Love and Death 1 1 
The s came dazzling thro' the leaves, /. .ofShalott,\\\. 3 
there like a s remain I'ix'd . . Elelinore . 92 
Many is arise and set. . . . Miller's D. 205 

s, that from thy noonday height i-'atima . 2 
great bow will waver in the s, . Pal. 0/ Art 43 

1 would see the 5 rise . . . MayQueeii,\\. 2,^1 

1 1 saw the s set : 11 .5 

and the s come out on high : . 11 .15 

the summer s 'ill shine, . . 11 .22 

at first, mother, to leave the blessed s, 11 iii 
O look I the 5 begins to rise, . 11 

may be beyond the s — ... " 

Between the* and moon upon the shore Lotrs-Es 
across the threshold of the s, . D of F. It \ nt. ( j 

We drank the I.ybian ■£ to sleep, . 11 . 145 

Between the rainbow and the s, Margaret . 13 
The * is just about to set, . . n .58 

While yon s prospers in the blue, . The Blackbirdii 
That broods above the fallen s . To f. S. . 51 
made his forehead like a rising i . M d' Arthur 
of Heaven pure Up to the S, 
s fell, and all the land was dark. 
great with pig, wallowing in s 
full music ruse and sank the s, 

cloudy porch oft opening on the 5? Love and Duty 9 
The S will run his orbit, . . n .22 

The S flics forward to his brother ?; Golden 1 ear 23 
For some three s's to store and hoard [Ulysses . 29 
widen'd with the process of the s's. Locksley 11. 1 ;8 
hurl their lances in the s ; , . n 
what to me were J or clime ? . . 11 

flash the lightnings, weigh the 5 — •< 

A merry boy in . 1 and shade? . Two Voices 
Thro' many an hour of summer s's Will II 'ater. 
To keep the best man under the s Lady Clare 
As she lied fast thro' s and shade, Sir L. aruii, 

A thousand sis will stream on thee, A Farm 1 •, 

As when the .1, a crescent of eclipse, Vision of Silt 10 

Close to the s in lonely lands, . The J .»;.'■• . ^ 

blew from the gates of the s, . Post's Song 3 
until the set of s Up to the people Primes:, 1 

some clear planet close upon the S 11 11. . 1 

set the starry tides, And eddied into it 11 . 11 1 

Meuinou smitten with the morning S.' 11 iii. no 



9 
49 

54 
38 



■'7 



. Gardener' sD. 79 

. Dora . 77, 107 
;/ 'alk. to the M fo 
. Ed. Morris 34 



170 

•77 

1I6 

3.1 

33 

3' 



404 



COXCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE 

with the s and moon renew their light Pnncess,\\\. 238 
till the S Grew broader toward his deathn . 345 

the nebulous star we call the -S" . \t iv. 1 

brief the 5 of summer in the North ir -94 

Thro' a great arc his seven slow s's 11 . 195 

in one night and due to sudden ^ ; it . 293 

Norway ^ Set into sunrise ; . » . 552 

issued in the s, that now Leapt . " v. 40 

thousand arms and rushes to the S. " vi. 21 

holds a stately fretwork to the s, . <i . 70 

drench'd it is with tempest, to the s 11 vii 127 
Till the S drop dead from the signs.* 11 . 230 

Nor branding summer s*s avail . In M 'em. ii. 11 
murmurs from the dying s : . . n iii. 8 

blurr'd the splendour of the s ; . 11 Ixxi. 8 

while we breathe beneath the s, . n lxxiv. 14 
j by ^ the happy days Descend . tr lxxxili. 27 
And all the courses of the s's . 11 cxvi. 12 

Sad Hesper o'er the buried ^ . 11 cxx. 1 

I found Him not in world or s, . >> cxxiii. 5 
Thou standest in the rising 5 . ir cxxix. 3 

The sport of random 5 and shade . " Con. 24 

To meet and greet a whiter s . n -78 

For him did his high s flame . Maud, I. iv. 32 

Our planet is one, the s\s are many ti . 45 

No s, but a wannish glare . . 11 vi. 2 

The j- look'd out with a smile . ■> ix. 3 

Something rlash'd in the s, . . u .10 

in the light of the ^ that she loves ir xxii. 11 

To the flowers, and be their s. . ti . 58 

fires of Hell brake out of thy rising s, u II. i. 9 
noble thought be freer under the s 11 III. vi. 48 
turn'd our foreheads from the falling s TheBrook 165 
.j- of sweet content Re-risen . it r68 

And underneath another s, . . Ode on Well. 101 
our God Himself is moon and s. . 11 . 217 

To meet the ^ and sunny waters, . The Daisy . 11 
Your presence will be 5 in winter, ToF.D Maurice 3 
newsBeatthro'theblindlesscasementiiVA/. . 70 | 
clothe her for her bridals like the s.' n . 231,836 
wound Bare to the s, . . . pi . . 322 
east began To quicken to the s . u . . 535 
our fortune slipt from .s to shade . tr . . 714 
would clothe her like the s in Heaven, m . . 784 
the 5" blaze on the turning scythe, >> . itoi 

while the ^ yet beat a dewy blade 11 . 1295 

lift a shining hand against the j . n . 1322 

bared her forehead to the blistering s> n . 1364 

bear him hence out of this cruel s : 11 . 1303 

there the Queen array'd me like thes: ■ - . 1549 

the 6" In dexter chief ; . . . Vivien, . 325 
often o'er the s's bright eye " . 4S3 

who can gaze upon the 6" in heaven? Elaine . 124 
The low s makes the colour : . n . 135 

center'd in a s Of silver rays, . 11 . 295 

Red as the rising 5 with heathen blood 11 . 308 

when the next i- brake from underground," 1131 

On some vast plain before a setting s Guhtevere 77 
from the ^ there swiftly made at her, » . 78 

once more ere set of s they saw . n . 394 

new warmth of life's ascending ^ . En. Arden . 38 
Cuts off the fiery highway of the .r, n . 130 

Under a palmtree, over him the S: 11 . 497 

yonder shines The -S" of Righteousness u . 500 

his own shadow in a sickly j . Ayhners F. 30 
the i" go down upon your wrath,' . Sea Dreanis 44 
Bright with the 5 upon the stream n . 95 

Into a land all •$■ and blossom . n . 99 

We seem'd to .sail into the -S" .' . The Voyage 16 
How oft we saw the *9 retire . w . 17 

many a rivulet high against the .9 The Islet . 21 
The v9peep'd in from open field l Home they brought' 6 
another of our Gods, the S, Apollo Lucretius 124 
stars from the night and the .sfrom the The Window^ 
S sets, moon sets .... '» 164 

Blaze, upon her wmdow, s, . 11 . 176 

You send a flash to the s. . . " 179 

sun (verVO 
s their milky bosoms on the thatch Princess, ii. Co 



sunbeam. poem. Line. 

When the thick-moted s lay . . Mariana . 78 
As when a ^ wavers warm . . Miller 's D. 7a 
Sometimes I let a 5 slip, . . Talking O. 217 
like a creeping s, slid . . . Godiva , 49 

from his ivied nook Glow like a s . Princess, Pro. 105 
To glide a ^ by the blasted Pine, n vii. 181 

The s strikes along the world : . In Mem. xv. 8 
where the 5 broodeth warm, . tr xc. it 

I make the netted 5 dance . . TheBrook . 176 

sunder, 
s's ghosts and shadow-casting men Vivien . 479 

sundered. 

never can be .? without tears To With P.ofArti-$ 

Quite i- from the moving Universe, Princess, vii. 37 
Time hath 5 shell from pearl ' . In Mem. Ii 16 
Be s in the night of fear ; . . ir exxvi. 2 
from the sabre-stroke Shatter'd and sLt. Brigade 36 
cause had kept him s from his wife : Vivien. . 565 

sundown. 
oft when 5 skirts the moor . . In Mem. xl. 17 

sunflower. 
Heavily hangs the broad 5 l A spirit haunts,' etc. g } 21 
Unloved, the s-f, shining fair, . In Mem. c. 5 

sun-frmged. 
little clouds s-f, are thine, . . Madeline . 17 

sung. 
cock s out an hour ere light : . Mariana . 27 

The blue fly 5 in the pane ; . ir . 63 

the cock hath j beneath the thatch The Owl, \. id 
Died round the bulbul as he -$■ ,■ . Arabian N's. 73 
From Calpe unto Caucasus they s, The Poet . 15 
At eve a dry cicala s, . . Mariana in theS. 85 
6" by the morning star of song . D.q/F. Worn. 3 
anthem s, is charmed and tied . u . 193 

wheresoever Tarn 5 or told . . M.d Arthur 34. 
falser than all songs have s, . . Locksley H. 41 
Among the tents I paused ands, . Two Voices 125 
I s the joyful Psean clear, . . it .127 

Wherever he sat down and s . Am/hiou . 19 

nightingale thought, ' I have s many Poet's Song 13 
j to, when, this gad-fly brush'd aside, Pri?icess, v. 404 
We s, tho' every eye was dim In Mem xxx. 14 

S by a long-forgotten mind. . it Ixxvi. 12 

A guest, or happy sister, s, . . nixxxviii. 26 
One whispers, here thy boyhood 5 1* ci. 9 

Whatever I have said or s, . . ir exxiv. 1 
Peace, his triumph will be .? . Ode on Well. 232 

^ nearly where we sit . . . Vivien. . 255 

told in tale, Or 5 in song ! . . ir . 700 

many a noble war-song had he s f . Guinevere . 276 

su n light. 
Place it, where sweetest .s falls . Ode to Mem. 85 
clear brow in s glow'd ; . Z.. ofShalott, iii. 23 

as 5- drinketh dew. . . . Faiima . 21 

Floated the glowing s's as she moved. CEnone . 178 
Are as moonlight unto 5, . . Locksley H. 152 
And the 5 broke from her Up . Maud, I. vi. S6 

[so rare the smiles Of s) . . The Daisy . 54 

like a stormy 5 smiled Geraint, . Enid . T329 

j on the plain behind a shower : . Vivien . 253 

return In such as of prosperity . Ayhners F. 421 

sun I ike. 
make your Enid burst S from cloud Enid . 789 

sunn'd. 
S by those orient skies ; . . 77ie Poet . 42 
and 5 Her violet eyes, . . Gardeners D. 135 

S itself on his breast and hands. . Maud,I. xiii. 13 
5 The world to peace again : . Vivien . 48c 

sunning. 
little head, s over with curls, . Maud,J.xxu. 57 

6' himself in a waste field alone . Ayhners F % 9 

sunny. 
Bright was that afternoon, S but chill ;En. Ard^^Gji 



tower or duomo, s-s } 



sunny-sweet. 



The Daisy . 46 



TEX.VYSO.VS WORK'S. 



405 



sunny-warm. POEM. LINE, 

tracts of pasture s-w . . . Pal. of Art 94 

sunrise. 
the breath Of the lilies at 5? .Adeline . 37 

Rare j flow' d The Poet . 36 

Freedom rear'd in that august s . 11 . 37 

lights of sunset and of s mix'd Love and Duty qo 

i:i the burst Of s, . . Prim ess. Pro. 41 

Norway sun Set into s . . . 11 iv 552 

, now At s, now at sunset, . Enid . . 7 
The* broken into scai let shafts . En Arden . 593 I 



The scarlet shafts of s— but no sail. 11 



600 



sunset. 
between the s and the moon ; . Eleiinore . 124 
the J, south and north, Winds all the Miller's D. 241 
charmed s linger'd low adown . Loios-E's. . 19 
lightsof J and of sunrise mix'd . Love and Dutyjo 
purpose holds To sail beyond the s, Ulysses . 60 
Von orange s waning slow : * Move eastward,' etc. 2 
the gates were closed At s, . . Princess, Con. 37 
rang Beyond the bourn of s '. . 11 . 100 

Last night, when the* burn'd . Maud, I. vi. 8 
varies, now At sunrise, now at s, . Enid . . 7 
hour or maybe twain After the s, Guinevere . 236 
some refulgent s of India. . . Milton. . 13 

sunsct-flush'd. 
pinnacles of aged snow, Stood s-f; Lotos-Es. 

sun-shaded. 
S-s in the heat of dusty fights 

sunshine. 
where broad s laves The lawn 
Simeon, whose brain the s bakes 
took The thunder and the s t 
The random s lighten'd ! 
like a touch of * on the rocks, 
A stroke of cruel .« on the cliff, 
When the tide ebbs in s, 
takes the s and the rains, 
Turn thy wild wheel thro' s, . 

Autumn's mock s of the faded woods Aylmer's F. 610 
past In*: right across its track . i>ea Dreams 122 

sun-smitten. 
S-s Alps before me lay . . . The Daisy 

sun-steep' d. 
S-s at noon, and in the moon . Lolos-E's. 

sun-stricken. 
fell S-s, and that other lived alone En. Arden 

supersede. 
one deep love doth s All other, 

superstition. 
paid To woman, s all awry : . 

supper. 
And after s, on a bed, . 
serve me sparrow-hawks For s, 

supple, 
s, sinew-corded, apt at anus ; 



17 

Princess, ii. 223 

D.ofF.Wom.xZq 
StS.Stylites 161 
Ulysses . 4S 
A mphion . $6 
Princess, iii. 339 
11 iv. 503 
it vi. 146 
/// Mem. x. 74 
Enid . . 348 



62 



74 



57" 



luMcm.xxx'n. 5 

Princess, ii. 121 

The Sisters. 16 
Enid . . 305 



. Princess, v. 524 

supplc-sincw'd. 
Iron-jointed, s-s, they shall dive . Locksley II. 1C9 



s ufiple-sliding. 
scoundrel in the s-s knee.' 



.S<vi Dreams 164 



suppliant. 
look'd and saw The novice, weeping, s, Guinevere 656 

supplicated. 
shall I brook to be s? . . . Boiidicea . 

supplicating. 

I' ll ' irn, s, if he cared . 

did they pity me s ? 

supplied. 
And he s my want the more . 

supporter. 
l':e s's on a shield, Bnw-hnck'd 
two wild men s's of a shield, 



I rden 
Boiidicea 



163 



/;/.l/W/;.lxxviii. 19 
Princess, vi. 3-58 

Enid . 1 1 16 



suppose. 
Good soul I s I grant it thee 
if, as I s, your nephew fights 

supremacy. 
In knowledge of their own s . 

sure. 
rest thee s That I shall love thee 
make him s that he shall cease '; 
Before I am quite quite s 
O Maud were s of Heaven . 
s am I, quite s. he is not dead.' 
evil done ; right s am 1 of lhat, 
' Fool,' he answer'd, ' death is s 

surety. 
did but keep your s for our son 

surf. 
White jwind-scatter'd over sails 
like a wader in the s, 

surface. 
ere he dipt the s, rose an arm 
And down my s crept. . 
These flashes on the s are not he. 
To make the sullen s crisp. 
Then from the smitten s flash'd, 

surge. 

when the s was seething free, 
The sands and yeasty s's mix 

surmise. 
silent we with blind s . 



POEM. LINE, 

Two loices 38 
Enid 



-. 475 



GZnone 



CEnottr 
Two Voices 
Ala ud y I. xi. 


156 
10 


M xu. 
Enid . 
Guittever* , 
Sailor Boy . 


•9 

'. 1 
187 

>3 



Princess, v. 24 

D of F. Worn. 11 
The Brook . 117 

fit. d' Arthur 143 
TalkiugO. . 162 
Princess, iv. 234 
luMem.xW'in. U 
Elaine 1229 

. Lotos-Es. . 151 » 
. Sailor Boy . 9 

. Princess, iv. 362 



surname. 
Simeon of the pillar, by s Stylitcs StS.Stylites 158 
'Katie.' 'That weie strange. WhatjP The Brook 212 

surpass. 
But tho' the port s'es praise . . Will Water. 77 

surprise (s. ) 
with v Froze my swift speech : . DefF Worn.. 89 
some s and thrice as much disdain Enid . . 557 
kepr it fur a sweet s at morn. . 11 . . 703 
truly is it not a sweet si . .11 . . 704 

surprise (verb.) 
S thee ranging with thy peers . 7«.1/V>«.xliii. 12 

survive. 
S in spirits rendcr'd free, . InMcm.xxxw'm. 10 

suspend. 
he s's his converse with a friend, . Enid . . 3.;o 

suspicion. 
A vague s of the breast : . . Two I 'oices 336 
gleam d a vague s in his eyes : . Elaine . 128 

suspicious. 
S that her nature had a taint . Enid . . CS 

sustain. 
bad him with good heart s himself Aylmer's F. 544 

sustained. 
Be dimm'd of sorrow, or s; . InMeinAxxx'iv. 10 

sustenance. 
Gained for her own a scanty s, 
No want was (here of human s, . 

nuallmo (s.) 
Above in the wind was the s. 
And the s 'ill come back again 
While- the prime s dips his wing, . 
The J stopt as he hunted the bee. 
like s's coming out of time . 
watch'd the s winging south . 
() .S', S, llying. flying South (rep.). 
The Mayfly is lorn by the s, 
Among my skimming s's ; 
s and sparrow and throstle . 

swallow (verb 
to sloughs That j common 

twaUoufd 
And blackening, s all the land, 



En. Arden . 


358 


11 


55 5 


Dying Swan 
Ainyi)ueen,\\ 
Ed. .Morris . 
Pool's SOHg 

Princess, ii. 
m iv. 


10 
"9 

14. 

•> 

«• - 

■' 


Aland, I. iv. 
Th* Brook . 

The ll' indole 


1 \ 
-■! 
'" 1 
157 


Princess, v. 


•<" 


Guiiu . 


Bs 



/.o5 



CONCORDANCE TO 



swallow-flight, poem. ltne. 
loosens from the lip Short s-f's of In Mem.xlvii. 15 

swallowing 

a gulf of ruin, 5 gold, Not making . Sea Dreams 79 



Miller's D. . 97 
D oj F. Worn. 221 
Guinevere . 243 

MayQueen,\. 31 
#«/rf . . 880 

0?i a Mourner 9 

Princess, v, 433 



- Aylmer's F. 19 

. Arabian N's. 27 
. .57 Agnes' Eve 6 
. Princess,Pro. 95 



S7t><??«. 
I loved the brimming wave that 5 
The light white clouds over us. 
in the light the white mermaiden s, 

swamp. 
like fire in s's and hollows gray 
Gray s's and pools, waste places 
The s } where hums the dropping 

swamp' d. 
This Gama s in lazy tolerance 

swan. 
Adown it floated a dying s, . . Dying- Swan 6 
The wild s's death-hymn took the soul w . 21 

Far as the wild s wings . . Pal. of Art . 31 

the brink, like some full-breasted s AT. d' Arthur 266 
a neck to which the s's Is tawnier Elai?ie 1178 

after many a summer dies the s. . Til/wuus . 4 

swung. 

s besides on many a windy sign- 

sward. 
The sloping of the moon-lit s 
Slant down the snowy s, 
s was trim as any garden lawn : 

At this upon the s She tapt 11 . 148 

* Pitch our pavilion here upon the s ; 11 iii. 328 
on the s, and up the linden walks, ir iv. 191 

dismounting on the s They let the horses Enid 1059 
than the s with drops of dew, . t; 1538 

sware. 
Merlins that I should come again . M.d'Arthur 23 
Cophetua s a royal oath : . . Beggar Maid 15 
at thelast hes That he would send Princess, i. 62 
.5" to combat for my claim till death u v. 350 

but mine,' so I s to the rose, . Maud,I. xxii. 31 

since he never s Except his wrath Lucretius . 127 

swarm (s.) 
Then we shoulder'd thro* the s, . Andley Ct. . 8 
Glitter like a s of fire-flies . . Locksley H. 10 
and the s Of female whisperers : . Princess, vi. 335 
.s's of men Darkening her female field, «r vii. 18 
Eack to France her banded s's, . Ode on Well, no 

swarm (verb.) 
s as bees about their queen . , Princess, i. 39 

swarmed. 
.noise of life 6" in the golden present, Gardener 's D. 175 
with the cross ; they .s again. . StS. Stylites 170 
s His literary leeches. . . . Will Water. 199 



swarming;. 
and the crowd were s now . 
heathen s o'er the Northern Sea. 



Princess, Con. 37 
Guinevere . 425 
swathed, 
s the hurt that drain'd her dear lord's E7iid 1365 

sway fs.) 
A hate of gossip parlance, and of s, Isabel . 26 

sway (verb.) 
She saw the gusty shadow s. . Mariana . 52 

Unto the dwelling she must s. . Ode to Mem. 79 
truth that s's the soul of men? . Day-Dm. . 72 
waves that s themselves in rest, . In Mem. xi. 18 
Unwatch'd, the garden bough shall s, tr c. 1 

while these long branches s, . . Maud,I.xviii, 29 

sway'd. 
Still hither thither idly s . . Millers D. 47 
and so I s All moods. . . . D.qfF. Wom.iyi 
s The rein with dainty finger-tips, Sir L.andQ.G. 40 
^ to her from their orbits . . Pniicess, vii. 307 
And world-wide fluctuation s . InMem. cxi. 15 
S round about him, as he gallop'd up Enid . . 171 
hundred under-kingdoms that he s Vivien . 432 

s The cradle, while she sang . Sea Dreams 279 



swaying. 
Not s to this faction or to that ; 



Ded. of Idylls 20 



Miller's D. 
Lotos- E's, . 
T&lking O. . 



. Princess, 



swear. 
Such eyes ! I s to you, my love. 
Let us s an oath, and keep it 
I s (and else may insects prick 
I s, by leaf, and wind, and rain, 
And hear me s a solemn oath, 
she made me s it — 'Sdeath . 
6" by St something — u 

I s to you lawful and lawless war . Maud, II. v. 
I s it would not ruffle r^e so much Enid . 
I s I will not ask your meaning ir 3 

ere I leave you let me s once more Vivien 
I sby truth and knighthood that I gave Elaine 3 
s To reverence the King, . . Guinevere . 
a secret — only s Before. I tell you En. Arden . 
s upon the book Not to reveal it, . n 

' S' added Enoch sternly 'on the book ir 
I s you shall not make them out of Aylmer's F. 
I s henceforth by this and this, . The Ri?iglet 



£7 
153 

69 
8r 
281 
281 
283 
94 
099 
5Qi 
778 
289 
464. 
838 
839 
843 
301 



swearing, 
s men to vows impossible, 

sweat. 
bloody thumbs S on his blazon'd 
s her sixty minutes to the death 

sweating, 
s rosin, plump'd the pine 
s underneath a sack of corn, 
up the side, s with agony, got, 



Elaifie 



Walk, to the M. 68 
. Golde?t. Year 68 



Amphion 
Enid . 
Elaine 



47 
263 
493 



a weird bright eye, sand trembling, Aylmer's F. 583 

sweep (s.) 
and a s Of richest pauses, . . Elednore . 6$ 
parson taking wide and wider s's, . The Epic . 14 
by many a s Of meadow smooth . Andley Ct. . 12. 
The s of scythe in morning dew, IuMem.\xxxvi\i.i& 
a single bound, and with a s of it . Enid . 1575 

dreadsof the down-streaming seas: En. Arden . 55 
or the s Of some precipitous rivulet ir . 587 

sweep (verb.) 
vS" the green that folds thy grave. . A Dirge . 6 
see the morning mist S thro' them CEnone . 213 
we s into the younger day . - Locksley H. 383 
s the tracts of day and night. . Two Voices 69 
s the crossings, wet or dry, . . Will Water. 47 
let the wind sandtheplover cry ;'Comenot,7ohen,'etc.$ 
ss with all its autumn bowers . In Mem. xi. 10 
heard them s the winter land ; . 11 xxx. 10 

the wind began to s A music . 11 cii. 

s's away as out we pass. . . h Con. 

s me from my hold upon the world, Vivien 



S3 
95 

152 
39 



those long swells of breaker s . The Voyage 

S7veeping. 

And with a s of the arm, . . A Character x6 

s thro' me left me dry, . . . Eocksley H. 131 

S the frothfly from the fescue . Aylmers F. 530 

sweet. 

pillar'd palm, Imprisoning s's, . ArabianN's. 40 
S is the colour of cove and cave . Sea-Fairies 30 
s shall your welcome be . n .3* 

So s it seems with thee to walk . Miller's D. 29 
A trifle, si which true love spells n . 187 

Or gay, or grave, or s, or stern, . Pal. of Art 91 
O s is the new violet . . . MayQueen } \\\. 5 
And s is all the land about . t: .7 

O s and strange it seems to me, . »r . 53 

sit was to dream of Father-land - Lotos-E's. . 39 
How s it were, hearing the downward if . 99 

How s (while warm airs lull us, . u . 134 

Only to hear were s, . . . tr . 144 

surely, slumber is more s than toil 11 . 171 

S as new buds in Spring . . D.ofF. Worn. 272 
Failing to give the bitter of the s, n . 287 

which came between, more s than Gardener' sD. 247 
made it s To walk, to sit . . Ed. Morris 39 
.5" / s! spikenard, and balm, . St S. Stylites 208 

Yet seem'd the pressure thrice as s Talking O, 145 



TEXiVYSOX'S WORKS. 



407 



l'OEM. 1INE. 

These three made unity so s, . Two Voices 421 
How j- are looks that ladies bend Sir Galahad : -\ 
made it seem more s to be Vou might haz-e won' 29 
As i as English air could make her, Print ess,Pro. 1^4 



S and low, s and low. ... m 11. 4sG 

O : and far. from cliff and scar . 11 iii. 35O 

* as those by hopeless fancy feign'd m :v. 37 

S is it to have done the thing one ought, •■ v. 64 

she can oe s to those she lo\es, 11 . 279 

showers of random s on maid and man •> vii. 71 
call her s, as if in irony, . . i< .82 

and j is every sound .rep ) . h . 203 

O .S" and bitter in a breath . . In Mem iii. 3 

" 1'hey rest,' we said, 'their sleep I* $,' ■■ xxx. to 

To niter love more s than praise . 11 lxxvi. 16 

S after showers, ambiosial air, . ti lxxxv. 1 

Desire of nearness doubly s, : . 11 cxvi 6 

if the words were s and strong . n exxiv. 11 
Hut a smile could make it s . Maud, I. vi. 39, 95 

What some have found so s ; . n xi. 4 

Maud is as true as Maud is J. • . 11 xiii. 32 

low world, where yet 'tis s to live : 11 xvili 48 

if left uncaiicell'd, had been so 5; 11 xix. 46 

meadow your walks have left so s 11 xxii. 39 
She is coming, my own, my s; • 11 .67 
seeing her so s and serviceable. . Enid 



words whose echo lasts, they were so s, » 



S were the days when I was all unknown. Vivien 351 
if you love, it will be s to give it : Elaine . 689 
if he love, it will be y to have it . 11 . 690 

s and serviceable 'I o noble knignts >i . 763 

then will I, foi true you are and i 11 . 950 

S is true love tho' given in vain. . 11 1001 

s is death who puts an end to pain : ir 1002 

J-.ove, art thou s f then bitter death 11 1004 

Love, thou art bitter 5 is death . •» 1005 

heard the bridegroom is so i ? . Guinevere . 175 
hast not made my life so j to me . ,1 . 448 

taking pride in her. She look'd so s, Aylmer's F. 555 
your dicam,' she said. ' Not sad, buts' Sea Dreams 10 f 
' So s. I lay ' said he ' And mused •» .10} 

an loilc they s.iys is r, . . , .V. Farmer 63 
1 knew not what of wild and J, . Tlthonus . 61 
Where is another s as my I .' 
C'laspt on her seal, my s ! 

ttuteten. 
i": the spirit still. 

sicrt teu'd 
Lo! J with the summer light, . Lotos-E's. . 77 

stiec tt'r. 
Whether smile 01 fiown be s, . Madeline . 13 
5 is the young lamb's voice . A/at Queen, iii 6 
s far is death than life . . 11 .8 

.» 'ban the dream Dream'd by a happy Gatdener'sD 70 
S thy voice, but every sound is sued: l'riniess,\u 204 
; seems lo rest beneath the clover sod hiMent. x 12 
nothing can be s Than maiden Maud Maud, l.xx 21 
s th in the bride of Cassivtlaun, . Enid . . 744 
I know not which is r, no, not I. . Elaine 100^-9 
if death be i. let me die. , . 11 1006 

' Your own will be the s,' . . Sea Dreams 304 

sweetest. 
can break our dream When J ; 
love their best Closest and s. 



The Window 86 
• 135 

DofF.Wom.2-fs 



Elaine 



Sweet-Gate. 
SO rustic round the shelving keel Ed Morris 1 

sweetheart. 
S, I ;ove you so well . . . Grandmother 

tweet-hearted, 

S-h, you, whose light blue eyes . l/iMem.xcv. 

sweetness. 
folds the lily all her s up, . , Priucas vii. 1 
lie gun in s ami 111 11101.1I height " . 2 

1 c my s moic and more, In Mem.xxxv. 

A 'cciet i 111 the stream, . . " IxiiL 

'I hi c from its proper place f . n Uxxii 
N 01 mini; the s 01 the skill . . 11 cix. 



l'OEM. USE. 

your s hardly leaves me a choice . Maud, I 

Tho' I fancy her s only due . 11 xiii. ,j 

sweet smelling. 
led me thro' the short s-s lanes . The Brook . 122 

swell (s.) 
' the wavy s of the soughing reeds Dying Sivan 38 
[ four currents in one j . . . Pal. of Art 33 
I a s of music on the wind . May Queen, iii. 32 
I on the s The silver lily heaved . To E E. . 18 
[ only the s Of the Ion;; waves . Maud, 1 xviii. 62 

I So fresh they rose in shadow'd s's The Letters 46 
! only heaved with a summei s. . The Daisy . 12 
' those iong s's of breaker sweep . The Voyage 3a 

swell .verb ) 

I with white bells the clover-hill s's Sea-Fairies 14 

1 sometimes they J and move, . . Eleauore . 111 

I And while he sinks or s's . . Talking O. 270 

S'i up, and shakes and falls. . .Sir Galahad 76 

s On some dark shore . , . Princess, i. 244 

S out and fail, as if a door . . DiMem xxviii. 7 

Spring that s's the narrow brooks 11 Ixxxiv. 70 

siveird. 

But still her lists were s . . Princess, iv. 300 

voice of the long sea-wave as it s . Maud,\.x'\v. 31 

low musical note .S" up and died : . Sea Dreams 204 

as it s, a ridge Of breaker issued . 11 , 204 

and s again Slowly to music . • » -215 

The broad seas j to meet the keel, The Voyage 13 

swelleth. 

Her song the itntwhite s, . . Clariiel . 15 

swelling; 

Of such a tide f toward the land, Sea Dreams 85 

swept. 
with a flying finger 1 my lips, . Gardener* 'sD '.241 
A breeze thro' all the garden s . Day- Dm . 133 
No wing of wind the legion J, . InMem. Ix.wii. 6 
downwejandchargcdandovcrihrew Ode on W 
S with it to the shore . . Sea Dreams iy 

s away The men of flesh and blood, " . 230 

SwelTd to meet the keel, And a' behind TheVoy. 
He cast his body, and 011 we s n . 80 

swerve. 
approaching rookery s From the elms Princes f, Con 97 
Nor pastoral rivulet that s*s . InAfem.xax 14 

.V from her duly to hei self and us— Ay Inter's F, 304 

swened, 

be s from right to save A 1'rincc . Princess, ii. 270 
And so my passion hath not s In Mem Ixxxiv. 4; 

swerving. 
at a sudden s of the road, . . Enid . 1355 

swift. 

Not ^ nor slow to change ' Love tlurn thy land,' etc. 3 1 

swim, 

how to skate, to row, to s . . Ed. Morris 19 
High up the vapours fold and s: . Two I 'oil 
A light before me s'r, . . . Sir Gala/:.: 

1 he mystic glory 5 s away : . In Mem. Ixvi. 9 

on the depths of death there s's . n evii. 11 

swindler. 
and a wietchcd s's lie? . . . Maud, I. i. 56 

swine. 
watch the darkening droves of j . Pal. of Art 159 
Upon hct tower, the Niobc of s. Walk to the M. .. 1 
all the s were sows. And all the dogs' — Princeis,\. 190 
I husiied together, each sev, like r, Maud, I. i. 34 
of all the drove should touch me : s !' Vivien . 549 

swing {s.) 

the rush of the air in the prone s . Ay Inters F. 86 

swing (verb. ) 
j'jc the trailer from the crag ; . I.ocksley II 161 

shrill LeJ rings, llie censer rt, , Sir Gala/... 
6 [ -.' V ) 

17 as in a 1, With dinning sound . EUlUum , iji 



no 
866 



408 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Down-deepening from s to s 

at the last he waken'd from his. s . 

swoon (verb ) 
the languid air did s. 
A time to sicken and to s, 
Lest he should s and tumble , 

swoon d 

She nor s, nor utter 1 d cry : . 
the pure pain, and wholly 5 away, 
smote her hand; well-nigh she s .* 
woman shrieking at his feet, and J. 



rOEM. LINE. 

Fat una, . 27 
Enid . 1431 



sycamore 
The pillar' d dust of sounding s" 
height Of foliage, towering s; 
The large leaves of the s. 



rOEM. line, 

. Audley Ci . :=, 
JnMem.lxxxvin 4 

:r xciv. 55 



Lotos-E's. . 5 
In Me vi. xxi. 17 

En. A rden . 775 

Pnncess, v. 533 

Elaine . 517 ' 

. 622 I 

Ayhners F. 811 | 



Sylta. 

! all the blood by S shed Came driving Lucretius . 4 

syllable. 

j Faltering, would break its 5^ 



swooning. 

And I was faint to s, . . Vivien . T30 

thus they bore her s to her tower, Elaine . 96} 

Lash the maiden into s, . . Boaduea . 67 

swoops. 
and s's The vulture, beak and talon, Princess, v. 372 

sword. 

flames, nor trenchant s's "Clear-headed friend* etc 14 
No s Of wrath her right arm whirl a The Poet 53 

Many drew 5*5 and died. . . D of F. Worn. 95 
if knowledge bring the s, That know- 
ledge takes the s away — ' Lore thou thy land' 87 
mystic, wonderful, Holding the s . ill. d Arthur 32 j 
King Arthurs s, Excalibur i> , 103 i 

ciutch'd the s And strongly wheel'd n . 135 

Man for the s and for the needle she Princess, v. 438 j 
j to s, and horse to horse we hung n . 528 } 

To draw, to sheathe a useless s 1 . . InMent cxxvii 13 \ 
not openly bearing the s. . Maud, I. 1. 28 ] 

beard Geraint. and grasping at hiss Enid . *573 j 

touch it with a s, It buzzes wildly Vivien . 281 j 

seem a s beneath a belt of three, . m . 360 

every dint a s had beaten in it. . Elaine . 19 

children born of thee are s and fire Guinevere . 422 
No desolation but by s and fire? . Ayhners F. 748 
hoveringly a s Now over . . Lucretius , 61 

swordcui 
Seam'd withanancientson thecheek Elaine . 25S 

sword-grass. 

On the oat-grass and the s-g . MayQueen,\\. 28 

swore. 

we closed, we kiss'd, j faith . 
5 They said he lived shut up 
laugh'd, and s by Peter and by Paul: 
The barons s, with many words, . 
s he long'd at college, only long'd, 
She was a princess too ; and so I s 
caught By that you j to withstand ? 
bailiff s that he was mad, 
s That 1 would track this caitiff . 
But keep that oath you s, 
on the book, half-frighted. Miriams, 
s besides To play their go-between 
to those that s Not by the temple 
ours he s were all diseased . 

sworn. 

True Mussulman was I and s 

s his love a thousand times . 

Not tho' Blanche had s 

Mine, mine — our fathers have s. . 

.s From his own lips to have it — . 

s That 1 will break his pride 

* Have I not j ? I am not trusted 

1 have s never to see him more, . Guinevere . 374 



symbol. 
Weak s's of the settled bliss, 
so bhali grief with s's play, . 
Mute s's of a joyful morn, 

symbol' d. 
As jf the living passion s theie 

symmetry, 
s Of thy floating gracefulness 
A certain miracle of j, . 



Ed. Morris 


"4 : 


Golden Year 


8 


. Godiva 


2 4 


Day-Dm. . 


155 


Princess, Pro 


157 1 


n v. 


285 i 


Maud, I. vi. 


80 


The Brook . 


143 


Enid . 


414 


Vivien 


538 


. En. A rden 


844 


Ayhners E. 


522 


Tlte Voyage 


793 
76 


A radian N's 


9 


(E7ione 


227 


Princess, vii. 


57 


Maud, I.xix 


43 


Enid . 


409 


" 


4 2 3 


Vivien 


377 



Love and Duty 39 

, Milter's D. 233 
luMemAxxxw 95 

11 Con. 58 

Ay liner's F. 535 

. E lean 07 e . 49 
. Gardeners D. ix 

sympathise. 
growing coarse to s with clay. . Lotksley H. 46 

sympathy. 

dainty-woeful sympathies. . , Margaret . 53 
plies Itsomce, moveclwiths. " Loze thou thy land' 48 
Nor lose their mortal s. . In Mem.xxx. 23 

And yet I spare them s . . n lxii. 7 

Some painless s with pain ? ' . n Ixxxiv. S3 

Syrian. 
breath'd beneath the .S" blue: . In Mem. 11. 12 

sys tern. 
four field s, and the price of grain ; Audley Ci 33 
to law kS' and empire ? . „ . Loveand Duty 8 
A dust of s's and of creeds. . . Two Voices 207 
block and bar Your heart with s . Princess, iv. 443 
world Of traitorous friend and broKen s w vi. 178 

Our little s's have their day ; In Mem. Pro. ij 

star and s rolling past, . . . 11 Con. 122 



iaahe. 

But godamoighty amoost t mea , N. Farmer. 51 

taaken. 
A mowt 'a / Joanes . . . N. Farmer . 49 
Or a mowt 'a / Robins ... if -50 

taakin . 
* The amoighty's a to' you toiss£n A~. Farmer 10-26 

taiile. 

an a's hallus i' the owd t ; , N. Farmer. 66 

tabernacle. 
gray tower, or plain-faced t . . Aylmer's F. 61S 

table (see Table Round.) 
all the i"s danced again, . , The Goose . 47 
King Arthur's t, man by man, . A/.d' Arthur 3 
now the whole round T is dissolved tr . 234 

And thrumming on the t: . . Will Water. 160 
on the fs every clime and age . Princess, Pro. 16 
laid aside the gems There on a / . Elaine 1197 

softly by the King And all his T . Guinevere . 46 
himself was knight Of the great T — 11 . 233 

Sat at his t ; drank his costly wines Sea Dreams 74 
there at t's of ebony lay . . Bodduea . 61 



swum. 
with an eye that s in thanks ; 

swung. 

bells that s, Mcv'd of themselves, 
S themselves, and in low tones 
and s The heavy-folded rose, 
.? an apple of the purest gold, 
.9 from his brand a windy buffet . 
$ round the lighted lantern . 
sideways up he s his arms, . 



Princess, vi. 193 

Pal of Art i2g 
Vision of Sui 20 
InMem. xciv. 58 
Enid . . 170 

M . . 939 

Guinevere . 260 
Sea Dreams 24 



table-land 
Are close upon the shining t-Vs 



Ode on Well. 216 



Table Round. 

that great order of the PR . Enid . . 3 

made a knight of Arthur's T P, . n . 1641 

I, therefore, made him of our TR h . 1756 

About the founding of a T R, . Vivien . 261 

Assay it on some one of the T R . 11 . 539 

blinds himself and ali the TR . 11 . 6^3 

I know the T R, my friends of old ; n . 665 

Rapt in this fancy of his T R, . Elaine . 130 

the rest, his T R, Known as they are, 11 . 186 

much they ask'd of court and 'PR, tr , 268 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



439 



. Princess, ii 169 

. F.H, Arden . 552 
. The I 'oyage 10 



POEM. LINE. 

charge at the head or all his 1 R, Elaine . 304 
with the f A' that held the lists, . •• 466-98 

is head of all our T R, . " 1318 

The marshall'd order of their T R .\ 1322 
To make disruption in the fR . Guinevere . 18 

Hath wrought confusion in the T R n . 218 ' 

canst thou know of Kings and T's R 11 . 226 ! 

In that fair order of my T R, . o . 460 

tablet. 
Thy / glimmers to the dawn . InMemAxyi. 16 

Their pensive t's round her head, 1. Can. 51 

table-talk. 
genial /-/, Or deep dispute, . //:. !/<■;;/. lxxxiii. 23 

taboo. 
worse than South-sea-isle t . . Princess, lit 261 

tack. 
tilt as when a boat T's, 

tackle 
Huoy'd upon floating t 
Dry sang the t, sang the sail • 

tact 
So gracious was her t and tenderness : Primess.i. 24 
The graceful /, the Christian art : In Mem.cix. 16 
she by / of love was well aware . Elaine . 978 

ta't-ti. 
clay /from thecommonearth. To — WithP.ofArtlJ 
And t my fiddle to the gate, . Amp/lion 11,15 

oath was / for public use . . Princess, tv. 318 

tagged. 

t with icy fringes in the moon . St S. Stylttcs 31 

tail. 
with playful / Crouch'd fawning . CPnone . 196 
fiom head to / Came out clear plates P:oo Voices 11 
the innumerable ear and /; . . The Brook 134 

taint. 
Defects of doubt, and t's of blood : In Mem hit 4 
pure is he from t of craven guile . Ode on Well. 135 
should surfer any / In nature : . Enid . . 31 
Suspicious that her nature had a t. 11 . .68 

take. 
T, Madam, this poor book of song ; Tothe Queen 17 
when to / Occasion by the hand, . ,, . 30 

7' the ! it my hrc.ist. . Adeline . 8 

Gargarus Stands up and t's the morning CKnone n 
that will / away my sin , . Pal. of Art 287 
Let her / 'em : they are hers : . MayQueen,u. 46 
1 thought, 1 /it for a sign. . . n iii. 38 

Grows green and broad, and t's no care l.otos-t.'s. 73 
T warning I he that will not sing The Blackbird 21 
the New-year will / 'em away. D. of the O. Year 14 
Comes up to I his own. . ,1 -3° 

'J hat t's away a noble mind. . To J. S. . 48 

/ The place of him that sleeps 11 .67 

knowledge t's the sword away — ' l.ovethou thytandii 
t the goose, and keep you warm, The Goose . 7 
/ the goose, and wring her throat, 11 . 31 

' The Ilcvil / the goose, . ■> -55 

/ the style of those heroic times? . The Epic . 35 
therefore / my brand Excalibur, M '.d Arthur 27,36 
t's the Hood With swarthy webs . >, . 268 

lusty bird t's every hour for dawn. 11 Ep. 1 1 

t her for your wife .... Dora . . 18 
/ a month to think, . . .11 . .27 
let me / the boy, ir .64 

but / the child 11 9', 97 

thou should*!/ my trouble on thyself u . .116 
will beg of him to / thee back : rep.)n . . 121 
/ her back : she loves you well. . i» . 140-52 
a beast To / them as 1 did? . . Ed. Morris 72 
mercy. Lord, and t away my sin. St .S. Slyliles 8,44 

/ the meaning, Lord : 11 .21 
silly people t me for a saint . . 11 . 1 i j 

let them / Example, pattern : u , aig 

kiss him : / his hand in thine. . Locksley II . 5a 

1 will / some savage woman . . n ,168 



POEM. LINK. 

turn this sickness yet might '■ . Two I'oicCi c< 
/ the nroidery Iranic, and add . Day- Dm. . 15 
So, Lady Flora, t my lay . . 11 1 

So much your eyes my far.cy t — 1 . 238 

/ it — earnest wed with sport, i< . ?-o 

I'll / the showers as they fail . Amphion . joi 

t Half-views of men and things. . Will Water. 5. 
I / myself to task : . . ,, 

T my brute, and lead him in, . I 'ision of Sin 65 
tsa lady's finger with all care, . Pnncess,Pro 171 
' 7* Lilia, then, for heroine' 11 . 217 

Cyril whispex'd : ' 7" me with you too.' ■■ i. £0 

T me: I'll serve you better in a strait 11 . 84 

'Well then, Psyche, / my life t, ji, ^7 

open eyes, and we must / the chance 11 iii. 127 

t The dip of certain strata . . 11 • 1=3 

And t's and ruins all ; . it 222 

were 1 thou that she might t me in, n i<\ 84 

mind is changed : we / it to ourself.' " . 343 

/ such bloody vengeance on you both? 11 . 513 

Satan / The old women . . 11 v. 32 

' Vet I pray, 7* comfort: . . ti -77 

they will / her, they will make her hard.fi . 87 

will t her up and go my way, . ir . 99 

t them all-in-all Wei e we ourselves u . 192 

I / her for the flower of womankind, 11 . 277 

Still T not his life . . . 11 . 397 

man wants weight, the woman t's it up 1. . 4^4 

she's yet a colt — 7", break hei : . 11 . 446 

on the little clause ' t not his life :' 11 . 4S9 

Is. and breaks, and cracks, and splits, 11 . 510 

I go with thee ' 7' it. Sir ' . 11 

/ her hand, she weeps : 'Sdeath ! . 11 
on to the tents : / up the Prince <• . 262 

stoop from heaven and / the shape o . 363 

great river I me to the main : 11 . 376 

swarming now, To / their leave . t> C ■ 

shall I t a thing so blind, . . In Mem. 111. 13 
She t's a riband or a rose ■ . . 11 
fs the sunshine and the rains, . o x. 14 

seem to / The touch of change . 11 x\i. 5 
I t the grasses of the grave . . 11 x.vi. 3 

t's His license in the field of time . 11 xwii. 5 
To / her latest leave of home, . 11 xxxix. 6 
She fs, when harsher moods remit 11 xlvii, 6 
thou shaft / a nobler leave.' . . 11 Ivii, 12 
Who fs the children on his knee, • ■ • Ixv. n 
7' wings of fancy, and ascend . 11 btxv. 1 
T wings of foresight : lighten thro' » . 5 

And / us as a single soul. . . t. lxxxiii. 44 
Can / no part away from this : . ., Ixxxiv. 68 
Ah, t the imperfect gift I bring, . ■■ 117 

I'll rather take what fruit may be ■> cvii. 1 ; 

the distance t's a lovelier hue, . o cxiv. 6 
t's The colours of the ctcsccnt prime? 11 cxv. 3 
I / the pressure of thine hand. . <• cxviii. 12 
/ the print Of the golden age . Maud, I. i. 29 
To / a wanton dissolute boy . m x. 58 

Shall I not /care of all that I think , n xv. 7 
Or to ask her, '/me, sweet, . " II. iv. 87 

He may / her now : for she never n v. I 7 

would I / her father for one hour The Brook . 114 
1 T it and come) to the Isle of To F. IK Maurice la 
T him to stall, and give him corn . Enid . . 371 
/ the rustic murmur of their bourg 11 . .411 
and /as fairest of the fair, . . II . 

He said, 'You /it. speaking' . •> 

/ A horse and arms for guerdon ; . 11 . 

'I / it as free gift, then,' ■■ 



T Five horses and their armours ; ' 
some of your kind people / him up, 1 
/ him up, and bear him to our hall, 1 
Sec ye / the charger too, . . , 
7" warning: yonder man is surclydcad:> 
7* my salute,' unknightly 
< Seraint could never / again 



1071 
1-^57 
1392 

1404 
1520 
1565 

1797 



/this boon so strange and not so strange, Vivien . isi 
T Vivien for expounder . . « us 

T one verse more— -the lady speaks it 11 

/ my counsel : let me know it at once 11 

found it therefore : / the truth. . 11 



4io 



CONCORDANCE TO 



TOEM LINE. 

shameless ones, who /Their pastime Elaine . 101 
Advance,and/your prize The diamond,'" . 502 

Wherefore /This diamond, and deliver itt. . 544 

you used to i me with the flood . ir 1031 

t the little bed on which I died . tr mi 

a chariot-bier To / me to the river, 11 11 16 

T, what I had not won except for you w 1175 

yeu I i »t with Amen. . _ . tr 1217 

com 1 ? to 1 the King to fairy land? 1; 1250 

to ,'my last farewell of you . n 1268 

to/ last lesve of all I loved? . Guinevere . 542 

1 cannot / thy hand ; . *• . 549 

y^vour own time, Annie (rep.) . En. Arden . 463 
was It hard to / The helpless life . i« . 557 

why did they / me thence? , . ir . 782 

T, give her this for it may comfort her rt . 900 

' T it,' she added sweetly . . Ayhners F. 246 
who beside your hearths Can /her place n . 735 

Will not another / their heritage ': 11 . 786 

he wouldn't / my advice. . . Grandmother 4 
Let me go : / back thy gift : . Tithonus , 27 

God hilp me ■ save I / my part c Sailor Bov . 21 
t "'t, love, and put it by ; . . 7 iie Ringlet 11 
/ this and pray that he Who wrote it A Dedication 4 
T the hoary Roman head . . Boadicra . 65 
would / the praise and care no more Coquette, ii, 14 
weepest ihou to / the cast . . tr in. 1 

T you his nearest. 7 you his dearest 'Ihe Victim 27 
Here is his dearest, YVe / the boy. •» . 42 

did T / That popular name of thine Lucretius . 95 
/ Only such, cups as left us . . 11 . 211 

Great Nature, /, and forcing far apart ir . 241 

7 my love, for love will come . The Window 12$ 
T my love, and be my wife « . * 11 . 129 

Mast I t you and bieak you . 11 136-8 

T, /, — break, break,— tr . 140 

take heed, 
being found / h of Vivien. . e Vivien . 379 

taken. 

more is t quite away, . - . Miller's D. 22 

Al! thing? are t from us. . . Lotos-E's. . 91 

Those we love first are / first . To J. S. . 12 

I fear My wound hath / cold, . M. d' Arthur 166 

Ate / by the foielock. . . . Golden Year 19 

Tho' much is /, much abides; . Ulysses . 65 

i with her seeming openness . Princess, iv. 281 
t to be such as closed Grave doubts JnMem.xlvn. 2 

As of a wild thing / in the trap . Enid . 1571 

for we have / out farewells. . . Guinevere . 1 16 

/ everywhere for Dure, n . 513 
mother said 'They have / the child. The Victim 45 

They have / our son . *i . 51 

T the stars from the night , .-, The Window 39 

takeih 

sick man's room when he /repose 'A spirit haunts* 14 

taking 

parson / wide and wider sweeps . The Epic . 14 
He kiss'd, / hi* last embiace, . Two Voices 254 
Titanic forces / birth . . . Day-Din. . 229 
Womanlike / revenge too deep . Maud, 1. iii. 5 
/ true for false, ot false for true ; . Enid . £53 

gross heart Would reckon worththe / ? Vivien . 766 
for you left me / no farewell, . Elaine 1267 

T her breau and theirs : . . En. Arden . in 
asking overmuch and / less, tt , 251 

So often, that the folly / wings . t» . 404 

/ pride in her, She look'd so sweet Aylmer's F. 554 

iale {story, etc.) 
With cycles of the human / . . Pal. of Art 146 
an ancient / of wrong, Like a / of 

little meaning .... Lotos-E's. . ^63 
Brimful of those wild t's, . . D of F. Worn, 12 
With the fairy t's of science . e Locksley H. 12 
A deeper / my heart divines. . Iwo Voices 269 

And told him all her nurse's /. a Lady Clare 80 
Tell me t's cf thy first love — . Vision of Sin 163 
a hoard ct/'j that dealt with kmghtSfPriucess^ro. 29 
the / cf her That cirove her foes . tr . 122 



POEM. LINK. 

told a / from mouth to mouth . Princess, Pro 1S9 
what kind of t's did men tell men . n . iy$ 

Why not a summer's as a winter's / ? 11 . 204 

A / for summer as befits the time . tr . 205 

tell me pleasant t's, and read My sickness ir ii. 234 

he that next inherited the / . . )t iv. ^69 

whereon Follow'd his /. . tr v. "46 

my / of love In the old king's ears, tr . 230 

So closed our /, of which 1 give you all n Con. 1 
the sequel of the / Had touched her; 11 . 30 

To bear thro' Heaven a / of woe, . In Mem. xh. 2 
When truth embodied in a / . . n xxxvi. 7 
Then be my love an idle /, . . m lxi. 3 

across With some long-winded / . The Brook . 109 
there he told a long long-winded /, n .1 38 

call'd her like that maiden ir> the /, Enid . . 742 
lay still ; as he that tells the / m . 1010 

jested with all ease, and told Free t's, " 11 40 

Were I not woman, 1 could tell a /, Vivien . 546 

answer'd Merlin ' Nay, I know the /. m , 563 

' O ay,' said Vivien, 'overtrue a /. tt . 57c 

Crueller than was ever told in /, . n . 707 

blamed herself for telling hearsay t's 11 , 800 

ran the / like fire about the court . Elaine . 730 

maid had told him all her / . . u 794, 810 

the fs Which my good father told Guinevere . 314 
j will tell him fs of foreign parts . En. Arden . 198 
there the / he utter'd brokenly, . 11 . 648 

felt the / Less than the teller : . tr . 712 

the pun, the scurrilous /, — . . Aylmer's F. 441 
And I fear you'll listen to t's . Grandmother 54 

t's ! for never yet on earth . . Lucretius . 1 :o 
rustic Gods ! a / To laugh at — ■ . tt . 182 

tale (number.) 
The /of diamonds for his destined boon) Elaine , 9; 

talent. 
health, wealth, and time, And fs Princess, iv. 333 

talk (s ) 
It seems in after-dinner / . . Miller % D. 31 
held a /, How all the old honour . The Epic . 6 
our soul with / of knightly deeds Jlf. d Arthur ig 
A / of college and of ladies' rights Princess,7'r / j.226 
broke and buzzed in knots of /; . tr i, 132 

household /, and phrases of the hearth, n ii. 294 

Heart-affluence in discursive / In Mem. cviii. 1 
dry-tongued laurels' pattering / Maud,l. xviii. 8 
perplext her With his worldly / . t. xx. 7 

From / of battles loud and vain, . Ode on Well. 247 
honest / and wholesome wine, To F D. Maurice 18 
like a shadow, past the people's / Enid . . 82 
I will tell him all their caitiff"/; tr . 915 

his/, When wine and free companions tr . 1141 

huge Earl cried out upon her / . tr . 149Q 

play'd about with slight and sprightly/ Vivien 27 
harlots paint their / as well as face ir . 670 

/ and minstrel melody entertain'd Elaine . 267 
From / of war to traits of pleasantry tt . 320 

Lancelot told me of a common / . ti . 576 

walls of yew Their / had pierced . ir . 965 

noble man bat made ignoble / . n 1082 

child kill me with her innocent / ?' Guinevere . 212 
in sweet / or lively, all on love . tr . 383 

miss to hear high / of noble deeds tr . 495 

current of his / to graver things . En. Arden . 203 
Fairer his /, a tongue that ruled. Ayhners F. 194 
remembering His former t's with Edith rr 457 

more and more allowance for his / Sea Dreams 75 
pious /, when most his heart was dry tr . 182 

talk (verb.) 
To himself he t's . . ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 3 
And ye / together still . . . Adeline . 60 
makes me / too much in age. . Miller s D. 194 
7" with the wild Cassandra . . CEnone . 259 
you can /.* yours is a kindly vein Ed. Morris 81 
days were brief Whereof the poets /, Talking O. 185 
*0 ay, ay, ay, you //' . . Godiva . 2O 

* I /,' said he, ' Not with thy dreams.' l"wo Voices 38 1 
All his life the charm did / . . Day-Dm. . i~i 



TE.WVYSON'S WORKS. 



4U 



POEM. LINE. 

Had made him / for show ; . . Will Water. 196 
We did but t you over, pledge yow Princess, Pro. 183 
down the hery gulf as / of it, . 11 iii. 270 

You / almost like Ida: she can/; 11 v. 201 

you /kindlier: we esteem you for it 11 . 203 

While now we t as once we talked In Mem. lxx. 9 
To / them o'er, to wish them here, 11 lxxxix. 11 
Be cheerful-minded. / and treat . >■ cvi. 19 

And t of others that are wed, . " Con. 98 

I trust that I did not /, . Maud,\. xix. 12-16 

one half-hour, and let him (tome!' The Brook 115 
days That most she loves to t of . " . 226 

tho' you / of trust, . . . Vivien . 208 

heard their voices / behind the wall 11 . 481 

Of whom the people t mysteriously Elaine . 424 
As even here they t at Almesbury Guinevere . 206 
clamour' d the good woman" hear him t .' Eu.ArdenS^i 

tailed 
sat and eat And t old matters over Audley Ct. 23 
For oft I / with him apart, . . Talking O. 17 
while they /.above their heads I saw Princess, Pro. 118 
they / At wine, in clubs, of art . 11 . 159 

while I walk'd and / as heretofore u i. 16 

/ The trash that made me sick . 11 ii. 371 

answer' d sharply that 1 / astray. . 11 iii. 124 

we are not / to thus : . . . i> . 233 

every voice she / with ratify it, . t» v. 127 

/ down the fifty wisest men ; . 11 . 284 

she you walk'd with, she You / with 11 vi. 238 
maidens came, they /. They sang, 1, vii. 7 

hears his burial / of by his friends 11 . 137 

While now we talk as once we / . InMem lxx. 9 
We /: the stream beneath us ran, 11 lxxxviii. 43 
My love has / with rocks and trees m xcvi. 1 
She / as if her love were dead, . The Letters 27 
/ with Dubric, the high saint, . Enid . 1713 

when often they have / of love, . Elaine . 670 

/, Meseem'd, of what they knew not; 11 . 671 

Blue, and reds They / of: . . Aylmer's F. 252 
people / — that it was wholly wise 11 . 268 

people / — The hoy might get . 11 . 270 

So they /.Poor children, for their comfort:-! . 426 

wrinkled benchers often / of him . 11 . 473 

ialketh. 
Who / with thee, Adeline? . . Adeline . 24 

talking. 
beneath a yew And / to himself Love and Death 6 
it her half-right / of her wrongs Princess, v. 375 
Drinking and / of me : . . . A/and, 1. vii. 6,14 
/ from the point, he drew him in . The Brook . 154 
And with nie Philip, / still ; . u . 164 

In silver tissue / things of state . Enid . . 663 
you were / sweetly with your Prince 11 . . 698 
heard them /, hislong-boundcn tongue En. Arden 645 

tall. 
divinely /, And most divinely fair. D.ofF.Wom. 87 
arching limes are / and shady . Margaret . 59 
are the ladies of your land so t V . Princess, ii. 33 
7* as a figure lenglhen'd on the sand 11 vi. 145 
But she is / and stately. . . ATaud, l.x'ti 16 
whom God had made full-limb'd and /, Guinevere 43 
loftier Annie Lee, Fair-hair' d and /. En. Arden . 750 
>od beside her / and strong 11 . 757 

his own children / and beautiful, . ir . 763 

dull and self-involved, '/'and erect, Aylmer's F. 119 
(ollow'd out '/"and erect, . . " . 818 

from the porch, / and erect again . 11 . 825 

it grew so / It wore a crown . The Flinver 9 

You so small ! am I so / ? . . The Window 76 

taller. 
a hart T than all his fellows, . Enid . . 150 

tallest. 
:hc, that rose the / of them all . At. if Arthur 207 

tall-tmorrd. 
long street climbs to one /-/ mill . En. Arden . 5 

Tallyho. 
Bad: Bess, Tantivy, T, . . The Brook . 160 



talon POEM. LINE. 

swoops The vulture, beak and /, . I'nmess. v. 373 
ever-ravening eagle's beak and / Boadicea . n 

tamarisk. 
The stately cedar, fs. . . A radian ATs. 105 

from a / near I wo Proctors . . Princess, iv. 233 

tame (adj.) 
were all as /, I mean as noble . Vivien . 457 

helpless life so wild that it was / . En. Arden . 558 

tame (verb.) 
nor /and tutor with mine eye . DofFWom.\-$ 
tamed my leopards : shall 1 not / these.' Princess,v 390 

tamed. 
I /my leopards: . . . Princess, v. 390 

Tamesa. 

Bloodily flow'd the T . . . Boadicea . 27 

tamper 
embassies oflovc.To/withthefeclingsCan&'WirT'YO 19 

tamper d. 
Some meddling rogue has / with him Elaine . 129 
/ with the Lords of the White Horse, Guinevere 16 

tangle (s. ) 
Should toss with / and with shells In Mem. x. 20 

tangle (verb.) 
knots that / human creeds, 'Clear-lieaded friend, 'etc. 3 

Tantivy. 
Black Bess, T, Tallyho, 

tap. 
crush'd with a / Of my finger-nail . Maud, II. ii. 21 

taper. 

A million fs flaring bright . . Arabian N's.i?\ 

I knew your / faraway, . . Miller's D. . 109 
Her / glimmer'd in the lake below : Ed. Morris 133 

As this pale fs earthly spark, . Si Agnes' Eve 15 

The fs burning fair. . . . Sir Galahad 32 

calm that let the fs burn . . In A/cm. xc\v. 5 



The Brook . 1 60 



tapping. 
Leisurely / a glossy boot 



Maud, I. xiii. 13 



Walk, to the M. 29 
. Princess, I'ro 14 ) 

. Boiidicea . 16 



tapt. 
whined in lobbies, / at doors 
/ her tiny silken-sandall'd foot 

Tarauis. 
T be propitiated. 

tare. 
That / each other in their slime, . In Mem. Iv. 23 

target. 
passion were a / for their scorn : . Locksley II. 146 
from the tiny pitted / blew . . Aylmer's F. 93 

tarn. 

quenching lake by lake and / by / Princess, vii. 23 

a glen, gray boulder and black / . Elaine . 37 

A horror lived about the / . . ir .3^ 

like a glittering rivulet to the /: .11 -5} 

Tarquin. 

brooking not the T in her veins, . Lucretius . 234 

tarriance. 

after two days' / there return'd, . Elaine . sC3 

tarry. 

' He dared not /,' men will say, . Two Voices 101 

I must go : I dare not/' . . Princess, iii -) 

Knowing I / for thee,' . . . Aland, 1 1 1. vi. 13 

Would he could / with us here . Enid . . 623 

if he could but / a day or two, »» 627 

if thou / we shall meet again, . Guinevere . 89 

tarrying. 
after / for a space they rode . 

task's.) 
Sore / to hearts worn out . Lntos-E's. . mi 

the fs of might To weakness 'Love thru thytand' 1 ; 
'Hard /, to pluck resolve,' I cried, Two Voices Ii3 



Enid . 



1801 



£12 



CONCORDANCE TO 



May Queen ,'n 


■ i7 


Dora . 


95 


Ed. M 'orris 


IQ 


Tivo Voices 


281 


Princess, Pro 


■ 59 


" 


Il6 


ii 11. 


65 


ti 


130 


n 


363 


ii VH. 


291 


Ode on Well. 


69 


ii 


131 


Vivien 


181 


" 


4QI 


Guinevere . 


161 



POEM. LINE. 

The wrinkled steward at his t t . Day-Dm. . 47 

I take myself to / ; . . . Will Water. 162 

and yawning ' O hard /,' he cried; Princess, iii. 108 

kissthe child That doesthe* assigned Elaine . 825 

task (verb.) 
as we t ourselves To learn a language Ay Inzer s F. 432 

tassel-hung. 
In native hazels t-h. . . .In Mem. ci. 12 

taste. 
whoso did receive of them And t . Lotos-E's. . 31 
(If Death so t Lethean springs . InMem. xliii. 10 

tasted. 

He ^love with half his mind . InMem.\xxx\x. 1 

touch'd fierce wine, nor t flesh, . Vivien . 477 

taiodd. 
then the man; Torwoaded, . Princess, ii. 105 

taught. 

He t me all the mercy . 
I must be / my duty, and by you ! 
/ me how to skate, to row, . 
that plain fact, as t by these, 
T them with facts, 
teach them all that men are t ; 
she That / the Sabine how to rule 
learn whatever men were /." . 
whatsoever can be t and known; . 
what woman t you this?' 
deep voices our dead captain i 
So great a soldier t us there, 
So / will charm us both to rest 
he t the King to charm the Queen 
An air the nuns had t her ; . 

taunt (s.) 
A t that clench'd his purpose . Princess, v. 296 

taunt (verb.) 
X me no more : Princess, vi. 282 

tavern. 
Cceking a t which of old he knew En. Arden . 692 

tavern-catch. 
To troll a careless, careless t-c . Princess, iv. 139 

tavern-door. 
From many a t-d, . 

tavern-hours. 
The t-h of mighty wits — 

taw. 
That knuckled at the t< . . Will Water. 132 

tawnier. 
the swan's Is t than her cygnet's : Elaine 1179 

tax. 
'Honour,' she said, c and homage, t and toll CEuone 114 
when he laid a t Upon his town, . Godiva . 13 
' If they pay this t, they starve.' tr "20 

she took the t away, ... 11 . 78 

Hortensia spoke against the t; . Princess, vii. 112 
Levied a kindly t upon themselves £u. Arden . 664 

teach. 
Tme the nothingness of things . A Character 4 
Oh ! t the orphan boy to read, L. C. V. de Vere 69 
And, as tradition t'es, . . . Amphion . 26 
others' follies t us not, . . . Will Water. 173 
Nor much their wisdom t's; . ir . 174 

t them all that men are taught ; . Princess, Pro. 136 
Come Time, and t me, many years, InMem.x'ui. 13 
My own dim life should t me this, n xxxiv, 1 
Her office there to rear, to t, . 11 xxxix. 13 

/true life to fight with mortal wrongs JHaud,l. xviii. 54 
As proof of trust O Merlin, t it me Vivien . 1S0 
find a wizard who might t the King tr . 433 

t high thought, and amiable words Guinevere . 477 
Shall we / it a Roman lesson? . Boadicea . 32 
Tihat sick heart the stronger choice OuaMoumen 8 

Teacher. 
Left by the 7" whom he held divine. Lucretius 13 



teaching, 
t him that died Of hemlock . 



TOEM. 

Princess, 



LINE. 

ii. 285 



Will Water. 



. Will Water. 191 



Talking 0. 


£3 


Mariana . 
A Dirge 


13 
22 


Cnana 
riana in the S 


=4 

2 3 

69 

77 

. 20 


Millers D'. 


go 
151 


ii 


211 


11 


221 


ti 


223 



team. 
The t is loosen'd from the wain, . In Mem. cxx. 5 
And see'st the moving of the t. . 11 . 16 

I heat them too — they sing to their i Grandmother %\ 
blessed fealds wi' the Divil's oan team N Farmertz 
and the wild / Which love thee. . Tithouus . 39 

teacup-times. 
In t-t of hood and hoop, 

tear. 

Her t's fell with the dews at even 

Crocodiles wept t's for thee . 

sweeter: dews than traitor's I 

blissful t's blinded my sight 

the fs run down my cheek, . 

I feel the t's of blood arise . 

The home of woe without a t. Ma 

Large Hesper glitter'd on her t's 

dews, that would have fall'n in t's, 

Eyes with idle t's are wet. . 

They have not shed a many fs, . 

Yet fs they shed : ... 

My eyes are full of fs, my heart of love CEnone 30 

water'd it with fs ? O happy fs . it . 230 

be sunder'd without fs To . With Pal. of Art 13 

temper'd with the fs Of angels . ti . 18 

phantasms weeping fs of blood . Pal. of Art 239 

ever unrelieved by dismal fs, . 11 . 271 

embraces of our wives And their warm fs Lotos-E's. 116 

Charged both mine eyes with fs. D. oj F. Worn. 13 

I, blinded with my fs, ... ti . 108 

She ceased in fs, fallen from hope 11 . 257 

By sighs or groans or fs; tr . 284 

a t Dropt on the letters as I wrote. To J. S. . 55 

keep dry their light from fs ; 'Of old sat Freedom* 20 

Remorsefully regarded thro' his/\s, M, d' 'Arthur 171 

dropping bitter fs against his brow tr .211 

look'd with fs upon her boy, . Dora . . 55 

Rain out the heavy mist of fs, Love and Duty 43 

such fs As flow but once a life. 

to the fs that thou wilt weep. 

She told him of their fs, 

eyes are dim with glorious fs, 

fs and smiles from heaven again Sir L. andQ. G. 2 

What there is in loving fs, . . Vision of Sin 161 

foolish fs upon my grave, ' Come not, when,' etc. 2 

And kiss'd again with fs (rep.) . Princess, i. 250 

circled Iris of a night of fs; . 11 iii. 11 

bow'd as if to veil a noble I ; . tr 

T's, idle fs, I know not what they mean u 

T's from the depth of some divine despair 11 

the t She sang of, shook and fell, u 

my Sire, his rough cheek wet with fs 11 

Like summer tempest came her fs n 

leaves were wet with women's fs: " 

Passionate fs Followed : ti 

like an Alpine harebell hung with fs 11 

round my wrist, and fs upon my hand : "- 

The far-off interest of fs? . . In Mem. 

thou deep vase of chilling fs . n 

T's of the widower when he sees n 7 

Mine eyes have leisure for their fs n 

fill'd with fs that cannot fall, 

fs that at their fountain freeze 

With costly spikenard and with fs. 

fs are on the mother's face, 

dip Their wings in fs and skim away 

drown The bases of my life in fs. 

grieve Thy brethren with a fruitless t? 

thy quick fs that make the rose . 

No single t, no mark of oain : 

with long use her fs are dry. 

To pledge them with a kindly /, . 

dipt in baths of hissing fs. 

There has fallen a splendid / 

shake its threaded fs in the wind . 

dabbling in the fount of fictive fs . 

moves, and there are sobs and fs: Ode on Well. 268 

I conseciate with fs— These Idylls. Ded. of Idylls ^ 



62 

Locks ley H. 82 
Godiva . 19 
Two Voices 151 



. 272 



4r 
22 
546 
2 3 
291 
100 
123 



II 


XIX. 


11 


11 


XX. 


12 


ir 


XXX 11. 


12 


if 


XXXIX. 


10 




xlvii. 


ib 


tr 


xlviii. 


16 


{ ti 


lvii. 


10 


ir 


lxxi. 


TO 


11 


lxxvii. 


14 


tt 




20 


11 


lxxxix. 


IO 


11 


CX VI I. 


23 


Ma j 


rt/jl.xxii. 

III. vi. 


59 
28 


The Brook . 


93 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



4i; 



LINK. 
. Ill 

. 823 

•399 
'434 i 
. 229 1 



POEM. 

t's upon his broad and naked breast Enid . 
the mother smiled, but half in t's, 11 
mar a comely face with idiot t's . n 
felt the warm t's falling on his face 11 
cither eyelid wet with t's . . Vivien 
gleam'd her eyes behind her t's . 11 . 252 

slow / creep from her closed eyelid >i . 755 

Then flash'd into wild t's, . . Elaine . 610 

' Farewell, sweet sister,' parted all in ts. n T146 

Words, as we grant grief t's 11 1182 

and my t's have brought me good : Gumer'ere . 200 
Made my t's burn — is also past, . 11 . 538 

flooded with the helpless wrath ait's. En. Arden . 32 
manifold entreaties, many a /, 11 . 1^0 

ilow'd the easy current of her t's . 11 . 866 

their own bitter /'j,7".s,and the careless/1 ;'//«?>-'.s/''.428 
Story, that cost me many a t . Grandmother 22 

those tremulous eyes that fill with t's Tithonus . 26 
and thy t's are on my cheek. . u .45 

thou ever scare me with thy t's 11 .46 

A moment came the tenderness of t's Coquette, ii. o 
My fs, no t's of Love, are flowing fast 11 iii. 7 
tin t's of love, but t's that Love can die n . 8 

And I said, 'O years, that meet in t's 1865-1866 . 4 
Deity false in human-amorous / s; Lucretius . 90 

tear 'verb.) 
/hisheart before the crowd ! ' Vou might havev/on' 3b 



En. Ariien 
BoSdieea 



Talking 0. 



Enid 



1363 



to t away Their tawny clusters, . En. Arden . 378 

T the noble heart of Britain . 
winds of winter t an oak 

tear-drop. 
A t-d trembled from its source 

tearing. 
t off her veil of faded silk 

tease. 
t her till the day draws by : . . In Mem.Wx. 14 

teat. 
from the plaintive mother's /he took The Brook . 129 

teens. 
The maiden blossom of her t . Talking O. . 79 

telegraph. 
there thro' twenty posts of /, . Frincess,Pro. 77 

Telemachus. 
This is my son, mine own T, . Ulysses . 33 

telescope. 
here were t's For azure views ; . Princess, Pro. 67 

tell. 
She'll not / me if she love me, 
Vet / my name again to me, 



Lilian 



6 

142 

/ her to her face how much I hate (I: none . 224 

/ her, when I'm gone, to train . May(Jueen,\\. 47 

and I will / the sign 11 iii. 24 

kind word, and / him not to fret . n .45 

If I had lived — I cannot / — . . " .47 

1 .ich little sound and sight. D.o/F \Wom.aj6 

Exquisite Margaret, who can / . Margaret . 36 

1 will not / you not to weep . . To J, S. . 36 

And ran to / her neighbours ; . The Goose 14 

' you all, . Gardener sD.lyi 

. of farewells m . 24G 

Might I n- -t / ' ' 

t him Dora waited with the child ; 

/ me, did she read the name 
And what remains to /. 
And 1 will / it. Turn your face . 
whither gocst thou, / me where?" 
If my heart by signs can /, . 
T me talcs of thy first love — 
/me pleasant tales, and read . 
■ no — I would not .'. No, 

1 /'us,' l''|..'i.in ask'd, 'Howgrewthis " iii. 60 
u, girl, " . 236 

/her, /her, what I / to I .1 iv. 77 

t her, Swallow, thou that knowest each " . 78 

To / her what they were, . . •» 

I cr.mc to / you; found that you had gone 11 



Dora . 

Talking O. 



Day -Dm. 



74 

'53 

204 

17 

. 190 

/. . of 'Burleigh 2 

Vision 0/ Sin 163 
Princess, ii. 234 



?OEM. LINE. 

my nurse would / me of you : . Princess, iv. 407 

'you— /us what we are' . . » Con, 34 
mused on all I had to /, . . In Mem 

And I should / him all my pain, . 11 xiv. 13 

/ them all they would have told, . 11 xxxix. 25 

In that high place, and / thee all •■ xhii. 16 

Could hardly / what name were thine o Iviii. :6 

turn the page that t's A grief, . 11 lxxvi. 10 

O / me where the senses mix . 11 lxxxvii. 3 

/ me where the passions meet, 11 -4 
You / me, doubt is Devil-born. . " xcv. 4 
clash and clang that t's The joy . i» Con. 61 
can he t Whether war be a cause . Maud, I x. 44 

1 must / her before we part rep.) 11 xvi. 33 
more blest than heart can / . . u xviii. 82 
fs me, when she lay Sick once . " xix. 72 
t us What and where they be. . n II. iv. 15 
T him now : she is standing here . » v. 65 
And now it t's of Italy . . . The Daisy . 90 
day by day she thought lot Oeraint, Enid . . 65 

/ him what I think and what they sa> 00 

not dare to / him what 1 think, 11 . 105 

sparrow-hawk, what is he, /me of him. •■ . . 404 
/ me, seeing I have sworn . .11. . 423 
7" her, and J rove her heart . .11 . .513 

Ashamed am I that I should / it thee. 11 . . 577 
child, and t me if you know it.' u . 684 

yester-eve I would not / you of it, ti . . 702 
would only speak and / me of it.' 11 . , 903 
1 will / him all their caitiff talk ; it 915 

I will / him all their villany, 981 

lay still ; as he that t's the tale . n . 1010 

I will / him How great a man . 11 . 1076 

for shall I / you truth ? }*<>/< scem'd Vivien . 150 

Heaven that hears I /you the clean 11 . 193 

if you talk of trust 1 / vou this . <• . 210 

T me, was he like to thee?' . ■• . 463 

Were 1 not woman, I could / a tale •< . 546 

mutter'd in himself, ' / for the charm ! •• . 658 

/ us— for we live apart . . Ettriue . 284 
/ her, she shines me down . . 11 

till her time To / you :' . . Guinevere . 141 

nor would he/ His vision; . n . ; 

/ the King I love him tho' so late? 11 • ' 44 

must / him in that purer life, . 11 . 646 

will / him tali parts . En. Arden . 198 

who best could / What most it needed i> . 265 

Not to / her, never to let her know. 11 j 

/ her you had seen him dead . 11 . 809 

a secret— only swear Before I / you 11 . 839 

/ her that I died Blessing her " . 879 

/my daughter Annie, whom I saw 11 

/ my son that 1 died blessing him .. . SS6 

let me /y. hi: I myself— . . Aylmer's F. 352 

1 knew, but I would not / . . Grandmother 26 
I pray you / the truth to mc. . The I 'ictim 50 
which the dearest I cannot / .' 11 .64 
nor at all can / Whether 1 mean . Lucretius . 14s 
7' my wish to her merry blue eye. The Window 101 

teller. 
felt the talc Less than the /: . En. Arden . 713 

telling. 
Which / what it is to die . . In Mewt.xxTn. 7 
blamed herself for / hearsay talcs: Vivien . 800 

temper. 

One equal / of hemic hearts. . Ulysses . 68 

Of / amorous, as the first of May, Princess, i. 2 

us of what / you are built, n iv. 381 

Whence drew you this steel / ? . <• vi. .15 

temperament. 

But yet your mother's jealous /— Princess, ii 717 
He has a solid base of /; . . 11 iv. 235 

And pure nobility of / . . Enid . 

tempered. 
I with the tears Ofangels To -. With Pal.ofArtx'i 

tempest. 
The / crackles on the lead-. . . Sir Galahad 53 
beacou-tOWCT above the waves Of /, Princess, iv. 47^ 



4 i4 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM 1INE 

Like summer / came her tears — .Princess, v. 546 
each ear was prick'd to attend A t, it vi 264 

So drench'd it is with t, " vii. 127 

whatever /mars Mid-ocean . . Inhlem xvii. 13 
tracts of calm from / made, * n cxi 14 

whatever fs lour For ever silent : Ode on Well. 175 
that t brooding round his heart . Enid . . 860 
ever overhead Bellow d the t . Vivien . 806 

after t t when the long wave broke Guinevere . 288 
A rushing / of the wrath of God . Aylme^s F. 757 
After a t woke upon a morn . Lucretius . 24 

tempest -buffeted 
T-b, citadel-crown'd . . Will . . 9 

temple (sanctuary ) 
The crowds, the t s, waver'd, D.ofF Worn 114 

The palms and fs of the South * You ask me, ivhy 28 
swore Not by the t but the gold . Aylmers F. 7Q4 
Lo the palaces and the t . . Boiidicea- . 53 

temple (side of the head ) 
Cluster' d about his fs like a God s (Euoue . 59 
Flush' d in her t's and her eyes. . Pal of Art 170 

Temple-bar 
High over roaring T-b, . . Will Water. 69 

Tern pie -eaten. 
college-times Or T-e terms, . , Aylmers F. 105 

temple-gates. 
drops at Glory's t-g, ' You might have zoon,* etc. 34 

tempt, 

and a ring To t the babe . . En. Arden . 752 
t The Trojan while his neat-herds Lucretius . 87 

tempted 
I do believe she t them and fail'd, Vivien , 668 

tenant. 

Careless fs they ! . . . . Deserted H, 4 

as with his t, Jocky Dawes. Walk, to the M. 21 

thither flock'd at noon His fs . Princess, Pro. 4 

Be ts of a single breast . , In Mem. xvi. 3 

tenanted, 
bought the farm we t before. . The Brook . 222 

tend. 
Live happy '. t thy flowers ; . . Love and Duty^\ 
our.self Would t upon you . . Princess, hi. 304 
fs her bristled grunters in the sludge :' 11 v. 26 

we will t on him Like one of these , 11 vi. 10S 

half fool'd to let you / our son, . if . 257 

may t upon him with the prince.* it . 295 

And fs upon bed and bower, . Maud,\,x\v. 4 

I that wasted time to / upon her, . Enid . . 887 
the Powers that t the soul, . . Guinevere , 65 

tendance, 
nor from her i turn'd . . . Gardener' sD. 143 
pensive / in the all-weary noons, . Princess, vii. 87 
her sweet i hovering over him, . Enid . 1774 

tended, 

t by Pure vestal thoughts . . Isabel . . 3 

"be / by My blessing . . . Love and DuiyZ^ 

But Psyche t Florian : . , . Princess, v\\. 40 

And t her like a nurse. . . . Maud,\.x\x. 76 

And Enid t on him there ; . . Enid . 1772 

and every day she t him, . . Elaine . 846 

tender. 

dark and true and t is the North. Princess, iv. 80 
t over drowning flies, . . . InMem.xcv. 3 
For, Maud, so t and true, . . Maud, I. xix. 85 
seeing them so t and so close . Enid . . 22 
So t was her voice, so fair her face, Vivien . 251 

O true and / .' O my liege and king ! ir , 640 

with all ease, so t was the work . Elaine . 441 

tenderer. 
a love Far t than my Queen's. . Elaine 1386 

ienderest-heartcd. 
Vivien, like the i-h maid . . Vivien . 227 



tenderest-touching. toem. lin;t. 
by t-t terms To sleek her ruffled peace Vivien . 747 

tenderly. 
in what limits s and how t; . . Ded. o/Idylh 19 

tenderness. 

decent not to fail In offices of t, . Ulysses . 41 

So gracious wa.s her tact and t: . Princess, i. 24 

lute and flute fantastic t, . . n iv. in 

No saint— inexorable — no t — . it v. 504 

The /, not yours, that could not kill 11 vi. 170 

T touch by touch, and last . . n vii. 99 

All-comprehensive I, InMem lxxxiv 47 

A face of t might be feign'd, . Maud, I vi. 52 

Thro' that great t for Guinevere, . Enid . , 30 
whether filial t, Or easy nature, 11 797 

a sudden-beaming / Of manners . Elaine . 337 

His bashfulness and t at war, . En. Arden . 288 

A moment came the t of tears . Coquette, ii 9 

tender -Peuciird. 
The i-p shadow play . . . InMem.x\v\\\. 12 

tending, 
t her rough lord, tho' all unask'd, Enid . 1254 

tendon. 
And scirrhous roots and t's. . Amphion . 64 

tenfold-complica ted. 
abyss Of t-c change . . . In Mem. xc'n. 12 

tennis. 
Quoits, £, ball— no games? . . Princess, iii 199 

tenor. 
My blood an even t kept, . . InMem lxxxiv. 17 

tent. 

Among the fs I paused and sung. Two Voices 125 

A t of satin, elaborately wrought . Princess, iii. 330 

No bigger than a glowworm shone the lu iv. 7 

They bore her back into the t . u . 175 

blazon'd lions o'er the imperial t . u v. 9 

He show'd a t A stone-shot off: . h . 50 

in the fs with coarse mankind, . tr vi. 53 

shall not lie in the fs but here > . ir - 78 

on to the fs : take up the Prince.' n . 262 
sport and song, in booth and t, . InMem.xcv'u. 28 

show'd an empty t allotted her, , Enid . 1733 

And past to Enid's /; . . ir *77° 

term (expression, etc.) 
Not master' d by some modern t; Love thou thy lane? 30 
inmost fs Of art and science : . Princess, ii. 423 
Heap'd on her fs of disgrace, . Maud, II. i. 14 
merit well Your t of overstrain'd. Vivien . 385 
essay'd, by tenderest-touching fs w . 747 

after that vile t of yours u . 770 

term (period of time, etc.) 
To sleep thro'/\s of mighty wars, Day-Din. . 221 
caught the blossom of the flying fs. Princess, Pro 163 
To point the t of human strife . hi Mem. xhx. 14 
college-times Or Temple-eaten fs, Aylmers F. 105 
dipt by horror from his t of life. . n . 603 

terrace 
t ranged along the Northern front, Princess, iii. 102 
I paced the /, till the Bear had wheel'd m iv. 194. 
The moonlight touching o'er a t . The Daisy . 83 

terrace-lawn. 
On every slanting t-l. . . . Day-Dm. . 30 

terrible. 

O fair and strong and t ! . . Princess, vi. 147 

are two more t And stronger . n . 149 

tl for it seem'd A void was made Lucretius . $6 

territory. 
You lying close upon his t, . . Princess, iv. 384 
Close on the borders of a t, . . Enid . . 34 
When men of mark are in his/. . tr . 1073 

Led from the t of false Limours . i» , 32S6 

Endow you with broad land and t Elaine 953, 1312 
they wasted all the flourishing t, , Boiidicea . 54 



TEAWVSOX'S WORK'S. 



4': 



. Aylmer's F. 99 
. The Captain 1 

Hendecasyllabics 3 

. In Stem. xclv. 28 



terror. rnE.M. line 

Still she look'd. and still the / grew Enid . 61 5 

the expectant / of her heart . . En Arden . 4S9 
Flights, t's. sudden rescues, 
H e that only rules by / 

test s ) 
I come to the t, a tiny poem 

test (verb.) 
defying change To t his worth 
tested. 
to return When others had been t) Aylmer's F. 219 

testify. 
as the dead we weep foi /— . . Aylmer's F. 747 

testimony. 
To this I call my friends 111 /, . Elaine 1291 

to t!ie basement of the tower For / ; Guinevere 104 

Teuton. 
T or Celt, or whatever we be, 

text. 
Took this fait day for /, 



W . to A lejcan. 32 

. Prmcess.Pro 108 
A square of / that looks a little blot, Vivien . 521 
/ no larger than the limbs of fleas : " . 522 

every square of / an awful charm, 11 . 523 

none can read the /, not even I ; " . 531 j 

Suddenly put her finger on the /, En. Arilrn . 493 
sowing hedgerow t's and passing by, Aylmer's F. 1 71 
being used to find her pastor t's . •• . 606 

Christian hope Haunting a holy t, Sea Dreams 42 
And the parson made it his t . Grandmother 29 

Thames. 
Came crowing over T. . . Will Water. 140 

thank. 

feared To meet a cold ' W'c / you Princess, iv. 309 

7' Him who i=>led us here . . Ode on Well 154 

I I the saints, I am not great . Guinevere . 1^7 

on a broken word 10 t him with . F.n. Arden 344 

/ God that I keep my eye-, . Grandmotherioo 

thanked. 

Cod be /.'" said Alice the nurse, . Lady Clare 17 

Assumed that she had / him, . Enid . J494 

thaul./ul 
Not t that his troubles ate no more Lucretius 

thanks. 
statue-like, In act to render /. 
A thousand / for what I leam 
Their debt of / to her who first 
But ' 7",' she answer'd 'go:' 
you have our / for all : . 
we owe you bitter / : 
To lighten this great clog of /, 
with an eye that swum in /; 

T. lor the fiend best knows . 
Render / to the Giver, . 
' T, venerable friend,' replied Geraint Enid 
shall have leam'd to li >p you /. . 11 

to which She answer'd, ' 7', my lord ;' •> 
yet mv / For these have broken . / 
the stranger welcome. 7'atlast! 11 
no more / than mi^hl a goat . 11 

your feel before her own? And yet no/: «• 
/ 11 seems till now neglected, . i» 

T. but you work against your own Elaine 



'43 



Gardener sD. 1 59 

Talking O. 203 

Princess, ii. 125 

n . 336 

i> iv. 507 

11 . 510 

II VI. no 

II . 193 

Maud. T. i. 75 
Ode tm Weil. 44-7 

303 
822 

1113 
"3 
119 
"7 
130 
'53 

1094 



Sea Dreams 307 



1 do forgive him !' ' T, my love, 

thatch. 
Weeded and worn the ancient / . Mariana . 7 
the cock hath sung beneath the / The Owf, 1. 10 
sun their milky bosom- on the /, . Prtncta, ii. 88 
It sees itself from / to base . . Ket] mescal . 3 

thatched. 
They built and /with leaves of palm. En. Arden 560 

thaw. 
j" this male nature to some touch Princess, vi. 287 

theatre, 
stately t's Lcnch'd crescenl-wisc . Princess, ii. 347 



theme poem 1 inb 

Seem but the / of writers, . . Ed Morris «3 
Ah, let the rusty / nione / . . Will Water. i~7 
warming with her/, she fulmined out Prime.*, -. ii. 116 
Whereat we glanced from / to / luMern buxviii. 33 

Theodolind 
castle Of Queen T, where we slept. The Daisy . Sa 

theory. 
foigedathousand/Z/^r/Vjoftherocks, Ed Morris i3 
Veneer'd with sanctimonious / . Princess, Pro. 117 
fed her tkeor tes, in and out of place \< i i.j 

fair theories only made to gild . 11 ii. 213 

your Psyche thieved her theories . 11 111. 75 

cramm'd with theories out of books, n Con. 33 

Thessalian. 
Or that T growth . . . Talking O. . 292 

thesis. 
The / which thy words intend — . T-.co I'oices y-Z 

the-w. 

ever had I seen Such t's ol men ■ . Princess, v. 24O 

the wrestling t's that thtow the world ; •• vii. 210 

I felt the t's of Anakim, . . In Mem. cm. 31 

thick, 

t as dust In vacant chambers, . TotheQueen 18 

/ with white bells the clover-hill . Sea-Fturies 14 

masses / with milky cones. . . Miller's D. 56 
/as Autumn rains Flash in the pools Uiuorie . 201 

My voice was / with sighs. . . D off Worn 1 1 

with a grosser film made / . . St S. Style: 

the mother-city / with lowers, . Princess, i 111 

shoulders, / as herded ewes, , 11 iv 4-5 

So / with lowings of the herds, . InMem xevm. " 3 

thick,, id 
Aclamour/, mixt with inmost terms Princess, ii 423 

thicker 
/ down the fiont With jewels . Enid . 
7'thedri/zlegrew, deeper the gloom Lit. Arden 
Nowthinnei and now ; like the flakes Lucreti. 

thickest. 
Among the / and boie down a prince Princess, v. 507 

thicket. 

Athwart the / lone: . . . Ciarilel . jo 

the dry t's, I could meet with her, (Eno'U . 219 

No branchy / shellci yrcld.s . . .Sir Galahad ;J 

hid and sought In the orange t's: . I'r:,. , ,. ii, ^ ■', 

And round us all the / rang . . IrtMern. xxm. . \ 

and the / closed Behind her, . Vivien . £22 

thick-leaved. 
the /-/platans of the vale. . . Princess, iii. 139 

thick-moled 
When the t-m sunbeam lay . . Mariana . 7 3 

thick-leaved. 
T-l, ambrosial, .... Claribel . 5 

ihick-Jleeced. 
livelong bleat Of the //sheep . OdetoMem. 66 

thuk-je-.ctll'd. 
T-j shone the saddle-leather L. efShalott.u'i.io 

thick-fanned. 
thro' the /-/ vine— . . . Lolos-Es. . 140 

thief 
this hedgerow/, the sparrow-hawk; Enid . . 309 
now no more a vassal to the /, . h . 1601 

theieforc turning softly like a /, . En. Arden . --1 
storming a hlll-forl of thieves . Aylmer's . 

But thieves from o'er the wall. . The Flower 11 

thieved 

Affirms your Psyche / her theories, Princess, iii. 76 

thigh. 

flush'd Ganymede, his rosy / . Pal of Art 121 

both my t\ are 1 [ted with the dew . MS Styiitesno 
he smote his /, and mock'd . . Elaine 



416 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

N. Farmer. 35 



Tkimbleby. 
ITolihs or 7'— toner 'ed shot un 

thin (adj.) 
if his fellow spake, His voice was / Lotos-E's. . 34 
His face is growing sharp and I D. of the O Year 46 
O hark, O hear ! how t and clear. Princess, iii. 354 
When it slowly grew so/, . . Maud, I. xix. 20 

thin (verb.) 
or would seem to t her in a day . Ay biter's F. 76 

thing. 

Teach me the nothingness oil's* , 
all the dry pied t's that be . 
All t's that are forked and horned 
She spoke at large of many t's 
all t's in order stored, . 
all t's fair to sate my various eyes 



A Character 4 
The Mermaid 48 

» • 53 

Miller's D. 155 
Pal. of Art 87 
" '.. z 93 

But all these t's have ceased to be May Queen, \\\. 48 
•where all fs always seem'd the same Lotos-E's. . 24 
all t's else have rest from weariness? (rep, )i 1 . 59 

We only toil, who are the first of t's, 11 . 60 

the roof and crown of t's? . u . 69 

All t's are taken from us . 11 . 91 

All t's have rest, and ripen u . 96 

our great deeds, as half-forgotten t's. 11 . 127, 

to start in pain, Resolved on noble t's, D.qfF. Wont, 42 
How beautiful a t it was to die . u . 231 

From all t's outward you have won Margaret . 11 
A man may speak the t he.\i\W.\ t Youaskme, vjliy,'elc.& 



Keep a t, its use will come. . . The Epic 
A little t may harm a wounded man M.d' Arthur 
.is a shameful t for men to lie. . n 

and do the t I bad thee, tr 

a precious i, one worthy note, . 11 

More t's are wrought by prayer . 11 

' come With all good t's, . . n Ep. 2b 

We spoke of other fs; we coursed Gardener's D.217 
and thought Hard t's of Dora , Dora . . 56 
And all the t's that had been. . 11 . 105 

had pack'd the t among the beds,) Walk, to the M. 36 
could not light upon a sweeter t: . 11 . 44 

shame and pride, New t's and old, » . 53 

wince As from a venomous t: . 11 ,64 

spoke I knowing not the t's that were Ed Morris 89 
sweet hours that bring us all t's Love and Duty 56-7 
And all good t's from evil . n .58 

■wake and sleep, but all t's move : Golden Year 22 
something more, A bringer of new t's ; Ulysses . 28 
easy t's to understand— . . Locksley H. 55 
crown of sorrow is remembering happier t's n . 76 
earnest of the t's that they shall do if . 118 

all t's here are out of joint . ir . 

to have loved so slight a t. . tr . 

Howsoever these t's be, a long farewell 11 
learn new t's when I am not,' t Two Voices 
There is no other I express'd . 11 

These t's are wrapt in doubt . ti 

Not simple asa/ that dies. ti 

vex His reason: many t's perplex, 
He may not do the the would . ir 

So variously seem'd all t's wrought, ir 
Here all t's in their place remain . Day- Dm. . 
All precious t's, discovered late, . 11 

Well — were it not a pleasant t . u 

Half-views of men and t's. . . Will Water. 
If old t's, there are new ; ir . 

I look at all t's as they are, . m .71 

Like all good t's on earth ! . . 11 . 202 

I hold it good, good t's should pass : if . 205 

For this, thou shalt from all t's suck u .213 

Tomohrit, Athos, all t's fair . . To E. L. 5 

She will order all t's duly, . . L. of Burleigh 39 
Callest thou that t a leg? . . Vision of Sin 89 
culture for the crowd, And all t's . Princess, Pro. 1 10 
For any male t but to peep at us.' tr . 151 

And they that know such t's — . tr i. 143 

to answer, Madam, all those hard t's 11 ii. 324 

t.vo dear t's are one of double worth, tr . 397 

c lill she rail'ti against the state of t's. tr iii. 68 
One mind in all t's: ... if .75 

all fs were and were not (iv. 545) u .173 



133 



might have seem'd the ;* you say. Princess, iii. i£5 
for all t's serve their time . . 11 iv. 55 

To harm the t that trusts him, -. ir . 229 

to have done the t one ought, . tr v. 64 

tender t's that being caught feign ir . 105 

does the / they dare not do, , n . 153 

I myself, What know I of these t's ? it . 274 

all t's grew more tragic . . ir vi. 7 

May these t's be ! ' Sighing she spoke tr vii. 280 
trust in all t's high Comes easy . ir . 310 

Too comic for the solemn t's they are 11 Con. 6j 
Of their dead selves to higher t's . In Mem. i. 4 
shall 1 take a t so blind . . 11 iii. 13 

Like a guilty t I creep . . 11 vii. 7 

now so strange do these t's seem . 
And ask a thousand t's of home ; 
Behold, ye speak an idle t . 
to choose Of t's all mortal, . 
To keep so sweet a t alive :' 
And all he said of t's divine, 
Shall count new t's as dear as old : 
May some dim touch of earthly t's, 
other than the t's I touch.' . 
love reflects the t beloved ; . 
, How should he love a t so low?* 

So little done, such t's to be . 
■ In fitting aptest words to t's, 
Over all t's brooding slept . 
j whether trust in t's above 
. all t's round me breathed of him. . 
I these t's pass, and I shall prove . 
1 The glory of the sum of t's . 
j And he, he knows a thousand t's. 
treat Of all t's ev'n as he were by. 
Best seem'd the t he was, and join'd 
Submitting all t's to desire. . 
j But I was born to other t's. . 
I Thou watchest all t's ever dim 

I cannot think the t farewell 
I sees the course of human t's. 
Love for the silent t that had made Maud, I 
Like t's of the season gay . . n 
A wounded t with a rancourous cry, :r 
broad-brimm'd hawker of holy t's, n 

Her mother has been a t complete, 
1 know it the one bright t to save 
given her word to a t so low? 
happy stars, timing with t's below, 
cursed him even to lifeless t's 
For a shell, or a flower, little fs . 
Comfort her, comfort her, all /'sgood 
speak to her all t's holy and high 
sweeter Than any t on earth. 
another, a lord of all t's, praying . 
is ever the one t silent here . 
grateful at last for a little t . 
in a weary world my one t bright ; it 
money breeds, Thought it a dead t ; The Brook 
how it was the i his daughter wish'd ti 
in Katies eyes, and all t's well. . 11 

a father on the t's Of his dead son The Letters 23 
If aught of t's that here befall . Ode on Well. 138 
Touch a spirit among t's divine, . ir . 139 

Yea, let all good fs await tt . 198 

these t's he told the king. . . Enid . . 151 
light on all fs that you love tt 226 

His dwarf, a vicious under-shapen t tt . . 412 
Mother, a maiden is a tender t . 11 . . 510 
These two fs shalt thou do . . tt . 580-6 
Edyrn answer' d, ' These t's will I do n . . 587 
talking f s of state :i 663 

evermore it seem'd an easier t . tr . . 957 
men may bicker with the fs they love, tt . 1 174 

What / soever you may hear, or see 11 . 1264 

ridden off with by the t he rode . tr . 1309 

Each hurling down a heap of fs . ti . 1442 

never yet beheld a t so pale . tt . 1463 

I will do the 1 1 have not done . it . 1473 

or what had been those gracious fs » . 148 *. 

As of a wild i taken in the trap, . it . 1571 

involved yourself the nearest t . Vivien . "149 



xni. 

xiv. 

xxi. 

xxxiv. 

xxxv. 

xxx vii. 

xxxix. 

xliii. 

xliv. 

Ii. 

lix. 

Ixxii. 

lxxiv. 

lxxvii. 

lxxxiv. 



Ixxxvii. 

xcvi. 

cvi. 

ex. 

cxiii. 

cxix. 

cxx. 

exxii. 

exxvii. 



xni. 
xvi. 

xviii. 

xix. 
II. ii. 



III. vi. 



T£.Y.VVSOjV'S IVOR AS. 



417 



POEM. LINE. 

unxshamcd. On all /'.rail day long • Vtzien . 516 
the / was blazed about the court, . m . 593 

ft with every sense as false and foul n . 646 

seeming-injured simple-hearted I . 11 . 751 

but one / now — better have died . 11 . 767 

One flash that missing all fs else . 11 . 781 

speakinginlhesilence,fullOfnoble/'.j,.£/rt/«^ . 338 
gaped upon him As on a / miraculous 11 . 452 

if I could believe the fs you say . n 1091 

in half disgust At love, life, all fs 11 123: 

the wild people say wild fs of thee •> 1356 

strong man-breasted t's stood . Guinevere . 244 
in the cellars merry bloated t's . n . 265 

a change, as all fs human change En. Arden . 101 
current of his talk to graver t's . 11 . 203 

set his hand To do the / he will'd 11 . 294 

there is a t upon my mind ■■ . 396 

fs fell on her Sharp as reproach . 11 . 484 

haunting people, fs and places, . " . 605 

/'j seen are mightier than fs heard, " . 767 

to all fs could he turn his hand. . >> . 814 

Took joyful note of all fs joyful . Ay liner's F. 67 
: nor liked the / he heard . 11 . 250 

7"s in an Aylmer deem'd impossible 11 . 305 

The fs belonging to thy peace . 11 . 740 

is it a light / That I their guest, . i< . 789 

all fs work together for the good . Sea Dreams 154 
And all fs look'd half-dead . . Grandmother 34 
and look'd the / that he meant : . it -45 

laughing at fs that have long gone by n . 02 

i the fs that a do . X. Farmer ' 6 
seii-t all fs thou wilt see my grave: Ttthonus . 73 
Welcome her,all/\syouthful and sweet, W.toAlexan.Z 
good fs have not kept aloof, ' My life is full,' etc. 2 
Another and another frame of fs . Lucretius . 42 
fs appear the work of mighty Gods 11 . 102 

think. 

I walk, I dare not / of thee, . . Oriana . 93 
When she would /, where'er she turn'd I'al.oJ Art 225 
whom t ye should I see, . . MayQueen,\. 13 
low i' the mould and t no more of me. 11 ii. 4 

when you t I'm far away . 11 -40 

I / it can't be long before I find . 11 iii. n 

So now I / my time is near. . . 11 .41 

1 t that we Shall never more . Ma" Arthur 17 

7" you they sing Like poets . . CardeuertD. 98 
r, William: take a month to/, Dora . . 27 

now 1 /. he shall not have the boy, .. . . n 7 

/ yourself alone Of all men happy Ed. Morris 77 

1 nave, 1 /, — Heaven knows— asmuch •• . 82 

1 / that I have borne as much . StS.Stylites 91 

let me / 'tis well for thee and me— Love and Duly 32 

t not they are glazed with wine. . LocK-sley II. 51 

I / of her as dead ... 11 -71 

this mould of hopes and fears T-vo Voices 28 

not /, hut thou wilt weep.' . • > . 51 

AVIi.it wonder, if lie fs me fair ':' . Day-Dm. . 272 

I / he came like Ganymede, . WUl Water. 119 

And I / thou lov'st me well . . L of Bur, 

I remember, when It,. . . Vision of Sin 77 



And I / we know the hue 



1 n 



1 confess with right you / me bound Princess, i. 157 

Iter Adams . 1. u. i-> 

I / no more of deadly lurks therein, " .208 

I I bear that heart within my breast 11 . 313 
What t you of it, Florian I . . n .386 
grant me license : might I use it ? / ; .. iii. 219 
almost / That idiot legend credible : 1. v. 146 

1 1 ir . 11 . 391 
1 1 Our chiefest comfort . 
to / I might he something to thec 
/ thai you might mix Ins draught . 

I t to win.' ... 11 

what 1 I yoii, some sweet dream . •• vii. 130 

he w.is not made to die ; . InMtm.P 

stunn'd me from my power to i . 11 .v.i. rs 

•nd t ' H I . 11 xx. ir) 

And /. I 

■ ild : she fs him kind 
I / once mure he ^eetns to die . m .-. . 



• 4'9 

vi. 183 

. 260 



POEM. LUTE 

And / of early days and thee, . In Mem.cxww. 8 
1 / we are not wholly brain, . . „ CX ix x 

1 cannot t the thing farewell . n cxxii! 12 

Result in man. be born and i „ ( 

Bound for the Hall, and I /fora bride Maud, 1. x. 26 
six feet two, as I t, he stands ; . „ xiil. 10 

Shall I not take care of all that I I, 11 X v. 7 

T I may hold dominion sweet, . 1, xvi 12 

shook my heart to / she comes . 1. xviu 10 
/that it well Might drown all life 11 II. u. 60 
Not let any man / for the public good, 11 v. 45 

I could even weep to / of it : . >i .86 

tell him what I /and what they say Enid . . 00 
not dare to tell him what I / .11 . .105 

/ the rustic cackle of your bourg it 276 

to / what kind of hiid it is ■, . ' 33,; 

/ or say, "There is the nightingale :' « . . 342 
Let never maiden /, however fair n . . 721 
let me / Silence is wisdom : . . Vivien . lot 

if you / this wickedness in me, . 11 . 188 

but / or not, By Heaven that hears ■■ . 192 

because I /, However wise, you hardly 11 . 204 

I / you hardly know the tender rhyme- . 233 

methinks you / you love me well ; 11 . 333 

However well you / you love me now !• . 3C6 

I /she cloaks the wounds of loss ,11 . - 

/ kindly of me, for I fear .1 , --- 

I / this fruit is hung too high . Elaine . 770 

to / of Modred's dusty fall, . . Guinevere . 55 
could /, sweet lady, yours would be 11 . 350 

in inmost thought to/ again . 11 . 372 

but rather t How sad it were . 11 .491 

/ nut, tho' thou would'st not love . 11 . 504 

/ nut that I come to urge thy crimes, 1. . 528 

what hope t I t there was a hope, 11 .623 

I / your kindness breaks me down En. Arden . 317 
I do / They love me as a father . u . 408 

7'uponit: For I am well-to-do . 11 . 414 

I / I have not three days more to live ; 11 . 852 

/— For people talk'd-that it waswholly^Amr'^.367 
/ that in our often-ransack'd world Sea Dreamt 125 
you / I am hard and cold . Grandmother 17 

I / not much of yours or of mine . Spiteful Let. 7 

thinketh. 
/,' I have found A new land, . Pal. of Art 283 

thinking. 
sobb'do'crWilliam'schild 7'of William Dora . v 4 
/ of the days that are no more. . Priticess, iv. 23 
She flung it from her, / : . . ,, Con. 3; 

/, here to-day, Or here to-morrow In Mem. vi. 23 
/' this will please him best,' . . 11 . 31 

Looking, / of all I have lust ; . Maud, II. ii] 46 
f, that if ever yet was wife . Enid . . 46 

/ that he heard The noble hart . " . . 232 

/ tli.it he read her meaning there, Elaine . 87 

t' is it Lancelot, who has come •■ . 564 

I or dead to met' . . En. Arden . fiyo 

' after I am gone, . . 11 . 835 
/that her clear germander eye Droopt Sea Dreams 4 

thinned. 

councils /, And armies waned, . Vivien . 4^ 

/', or would seem to thin her . Aylmer's /■'. ;6 

thinner. 

Then her check was pale and / . Lockslev II. 21 

ing! . . Princess, iii. 31:5 
Now/, and now thicker, like the flakes Lucretik 

thinnest. 

Which is / .' thine or mine J . . Vision of Sin co 

thirst. 
In hungers and in fs. fevers and cold. StS.Stylites 12 
Let her go I her t she slakes in 143 

thirsted, 
I / for the brooks, the showers : . Fatima . 10 

thirsting. 
only / For the right, . , ode on IVelt. 303 

I could nut inuve a .' , . . . Am'hion 
J 1) 



4iS 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Let there be fs, there are grapes ; Will ]Vaier. 57 
/, bursting Into glossy purples . Ode on Well 206 
many a prickly star Of sprouted / Enid . . 314 

shook beneath them, as the /shakes Guinevere . 252 

Thor. 
To 7" and Odin lifted a hand . The Victim 8 

tkom. 

Thick rosaries of scented /, . . Arabian N^s. 106 
as a / Turns from the sea ; . . Audley Ci. 53 
like me, with scourges and with fs ; StS. Styhtes 177 
That all about the / will blow . Two Voices 59 
T's, ivies, woodbine, mistletoes, . Day-Din. . 63 
A rosebud set with little wilful fs Princess, Pro. 153 
The path we came by, / and flower, InMem.xW. 2 
I took the fs to bind my brows . u lxviii. 7 

The fool that wears a crown of fs: u . 12 

bristles all the breaks and fs . 11 cvi. 9 

Seem'd catching at a rootless i . Enid . 1227 

mountain, like a wall of burs and fs ; Sea Dreams 115 
life, little Annie, flower and /. . Grandmother 60 
I have heard of fs and briers, . The Window 197 
Over the fs and briers, w . 198 

Thornaby, 
an' I 'a stubbed T waaste . , N. Farmer 28 
an' T holms to plow ! ... 11 . 52 

th ro ugh-edged. 
t-e intellect to part Error from crime ; Isabel . 34 

thoroughfare. 
In shadowy fs of thought ; . . fnJlfem.lxix. 8 
He left the barren-beaten /, . . Elai?te . 161 

thorpe. 

he, by farmstead, t and spire, 
By twenty fs, a little town, 
Then / and byre arose in fire, 

thought (s. ) 
tended by Pure vestal fs 



Will Water. 137 
The Brook . 29 
The Victim 3 



Isabel . 



Small t was there of life's distress : Ode to Mem. 



The viewless arrows of his fs . The Poet 
Life and T have gone away . Deserted H. 1 

Life and T Here no longer dwell ; if .17 

Moulded thy baby t. . . . Eleanore . 5 
flattering thy childish / . . ir . 13 

T and motion mingle, Mingle ever n . 60 

T folded over t, smiling asleep 11 .84 

T seems to come and go . . 11 .96 

I least should breathe a t of pain Miller's D. 26 
blessings beyond hope or t, . . 11 . 237 

the t of power Flatter'd his spirit CEnone . 134 
fiery fs Do shape themselves within m . 242 

divided quite The kingdom of her t Pal. of Art 228 
great t strikes along the brain . D. ofF. Worn. 43 
by down-lapsing / Stream'd onward u . 49 

comforts me in this one t to dwell, n . 233 

from the deep Gold-mines of t . ir . 274 

pensive t and aspect pale, . . Margaret . 6 
The last wild t of Chatelet . n -37 

strength of some diffusive t ' You ask me why* etc.i$ 
single t is civil crime, . . . ir . 19 

Thro' future time by power of/ l Love thou thy land' 4 
Wherever T hath wedded Fact. . ir . 52 

counting the dewy pebbles, fix'd in t M. d'Art/iurSq. 
His own t drove him like a goad . " . 185 

kinds of t, That verged upon them, Gardener s D.6g 
These birds have joyful fs . n .98 

he laugh'd, as one that read my t, 11 . 105 

A t would fill my eyes wuh happy ■ n . 193 

or should have, but for a t or two. Ed. Morris S3 
heedful ly I sifted all my t) . .StS. Styhtes 55 
Should my Shadow cross thy fs Love and Duty 85 
the times, when some new t can bud, Golden Year 27 
the utmost bound of human /. 
lightly turns to fs of love, 
touch him with thy lighter t. 
And the fs of men are widen'd 
in the fs that shake mankind 
men, thro* novel spheres of/ 
what thou lackest, t resign' d, 



. Ulysses 




32 


. Locks ley 
u 
tr 
11 


H. 


20 

54 
138 
t66 


. Two Voices 


61 


it 




98 



POEM. 

Two Voices 



LINE. 

344 

438 

459 
1? 

II . 70 

L. of Burleigh 21 
Vision of Sin 116 



Day -Dm. 



. In Mem. vi. 
xiii. 
xxiii. 

xxxii. 



Fruitful of further t and deed, 

overtakes Far t with music . 

To anchor by one gloomy / : 

would you have the / I had . 

t and time be born again, 

From deep t himself he rouses, 

Whited t and cleanly life 

The fs that arise in me ' Break, break,' etc, 

Sweet fs would swarm as bees . Princess, i. 39 

A / rlash'd thro' me which I cloth d ir . 192 

fs enrich the blood of the world.' n ii. 164 

fs as fair within her eyes m . 305 

set your fs in rubric thus . . ir iii. 34 

broke out interpreting my fs: . ij . 258 

live, perforce, from t to t . . -r ■ 3** 

tost on fs that changed from hue to hue, 11 iv. ,192 

those fs that wait On you, theircentre ; u . 423 

not a t, a touch, But pure as lines n v. 187 

other fs than Peace Burnt in us . n . 235 

Now could you share your t; . u vi. 235 

shining furrow, as thy fs in. me. . 11 vii. 170 

always t in t, Purpose in purpose, n . 286 

Beyond all /into the Heaven of Heavens n Con. 115 

with the / her colour burns ; . In Mem. vi. 34 

An awful /, a life removed. 1 

And T leapt out to wed with T . 1 

Nor other / her mind admits 

All subtle /, all curious fears, 

More strong than all poetic /; 

The lightest wave of / shall lisp . 

Upon the topmost froth of / . » 

There flutters up a happy /, 

In shadowy thoroughfares of /; . 1 

A grief as deep as life or /, . . 1 

fix my fs on all the glow 

Leaving great legacies of / . 1 

Whose life, whose fs were little worth, 

I find not yet one lonely / . . 1 

the man whose / would hold . > 

About empyreal heights of / . 

In vassal tides that follow'd /. 

in my fs with scarce a sigh . . 1 

I slip the fs of life and death ; . 1 

And every / breaks out a rose . 1 

The shade of passing / , . v Con. 

wrong Done but in / to your beauty Maud, I iii. 

letting a dangerous /run wild . n xix. 

noble / be freer under the sun > . n III. vi. 

Another / I had ; . . . . Enid . 

Grant me pardon for my fs: u 

hated her, who took no / of them, ir 

heard in / Their lavish comment . Vivien 

grated down and filed away with / 11 

rathe she rose, half-cheated in the / El-aine 

Her / when first she came . . Guinevere 

in / — Not ev'n in inmost / 11 

grew half-guilty in her fs again, . 11 

teach high /, and amiable words . 11 

forced my fs on that fierce law, . u 

the / Haunted and harass'd him . En. Arden 

t and nature fail'd a little, . . ir 

Her all of / and bearing hardly more Aylmers F. 29 

the worst / she has Is whiter . 11 . 362 

true that second fs are best? . Sea Dreams 65 

my fs are as quick and as quick . The Window ii. 

thought (verb.) 
She /, 'My spirit is here alone Mariana in the S.^j 
I cast me down, nor / of you . Miller's D. . 63 
My mother /, What ails the boy? 
' by that lamp,' I /, * she sits ! ' 
/ I might have looked a little higher 
she /, ' And who shall gaze . 
You / to break a country heart 
He / of that sharp look, mother, 
He / I was a ghost, mother, 
I / to pass away before 
I / of you and Erne dear ; 
I / that it was fancy 
I /, I take it for a sign. 
He / that nothing new- was said . The Epic . 30 



xxxvi. 

xlviii. 

Ii. 

Ixiv. 

lxix. 

lxxix. 

lxxxiii. 

lxxxiv. 
lxxxix. 

xciii. 

xciv. 

cxi. 
cxviii. 

CX XL 



5 

4 

7 

8 

7 

3 

35 

30 

23 

3 

38 

16 

71 
l6 
SO 
I02 

6 

52 

48 

. 793 

. 816 

1487 

7 

• 473 
■ 339 
. 180 

• 37i 

• 4<>5 
- 477 

• 533 
. 720 

793 



' It 


93 


ft . 


114 


her 11 


IV) 


. Pal. of Art . 


41 


. L.C.V.deVere 


May Q?teen, i. 


15 


11 


17 


it 111. 


1 


11 


29 


it 


33 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



419 



POEM. LINE I 

often / ' I'll make them man and wife Dora. . 4 , 
with her in the house 7' not of Dora 11 .8 

She /, ' It cannot be : my uncle's mind 11 . 44 j 

and t Hard things of Dora . . » 55 1 

he t himself A mark for all, . . Walk.t0tJuM.b4 j 
thro' his bounty hath t fit, . . St S Stylites 183 
toil'd, and wrought, and t with me— Ulysses . 46 I 
.Shy she was, and I / her cold ; . Ed. Gray . 13 | 
7' her proud, and lied over the sea 11 . 14 

and I / I would have spoken. . Vision of Sin 55 
nightingale/, ' I have sung many song*,Poet s SoMg 13 
A pleasant game she/: . . Princess, Pro.iqi 



In Mem. vi. 

u xliv. 

11 lxv. 

11 xcvi. 

•i Con. 

Maud, I. 1. 

Tl viii. 

11 xiv. 



XIX. 

II. 



III. VI. 



my good father t a king a king 

scatcely t in our own hall to hear 

once or twice I / to roar, 

(He scarce would prosper. . 

one anatomic' ' Nay, we t of that,' 

foot Was to you : but I t again : . 

1 t. That surely she will speak ; . 

we / her hall-posscss'd . 

1 I her half-right talking of her wrongs 

/ on all the wrathful King had said, 

I /, can this be he Krom Gama's . 

whom we / woman even now 

something written, something i ; . 

Has never / that ' this is 1 : ' . 

You / my heart too far diseased ; . 

1 look'd on these and t of thee 

all we / and loved and did . 

and / he would rise and speak 

/, is it pride, and mused and sigh'd 

1 / as I stood, if a hand, as white . 

r . iw I / lh.it she cared for me, 

/ like a fool of the sleep of death. . 

none of us tot a something beyond, 

1 I I saw her stand. _ . 
and / It is his mother's hair. . 
For I / the dead had peace, . 
When I / that a wai would arise . 
how money breeds, 7*itadead thing; The Brook 
day by day she / to tell Geraint . Enid 
t within herself, Was ever man . 11 
lie /, ' In spile of all my care, . 11 
fared it with, Geraint who / and said, ■■ 
In a moment / Geraint, . . 11 
/ to find Arms in your town, . :i 

t it never yet had look'd so mean. 11 
while she / ' they will not sec nie ' ■• 
h it service done so . 11 
/ Tli.it could I someway prove . 11 
A stranger meeting them had surely /, 11 
/ again, ' if there be such in me, . 11 
head high and / himself a knight, 11 
I /, but that your father came . 11 
/ she heard the wild Karl . . 1 
he / ' was it for him she wept . -i 
since she /, ' he had not dared to do it 11 
You / me sleeping, but I heard you >i 
I / that he was gentle, being great. Vivien 
and she / I'h. it all was nature, . Elaine 
t to do while he might yet endure, 11 
twenty times I / him I.ancclut . 11 
' ' If I be loved, . . 11 

brothers heard, and / With shuddering 11 
face and ( 'Is this Elaine?' " 
or t she heard them moan ; . . Gitinrvere 
she / ' he spies a field of death : . 11 

then she /, ' With what a hate . 11 

/ the Queen within herself again : »• 

/ the Queen, ' lo I they have set her on •• 
glanced at him, / him cold . . 11 

/ I could not breathe in that fine air " 
I 1 not of it: but I know not why ■ En. Arden 
t ih.it Philip did but trifle . . >■ 
' I ! 1 ■ ■ 1 " ' she / ' he i:> happy, . 11 

Philip / he knew : . . . . 11 

lie / it must have gone : 11 

he /' After the Lord has call'd . 11 
/ to bear it with me to my grave 
l.'ii' H i' lire of it. he t : . 
he /. had sl.mdcr'd Leolin to him 



I- 25 
u. 39 

. 401 
lii. 59 

. 290 
iv. 308 

• 3=4 
. 562 

v. 275 
. 462 

• 494 
256 



90X 

1091 

1163 

1230 

1216 

1568 

1589 

720 

3=8 

494 

534 

904 

J015 

1024 

J 29 

»33 

154 

222 

306 

402 

638 

393 

472 

498 

. 5<° 

» . 69s 

. 810 

■1 . 897 

Xylmer s F. 252 

11 • JjO 



I'OEM. LINE. 

pray God that he hold up ' she / . Aylmer's F. 733 
t myself long-suffering, meek . M . 753 

/the motion of the boundless deep Sea Dreams 89 
• What a world,' 1 /, ' to live 111 . „ .92 

ask her of my shares, It; . . „ .111 

( I r 1 could have died to save it) . n . 1 30 

first time, too, that ever I / of death Crandmot/ier ( 1 
t on all her evil tyrannies, . . ISoaduea . 80 
/ that all the blood by Sylla shed . Lucretius . 47 
these 1 / my dream would show to me 11 . = 1 

I / 1 lived securely as yourselves . n 

thousand, 

'There are fs now Such women, Princess, Pro. 127 
Who had mildew d 111 their t's, . Aylmer's I ■'. 383 

tJiowt. 
I / a 'ad summut to saay, . . N. Farmer 19 
I r a said whot a owt to a said . 11 .20 

tlirall 

j To save from shame and /: . . Sir Galahad 16 

Let not my tongue be a / to my eye Maud, l.xvi. 32 

thread is.) 
Draws different t's, and late and soon Two I 'oices 1 79 
He plays with t's, he beats his chair hi Mem. lxv. 13 

threadbare 
theme of writers, and indeed Wom /. Ed. Morris 49 

threaded. 
he / The secrctcst walks of fame . The Poet 
Or / some Socratic dream ; . In Mem. lxxxvi 

threading. 
led T the soldier-city . . . Princess, v. 7 

tJireat. 
Puppet to a father's t . . . Lochsley If. 42 
I hear the violent t's you do not hear, Enid 1269 
scared with t's of jail and halt el . Aylmer's F 520 
Boanerges with his t's of doom . Sea Dreams 343 

threatened. 
Had wink'd and / darkness . M.d 'Arthur ,Ep. 1 

til ree-days- Ion %. 
That t-d-l presageful gloom of yours Vivien . 169 

three-detker 
rushing battle-bolt sang from the t-d Maud, I. i. 50 
snap The t-tTs oaken spine . . 11 11 ii. .7 

three-man t Its-old. 
On corpses i-m-o at noon she came Pal. 0/ Art 243 

tltree-fiarts-sick. 
t-p-s With strumming and with scraping, Amphion () 

three-times-three 
The crowning cup, the /-/-/, . In Mem.Con. 104 

threshold. 

on her / he Howling To With Pal. of el rt 15 

carried out from the / of the door : May Queen, ii. 42 
Corpses across the /; . . D.ofF.IVom. 25 

Half-fall'n across the / of the sun, 11 . 63 

and stood Upon the /. . Dora . . 109 

footsteps smite the / stairs Of life St S. Stylites 188 
float about the / of an age . . Golden Year 16 

find him : by the happy /, he, . Pnsicess, vii. \i^ 
Upon the / of the mind ? . . In Mem. ni. 16 
To enrich the / of the night . . 11 xxix. 6 
all the marble / Sashing . . Enid . f 74 

And seldom crost her / . . Id: Arden 

reverencing death At golden t's . Aylmer's F. i< i 
wrinkled feet Upon thy glimmering t's TithoHUt ' B 
And burn the / of the night . . I'he Voyage 18 

threw. 
She / her royal robes away. . Pal of Art 290 

And stronglv whccl'd and / it. . M d'Atr ■ 
stronger he that smote And / him ■ Princess, v 526 
By overthrowing me you / me higher Enid 1040 

thrice-happy. 
T-lt days ! The flower of each . Ed, Morris (", 
T-h he that may caress . . Talking 0. 177 



420 



CONCORDANCE TO 



thnc e-iurned. poem. line. 
chew'd The t-i cud of wrath, . Princess, i. 65 

tkrid. 

To i the musky-circled mazes . Princess, iv. 242 
He t's the labyrinth of the mind . In Mem. xcvi. 21 

thridding. 
Z'the sombre boskage of the wood D. o/F. Worn. 243 

thrift. 
like the little /, Trembled in perilous Sea Dreams 10 

thrifty, 
i too beyond her age. . . . Dora . . 14 

thrill. 
His country's war-song I his ears Two Voices 153 
Me mightier transports move and t Sir Galahad 22 

tkrilVd. 

a clear under-tone T thro' mine ears D.ofF. Worn. 82 

thrilleth. 
Thro' my very heart it t . . Lilian . 22 

thrive. 
those Fresh faces, that would t . Talking O. 50 

thriven. 
"Word by which himself had t.' . Sea Dreams 193 

throat. 
golden round her lucid i And shoulder CEnone . 174 
From cheek and / and chin. . . Pal. of Art 140 
there was that across his t . L.C.Vde Vere 31 
bright death quiver 'd at the victim's t D.ofF. Worn. 115 
in her / Her voice seem'd distant, To J. S. . 54 
take the goose, and wring her t . The Goose . 31 
All /V that gurgle sweet ! . . Talking O. . 266 
She lit the spark within my t, , Will Water. 109 
Faltering and fluttering in her t, . Princess, ii. 170 
treble of that bassoon, my t; . 11 . 404 

the Lady stretch'd a vulture t, . n iv. 344 

t's would bawl for civil rights, . 11 v. 377 

flood a fresher t with song. . hi Mem.lxxxn.16 

cobweb woven across the cannon's t Maud,Ill.vi.2j 
the knotted column of his t, . £nid . . 74 

many-winter'd fleece of / and chin. Vivien . 690 
felt the knot Climb in her t, . Elaine . 737 

but one bird with a musical t, . The Islet . 2 7 

throb (s.) 
Perchance, to lull the t's of pain, . The Daisy . 105 

throb (verb.) 
T thro' the ribbed stone ; . . Pal. of Art 176 

throbbed. 
Till the war-drum t no longer . Locksley H. 127 
tempestuous treble t and palpitated Vision of Sin 28 
T thunder thro' the palace floors, Princess, vii. 89 

throbbing. 
T thro' all thy heat and light, . Fatima . 4 

throe. 
coughs, aches, stitches, ulcerous fs StS. Stylites 13 

throne. 
kept her t unshaken still, . . To the Queen 34 
a rich T of the massive ore, . A rabia?i N's. 146 

to osvn A crown, a sceptre, and a t ! Ode to Mem. 121 
With a crown of gold, On a t ? . The Merman 7 
With a comb of pearl, On a I ? . The Mermaid 7 
Over the t In the midst of the hall ; 11 .21 

lightly vault from the t and play . ir • 33 

Thou from a t Mounted in heaven To J. M. K. 12 
The t of Indian Cama slowly sail'd Pal. of Art 115 
bells Began to chime She took her I: u . 158 

solemn mirth, And intellectual t. .. tr . 216 

tame leopards couch'd beside her t Princess, ii. 19 
glittering bergs of ice, T after t . ti iv. 54 

clove An advent to the t : m . 265 

winged Her transit to the t, . . tr . 3S9 

at the farther end Was Ida by the t i» vi. 337 
The chairs and t's of civil power . luMem.xxl. 16 
shape the whisper of the /; . . " lxiii. 12 
thousand battleSjandshakingahundred/VTIf^^/, 1. 1.4S 



POEM. LINE. 

barking for the fs of kings ; . Ode on Well. 121 

Betwixt a people and their ancient /, tr . 163 

fierce light which beats upon a t> Ded. of Idylls 26 
couchant with his eyes upon the t, Guinevere . 12 
joy to the people and joy to the t Wei. to Alexan. 29 

throned. 
wisdom-bred And t of wisdom . CEnone . 122 
turning saw, I on a flowery rise, . D.ofF". Worn. 125 

throng (s.) 
in among the t's of men ; . . Locksley H. 116 

throng (verb.) 
To t with stately blooms . . The Poet . 27 
marish-flowers that / The desolate Dying Swan 40 
the people t The chairs and thrones In Mem. xxi. 15 
and t, their rags and they . . Lucretius . 170 

thronged. 
And her whisper t my pulses . Locksley H. 36 
Every gate is t with suitors, . 11 . 101 

thronging, 
t all one porch of Paradise . . Pal. of Art 101 
/ in and in, to where they waited . VisiojiofSin 26 

throstle. 

I thro' wild March the t calls . . To the Queen. 14 

The callow t hspeth, . . . Claribel . 17 

Sometimes the t whistled strong: SirL.andQ G.it 

And swallow and sparrow and /, . The Window 157 

throve. 

And so she / and prosper'd : . Pal. of Art 217 

that on which it t Falls off, . . To J. S. . 15 
t and branch'd from clime to clime In Mem cxvii. 13 

all this t until I wedded thee ! . Guinevere . 480 

/ not in her trade, not being bred . £n. Arden . 248 

in it t an ancient evergreen, ti . 736 

throw. 
I would I to them back in mine . TheMerman 31 
dividing the swift mind, In act to t M. d 'Arthur 61 
wrestling thews that t the world , . Princess, vii. 266 
To seize and t the doubts of man ; InMe?n. cviii. 6 

thrown. 
thunder or a sound Of rocks /down, Pal. of Art 281 
from one sorrow to another t : . Lotos-Ks. . 63 
broad-hmb'd Gods at random t . To E. L. . 15 
shiver of dancing leaves is t . . Maud, I. vi. 73 

thrum. 
to flaunt, to dress, to dance, to t, . Princess, iv. 498 

thrumming. 
And t on the table : Will Water. 160 

ikrnsh. 
rarely pipes the mounted t ; . . In Mem. xc. 2 

thrust is.) 
here a t that might have kill'd, . Elaine . 25 

thrust (verb.) 
and t The dagger thro' her side.' . D.ofF. Wom.259 
t him in the hollows of his arm, . Dora . _ . 129 
with grim laughter /us out at gates. Princess, iv. 534 
T in between, but Arac rode him down n v. 521 
into a shallow grave they are /, . Maud, II. v. 6 
/ the dish before her, crying ( Eat.' Enid . 1503 

thr^istcth. 
My tough lance / sure . . - Sir Galahad 2 

thumb. 
the raw mechanic's bloody fs Walk, to theM. 67 
stoop and kiss the tender little /, . Enid . . 395 
rotatory t's on silken knees, . . Aylmer's F. 200 

thumfi. 
heave and /A league of street . Princess, \\\. 111 

thunder fs.) 
did gather / as they ran, . . The Poet . 49 
as the lightning to the / 11 -5° 

With a low melodious /; . . Poet's Mind 27 
/ and light in the magic night — . The Aferynan 23 
quiet seats Above the /, . . CEnone . 130 



TEiViVYSOX'S WORKS. 



421 



POEM LINE. 

ragged rims of / brooding low, . Pal. of Art 75 
/ or a souud Of rocks thrown down i» . 281 

t on the everlasting hills. . . D. o/F. Worn. 226 
The fs breaking at her feet: ' 0/ old sat Freedom' 2 
Black'd with thy branding / . . StSStylites 75 
Low fs bring the mellow rain, . Talking O. . 279 
took The / and the sunshine . . Ulysses . 48 
A long melodious / Princess, ii. 452 

on black blocks A breadth of/. . 11 iii. 275 

crash of shivering points, And / . n v. 481 

Throbb'd / thro : the palace floors, ■■ vii. c) 

And a sullen / is roll'd : . . Maud, II. iv. 49 

even if they broke In /, silent; . Ode on Well. 177 
Upon a head so dear in /, . . Enid . . 862 
The drumming / of the huger fall 11 . 1022 

earth shake, and a low / of arms. . Elaine . 459 

on her the t's of the house . Aylmer's F. 278 

flood, fire, earthquake, t, wrought h . 639 

claps of / from within the cliffs . Sea Dreams 55 
And there was rolling / ; . 11 .114 

Welcome her, fs of fort and of fleet! W.toAlexan. 6 
T, a flying fire in heaven, . , Boddicea . 24 
Eut they heard the foeman's t . The Captain 41 
Nor ever lowest roll of / moans, . Lucretius . 108 

thunder (verb.) 
And the volleying cannon t his loss : Ode on Well 62 
T ' Anathema,' friend, at you : ToF. D. Maurice 8 
That not one moment ceased to I Sea Dreams 121 

thunderbolt. 

in its breast a / Locksley II. 192 

And like a / he falls. . . . 7 he Eagle . 6 
falling on them like at, . . Princess, Pro. 43 
the / Hangs silent . but prepare ; . 11 

/ dare All these male t's : . . <i iv. 479 

and once the flash of a / — . . Lucre t tin . 7 

thunder-cloud. 
As t-c's that, hung on high, . . Eieanore 
like a t-c Whose skirts are loosen'd Enid . 

thunder-drops. 
As t-d fall on a sleeping sea : . D o/F. Worn. 122 

thundered, 
t up into Heaven the Christ less code Maud.W. i. 26 
Volleyed and / ; . . . Lt. Brigade 21,42 

t in and out the gloomy skirts . Elaine . 291 

thundering. 
The league-long roller / on the reef, En Arden 585 

thunder-music, 
t-m, rolling, shake The prophets In Mem. Ixxxvi. 7 

thunder-peals. 
A bridal dawn of /-/, ' Lore thou thy land,' etc. 51 

thunder-shower. 
are drown'd in gloom Of ts . . Princess, iv. 505 

thunder-storm. 
the peoples plunging thro' the t-s ; Locksley H. 126 
Upon a king's right hand in /-ii. Princess, v. 4:9 

thwarted. 
wrong d and lied and / us— . . Princess, iv 510 
'P by one of these old father-fools, Aylmer's F. 390 

liar 
Studded wide With disks and t's, Arabian . 

ticking. 
The slow clock t, . . . . Mariana . 74 

tickle, 
t the maggot born in an empty hejd. Maud, 1 1. v 38 

tickled. 
secret laughter / all in> vjul. . Pnncets. . 

tickling. 
caught the ynunker / trut . Walk. total M. aj 

/ the brute brain within the man's Lucretius . 21 

tide 
The /of time flow'd back with me, Arabian 
crc she reach'd upon the / . L.ofShalott,\s. 3; 



POEM. LINE. 

Bluster the winds and t's . . D. o/F. II 'om. 38 
And when the / of combat stands, Sir Galahad 10 
down dark t's the glory slides, 11 -47 

at high / of feast, In masque . Princess, i. 194 
toward the centre set the starry t's, 1, ii. 102 

a / of fierce Invective seem'd to wait ri iv. 430 
When the / ebbs in sunshine, . ■• vi. 146 

I The / flows down, the wave again In Mem.xw. 13 
' The double t's of chariots flow . .1 a,. 
' forward-creeping t's Began to foam, t» cii. 37 

j In vassal t's that follow'd thought. » c.\i i'1 

/ in its broad-flung ship-wrecking roar, Maud, I iii. 1 1 
The fs of Music's golden sea . Odeon Well. 252 
Your limit, oft returnm* with the t. Elaine 1035 
his full / of youth Broke . . Aylmer's F. 115 
a full / Kose with a gTound-swell Sea Dreams ;o 
you do but hear the /. . . 11 .83 

Of such a / swelling toward the land n . £5 

No!' satd he, ' but this t's foar . n . .,_• 

Dream in the sliding t's. . . Eequiescai . 4 

tidings. 

Be cheer'd with / ol the bride, In Mem. xxxix. 23 
To hear the / of my friend, . . u cjutv. 3 

tie fs.) 

To pass with all our social t's . Day-Dm. . 217 

ancient t's Would stdl be dear . Pnncets, it 14; 

inwoven here With dear Love's / Maud, l.xviii. ci 

tie verb.) 
T up the ringlets on your cheek : Margaret . 57 
Close up his eyes : / up his chin \ D.oJ ilu O. Year 46 

tied. 
chann'd and /To where he stands P o/F. Wont, JO J 
/ it round his hat To make turn pleasing Dora 

t the bridle-reins of all the llirec . Enid 947,1032 

tier. 
up the marble stair, / over /, . Elaine 1241 

tiger 
Here play'd. a /, rolling [0 and fro Pal. of Art 151 
And let the ape and / die. . . /«.!/««. cxvn. 28 



a lc In act to spring : 



tiger-cat. 



Princess, ii. 417 



tiger-lily. 
Heavily hangs the /-/. . ' A spirit haunts,' etc. 12,24 

tighten. 
made her lithe arm round his neck T, Vivien . 4C4 

tigress. 
To trip a / with a gossamer . . Princess, v. 163 

<-is. 
Adown the T I was borne, . . Arabian N't. 6 

tile. 

hcrwhinnyshrillsFrom/toscullcry Princess, v. 443 

////(s.) 
rogue would leap from his counter and/, Maud,\.\. 51 

////iverb.) 
It is the land thai freemen /. 'Yon askmc-cky,' etc. 5 
the labourer t's His wonted glebe In Mem. c. 21 
sent a thousand men To /the wastes, Enid . 1790 
t's the field and lies beneath, . Tithenus . 3 

tilfd. 
for miles about Was / by women ; Princess, i. 190 

/;// (game of an: 
that rang With / ind tourney, . I'rimess,Pro.\ii 
:o move in old memorial t s, . . ■• v. 468 

Forgetful of the / and tournament Enid . . 52 
V!e!"r at the / and tournament . •• . 1808 

Hurt in his first / was my s"ii. . Elaine . 196 

should wear her lavoui al the / . « . 357 

many a time have waich'd thec at the / 11 1350 

Killed in a /come next, five summers GninMVtrt . 319 
on love And sports and fs and pleasure n . 384 

//// iof a cart.) 
his wife upon the /, . . Walk to the M. 33 



422 



CONCORDANCE TO 



tilt (verb.) poem. line. 

would t it out among the lads : . Princess, v. 345 

in this tournament can no man t, . Enid . . 480 

t's with my good nephew thereupon, 11 . . 488 

left it with her when he rode to t . Elaine . 30 

tilth. 
and so by t and grange, And vines, Princess, i. 109 
wither'd holt or t or pasturage. . E?i. Arden . 676 

tilting-Jield. 
In open battle or the t-f . . Guinevere 328-30 

timber. 

And fiddled in the 1 1 . . . Ampkioit . 16 

timber-croi. t. 
A front of t-c antiquity, . . En. Ardeti . 693 

timbrel. 
With t and with song. . . . D.ofF. Worn. 200 

lime fs.) 
yield you t To make demand . To the Queen 10 
tide of t flow'd back, with me, . Arabian N's. 3 
The forward-flowing tide of t ; n .4 

In sooth it was a goodly t, (rep ) . tr .20 

fed the t With odour ... n .64 

Apart from place, withholding t, . u . 75 

Entranced with that place and t, . »i . 97 

Graven with emblems of the t . n . 108 

After the fashion of the t, . . n .119 

night new-risen, that marvellous i <? . 130 

The sweetest lady of the t, n . 141 

Sole star of all that place and t . " . 152 

What t the amber morn Forth gushes Ode to fit em 70 
t the mighty moon was gathering Lo?'eaud Death 1 
Beat t to nothing in my head . Miller'!, D. 67 
when t was ripe The still affection 11 . 224 

From that t to this I am alone . CEnone . 189 
the t's of every land So wrought . Pal. of Art 147 
dreadful t, dreadful eternity, . ti . 267 

ever worse with growing t, 11 . 270 

You know so ill to deal with /, L. C. V. de Vere 63 
If T be heavy on your hands . n .66 

happiest t of all the glad New-year; MayQueen,\ .2,41 
The good old year, the dear old t n ii. 6 

So now I think my t is near. . 11 iii. 41 

jTdriveth onward fast . . . Lotos-E's. . 88 
The spacious fs of great Elizabeth D.ofF.lVom. 7 
The fs when I remember to have been ir . 79 

thine own Until the end of t* . tr .84 

Nilus would have risen before his t. ?i . 143 

This is the curse of t. . . . To J S. .17 
t and space to work and spread 'You ask me, why' 16 
induce a t When single thought . 11 .18 

transfused Thro' future t ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 4 
pamper not a hasty t, . . . tr . -9 

all the past of T reveals » -5° 

this be true, till T shall close . ir ■ -79 

the style of those heroic t's ? . The Epic . 35 

the Mastodon, Nor we those t's; . n -37 

never more, at any future t, . . J\T. d' Arthur 18 
'tis t that I were gone . . . 11 .163 

I see the true old t's are dead . 11 . 229 

Such t's have not been since the light it . 232 

cock crew loud ; as at that t of year n Ep. 10 
we listen'd ; with the t we play'd : Gardener 's D. 2x6 
in that t and place, I spoke to her, it 221-6 

the t Is come to raise the veil. . if . 268 

in my t a father's word was law . Dora . . 25 
T will set me right. . . . Ed. Morris 88 
forsolonga/, If I may measure I . StS.Stylites 92 
and Earth, and !Tare choked. . if . 102 

one thousand and two hundred t's To Christtt . 109 
do not say But that a t may come ir .187 

I say, that t is at the doors . ir 189 

But could I, as in fs foregone, . Talking O. . 189 
Shall Error in the roundoff . Love and Duty 4 

Wait ; my faith is large in T, . if . 25 

wheels of T Spun round in station, ir . 73 

the fs, when some new thought can Golden Year 27 
in our t, nor in our children's t, . 11 . 55 

all fs I have enjoy'd Greatly, . Ulysses . 7 
Made weak by t and fate, h " 6q 



and the long result of T ; 
Love took up the glass of T, 
in the foremost files of t 
we, the latest seed of T, 
P'orerun thy peers, thy t 



POEM LINE. 

. Locks ley H. 12 

i» • 31 

tt . 178 

. Godiva . 5 

Tivo Voices 88 



memory of the wither'd leaf In endless*? ti .113 

What t the foeman's line is broke n . 155 

memory dealing but with t, . . v . 376 

thought and t be born again, . Day-Dm. . 70 

And in the morning of the fs, . ti . 232 

For since the / when Adam first . u . 253 

How goes the t ? 'Tis five o'clock Will Water. 3 
on this whirligig of T We circle . 11 63 

With t 1 will not quarrel it . 206 

It was the t when lilies blow, . Lady Clare 1 
Then before her t she died . . L. of Burleigh 88 
Is to be the ball of T . . . Vision of Sin 105 
avenged by sense that wore with t it . 214 

thou wilt, but 1 am sick of T, ''Come not, when' etc. 9 
and the first bones of T ; , Princess, Pro. 15 
the sight and smacking of the /; . 11 . 8q 

one wide chasm of ;■ and frost . ti - 93 

to kill T by the fire in Winter . 11 . 201 

A tale for summer as befits the t, u , 205 

something made to suit with Y'and place <r . 224 

Some future t, if so indeed you wilt n ii. 50 

on the sttetch'd forefinger of all T ,, . 356 

like swallows coming out of t . \\ . 409 

great name flow on with broadening / 11 iii. 148 
somehow shapes the shadow, T; . m . 313 

for all things serve their t . v iv. 55 

What t I watch' d the swallow . h .71 

the Ithacensian suitors in old /, . ti . 300 

t When we made bricks in Egypt. if . 309 

those were gracious fs. o . 278 

fellow-worker be, When t should serve; it . 290 

wasted here health, wealth, and t, u . 333 

drunkard's football, laughing-stocksof 7\tr . 496 

spent a stormy t With our strange girl ; u v. 116 

equal baseness lived in sleeker fs \t . 375 

plant a solid foot into the T, . ti . 405 

music in the growing breeze of T n vi. 40 

scatterall ourmaids Till happier fs ir , 284 

passing home Till happier fs: . 11 . 360 

cali'd On flying T from all theirsilver 11 vii. 90 
Much had she learnt in little t . u . 225 

these twain, upon the skirts of T, it . 271 

Give it t To learn its limbs : . 11 Con. 78 

reach a hand thro* t to catch . In Mem. 1. 7 

Come T, and teach me, many years, if xiii. 13 

My fancies t to rise on wing, .11 . 17 

A t to sicken and to swoon. . . tr xxi. 17 

all was good that T could bring, . n xxiii. 38 
His license in the field of t % . . tr xxvii. 6 
I draws near the birth of Christ (ciii.i.)n xxviii. 1 
miss their yearly due Before their 1 1 ir xxix. 16 
As when he loved me here in T, . 11 xlii. 15 

What i his tender palm is prest . it xliv. 2 

A lifelong tract of t revealed . 11 xlv. 9 

And T, a maniac scattering dust, 11 xlix. 7 

When 7*hath sunder' d shell from pearl. 'it li. 16 

The perfect flower of human /; . 11 lx. 4 

the dark hand struck down thro' ;*, 11 lxxi. 19 

Foreshorten'd in the tract of t? . m Ixxvi. 4 
What / mine own might also flee, . . 11 Ixxxiii. 37 
Shall gather in the cycled fs . 11 lxxxiv. 28 
such A friendship as had master'd T; 11 . 64 

masters T indeed, and is Eternal, ir . 65 

Thy spirit in t among thy peers . n xc. 6 

measuring out The steps of 7'— . n xciv. 42 
There in due t the woodbine blows tr civ. 7 

change of place, like growth of t, . n .it 

The f'ithless coldness of the fs . ti cv. 18 

The admits not flowers or leaves 11 cvi. 5 

Becoming, when the / has birth, . 11 cxii. 14 

Is it, then, regret for buried t . tr cxv. 1 

Contemplate all this work of T> . n cxvii. 1 
if so he type this work of t 11 .16 

eddies in the flood Of onward t . n exxvii. 6 
echoes out of weaker fs . . ir Con. 22 

they must go, the t draws on . tr . 89 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



42: 



POEM. LINi:. 

Princess, Con. I 39 
. M11 u J, Li. 13 
v. 17 



Appearing ere the t's were n pe, 

nuer the /, for the 1 
weep for a / so sordid and mean . 
My yet young life in trie wilds of T, 
She is but dead, and the / is al hand 
W'reichedest age, since 7' began . 
is changed, for it fell at a / ul yeai 
' h is /. it is /, O passionate heart, 
such a / as goes before the leaf, . The Brook . 1 1 
Foremost captain of his/ . , Ode on Well. 31 
For many a / in many a clime . 11 . 04 

him, who bettering nol with / . Will . ■ JO 
Hereafter, thro' all/' J, Albert the Good Ded. 0/ Idylls*? 



XVI. 

II. in" 



III. 



tip. LINE. 

thro' her to the t's of her long hands, Princess, ii. 26 



tipt. 

t with fro^ -like spires. . 
Love / his keenest darts ; 



. Pal. of Art 52 
D.oJF. Wom.ni 



Laid 



272 



498 

716 
887 
'M i 
1424 I 

)8l 4 I 



. 65 
• 78 

• ?47 
. 264 
. 858 

. 141 
. 384 
.451 

46? 
684 
463 



I 

461 I 
601 

769 ! 

770 1 



770 



little / (or idle questioners. 

scantly / for hall' the work— . 

having seen all beauties of our /, . >• 

Constraint us, but a better /hascome: u 

I that wasted / to lend upon her . u 

in scarce longer / Than at L'aerleon <• 

And cursing their lost / . . " 

Enids and Geraints Of / s to be : . '■ 

most famous man of all those fs . Vivien 

Upon the great Enchanter 01 the 7, 11 

when the / drew nigh Spake . . Elaine 

man-'d his face and marked ll ere lus/. .1 

Hid under grace, as in a small..' / 

simples and the science of that /. . 

drave her ere her / across the heMs •. 

till her / To tell you :" . Guinevere 

for the / Was maytime. and as yel ■• 

Beat with me for the last / while I show 11 

lie the fair beginning of a /. . • " 

till in / their Abbess died. . . •• 

Take your own /, Annie rep.l . En. Arden 

of those / 1. » 

ited suitor of ohl t's. ■ ■ " 

,11 know, I watt His/.' . 11 

then indeed Harder the fs were, . AylmersF. 

a Malayan muck against the / 1 . •• 

years which are not T's had blasted bun " 

Is ihis a / to madden ma Iness . •■ 
r these to flaunt their pride T . n 

link'd their race with t's to come— n 

That Jenny had tript in h*r / . Grandmother it> 

first /, too, that ever I thought . •■ .61 

not weep — my own / seem'd so near 

For mine is a .' . ■ • 

And agi tee. 

What /have I ' • 

Then never chilling touch of /' 

no truer T himself < 1 

() skill'd to 1 ternity 

nicker, for the/ Is pleasant, 

But this is the / of hollies. . 

moon comes, 7' slips away . 

verb I 
Death's twin-brother, t's my breath, hi Mem Ixvii 7 

timing. 

happy stars, / with things below, . Maud I xviii 81 

Tl limit r-Mu in moil. 
'/'•.!/ grins on a pile of children's bones, Maud. I. i 46 

/;;;. 

p \\aWdfs, To serve the hot-and-hot WillWater. 227 

tint I. 

blazon'd on the shield In their own /, Elaine . 10 

tinged. 
t with wan from Ink of sleep, . Prineest, iiL 9 

and the nerve; prick Ami / . 



Bore and forbore, and did not /, . Two Voices 218 
mine the love that will not /, . In Mem. ox 18 

For a love that never fs ? . . The Windoiv igs 

tired, 
t out With cutting eights . . The Epic . 9 
At last, / out with play . Talk 

Ascending /, heavily slept till morn Lit. Arden k 1 
' '/'. Annie?' lor she did not speak rep | •■ 
1 began to be / a little, Graudmotl. 

7"of so much within our little life . Lucretiu 



Lucretius 

' Tirra lirra.' 
'77,' by the liver Sang Sit Lancelot./-. </5Wo//,iii 35 

tissue. 

In silver / talking things o( stale . find . . C63 

til 

T's, wrens, and all Wing •! nothings Enid . 



tumble ihe blossom the mad little Is flu Window 1 52 

Titan. 
The pulses of a T's heart . . InMem.tu. 32 

Whose 7' angels, Gabriel, Abdiel, Milton . 5 

7;/<?h;c - . 
7" forces taking birth Day-Dnt. .lit) 

T shapes, they cramm'd The forum Princess, vii.109 

555 I paid our fs in the days that arc gone Maud, II. 
• 746 
. 812 ! "iic. 

in hues to dim The 7' Flora. . Cardener'sD.ibj 



Nor toil for /, place, 



New as Ins /. I.uilt last year, 
a I'rmce indeed. Beyond all ft, 



title. 
'Lore thou thy land,' etc 25 



. Maud, 1. x. 19 
Ded. of Idylls 41 



Aylmer's F. 650 



1 ?9-,4 

» • 07 

11 11 

The Rutglet s. 15 

A Dedication 1 
Milton . 7 

On a Mourner 12 
Spiteful Let. 2; 
7V«- Window 163 



Maud, I. KX. 



Princess, 






' i 



In Mem. xlix. 3 



tinkling. 
Nor runlet t fl 



/// Mem.xux. 13 



tint. 

days have vanish'd, tone and t, . In Mem xliii. 5 
tiny-trump 

The /-/ gnat can break our dream Elaine . 138 



title-scroll 
l-s's and gorgeous heraldries 

titmouse. 
And the / hope 10 win hei 

alter. 
and ihcn A strangled / 

to-and-fro, 
commenced A t-aj. 

to-be. 

Dispensing harvest, sowing the T-l; Princess. vu.iyi 
Thro' all the secular t-b, . . InMtnt. xl. 23 

to-come. 
and all the rich t-c Reels . . Princess, vii. 33; 

to-day 
To-morrow yet would reap I -d, ' Loir thou thy laud' 1 
The sequel of Id unsolders all . M. d' Arthur 14 

toddle. 
Poor little life that t's half an hour Lucretius 

toil 

the reapers at their sultry / . 
tweet close of his delicious fs — 
fades, and falls, anil hath no /. 

re.ip the harvest with enduring t, 
surely, slumber is more sweet thl 
Bui enter not the /of life, . . Mat 

[ with hei ii 1 0.0,1 / . . Gardener" sD.n* 

ih vet Ills honour and his / ; I 7r 
1 must work thro' months of / . Amphion 

thou that after < and storm InMem.xi 1 

1 .' ■ 01 a mt to fl 1. 

/ of heart and knees and 
careful robins eye the di I' 
mutual love and l.onoutaWe /; 



Pal. of Art 

Lotoi 
11 
veet than / 



225 

77 
185 
82 

17' 



" exxvu. -.-.i 
Ode on Well. 212 
Enid . 774,128^ 
Lit. Arden . fcj 



424 



CONCORDANCE TO 



toil (verb.) poem. line. 
AVhy should we / alone, We only / Lolos-E's. . . 60 
Nor / for title, place ' Love thou thy land? etc. 25 
1 said, ' I t beneath the curse, . Two Voices 229 

tolled. 

T onward, prick'd with goads . Pal. of Art 150 

Souls that have t, and wrought, . Ulysses . 46 

/ Mastering the lawless science . Aylmer's F. 434 

often t to clothe your little ones ; . 11 . 699 

tolling. 
A motion tin the gloom— ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 54 
Spins, I out his own cocoon. . Two Voices 180 

T in unmeasurable sand . . Will . . 16 

toinie. 
i' the woost o' t's I wur niver . N. Farmer . 16 

toithe. 
an's t were due, an'Igieditinhond N. Farmer . 11 

token. 
There came a sweeter t . . May Queen,m.22 
came a mystic I from the king . Ed. Morris 132 
Who show'd a / of distress? . In Mem.bixvii.13 

then he bound Her t on his helmet Elaine . 373 
When these have worn their t's : . 11 . 765 

be a t to her, That I am he.' . En. Arden . 901 

told. 

Sweet Alice, if I I her all?' . . Miller's/). . 120 
My love hath I me soa thousand times CEnone -193 
has t me words of peace. . . May Queen,iu. 12 
wheresoever I am sung or t . . M.d' Arthur 34 
And I me I should love. . . Gardener's D. 63 
cuckoo t his name to all the hills . 11 .92 

This is not t of any. They were saints StS.Stylites 149 
And t him of my choice, . . Talking O . 18 
that same song of his He t me; . Golden Year 8 
She / him of their tears . . Godiva , 79 

i him all her nurse's tale. . . Lady Clare 80 
we, unworthier, t Of college : . Princess, Pro. no 
/ a tale from mouth to mouth . 11 . 189 

have him back Who t the ' Winter's Tale'w . 231 

your example pilot, t her all 11 iii. 121 

such extremes, 1 1 her, well might harm 11 . 128 

/ me she would answer us to-day 11 .150 

How came you here ? ' 1 t him : . 11 iv. 202 

me none t: not less to an eye . m . 305 

you had gone to her, She I, perforce : n . 311 

Go : Cyril I us all.' ... " v. 35 

now a pointed finger, /them all: . 11 . 260 

so I often / her, right or wrong, . ■■ . 278 

t the king that 1 was pledged . " . 342 

if I saw not, yet they / me all . n vi. 4 

might have t For she was cramm'd it Con. 34 

He t it not ; or something seal'd In Mem.xxxi. 15 
tell them all they would have t, . 11 xxxix. 25 
He t me, lives in any crowd, . » xcvii. 26 

first he t me that he loved . . »t Con. C 

What if he had t her yestermorn . Maud, I. vi. 50 
Who t hitn we were there? . . 11 II, v. 52 
hateful, monstrous, not to be I : . >t III vi. 41 
She t me. She and James had . The Brook . 96 
/ a long long-winded tale . . 11 .138 

She / me all her friends had said The Letters . 25 
It t of England then to me, . . The Daisy . 89 
T Enid, and they sadden'd her . Enid . . 64 
journey to her, as himself Had t her, >i . 144, 846 
these things he t the king. . .11. . 157 
/him scouringstill'Thesparrow-hawkl'ti . . 260 
/ her all their converse in the hall 11 . . 520 

return'd And / them of a chamber " . 1110 

/ Free tales, and took the word . u . n 39 

/him all that Earl Limours had said, -i . 1240 

nor / his gentle wife What ail'd him, 11 . 1352 

plainlier / How the huge Earl . 11 . 1653 

Merlin once had / her of a charm, Vivien . 54 

/ you first of such a charm 11 . 209 

I trusted, when X / you that, . 11 .211 

crueller than was ever / in tale . *' . 707 

/ her all the charm, and slept. . 'i . 815 



. Princess, vi. 012 
. Ode on Well. '46 



POEM. LINE. 

and she / him, 'a red sleeve . Elaine . 371 

Lancelot / me of a common talk . n . 576 

there /the King What the King knew 11 . 702 

the maid had / him all her tale, . 11 794,819 

T him that her fine care had saved 11 . 859 

I / her that her love Was but the flashn 1307 

Sir Lancelot / This matter to the Queen, Guinevere 53 
Nor with them mix'd, nor / her name, it . 146 
the tales Which my good father /. 11 .315 

yhim, with other annals of the port, En. Arden 703 
tho' Miriam Lane had / him all, . u . 766 

He said to Miriam, ' that you / me of 11 . 806 

Then he / her of his voyage, . n . 862 

been himself a part of what he /. . Aylmer's F. 12 
/ her fairy-tales, .... ir .89 

as he / The story, storming a hill-fort 11 . 224 

praised the waningred, and /Thevintage 11 . 406 

Then she / it, having dream' d . Sea Dreams 200 
what is this which now I'm / . The Ringlet 31 

These have / us all their anger . Boddicca . 23 
There was one who watch 'd and / me 11 . 30 

golden work in which I / a truth . Lucretius ., 256 

tolerance. 
Gama swamped in lazy / . . Princess, v. 433 
must have rated her Beyond all /. Aylmer's F. 381 

tolerant. 
T of what he half-disdain'd, . . Vivien . 34 

toll (s.) 
1 Honour,' she said 'and homage, tax and / CEnone 114 
fruits and spices, clear of /, . . Golden Year 45 

toll (verb. ) 
Tye the church-bell sad and slow D. o/theO. Year 3 
One set slow bell will seem to / . In Mem. lvi. 10 

toll'd. 
like a bell T by an earthquake 
Let the bell be / : (rep. ) 

tomb. 
Shut up as in a crumbling /, . Pal. of Art 273 

in the moon athwart the place of t's M.d Arthur 46 
bore him thro' the place of t's . 11 . 175 

hold their orgies at your/. 'You might havewon' 12 
near his / a feast Shone, . . Princess, Pro. 105 
her empty glove upon the / . . 11 iv. 573 

1 go to plant it on his /, . . In Mem. viii. 22 

In that deep dawn behind the /, . 11 xlv. 6 

My old affection of the /, . . 't lxxxiv. 75-7 
As it were a duty done to the /, . Maud, I. xix. 49 
Remains the lean P. W. on his / : The Brook . 192 
' Let her / Be costly, . . . Elaine 1329 

be blazoned on her / . . h 1334 

her, that is the womb and / of all, Lucretius . 240 

tome. 
at a board by / and paper sat . Princess, ii. 18 

Tomohrit. 
T, Athos, all things fair . . To E. L. . 5 

to-morrow. 
T 'ill be the happiest time . May Queen, i. 2, 42 

yyet would reap to-day, 'Love thou thy land,' etc .93 

Tomyris. 
bronze valves, emboss'd with T . Princess, v. 355 

ton. 

Than were those lead-like t's of sin, StS. Stylites 25 

tone. 
Wears all day a fainter /. . . The Owl, ii. 7 
Sweeter t's than calumny . . A Dirge 17 

'O cruel heart, 'she changed her t. Mariana in the S.f><) 
wind breathes low with mellower /: Lotos-E's. . 147 
fall down and glance From / to / . D.ofF. Worn. 167 
it was the / with which he read M d'Arthur,Ep. 5 
He heeded not reviling t's, . . Two Voices 220 
Swung themselves, and in low t's. Vision of Sin 20 
to herself, all in low t's, she read . Princess, vn. 160 
To one clear harp in divers t's . In Mem. i. 2 
With all the music in her /, . . 11 iii. 10 

days have vanish' d, / and tint, . » xliii. 5 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



425 



POEM. LINE. 

He past : a soul of nobler /: . In Mem. lix. 1 

Perhaps the smile and tender / . Maud, I. vi 63 
came her father, saying in low t's . Elaine . 988 

hint it not in human t's . . . Coquette, iii. 11 

tongue. 
of the many t's, the myriad eyes . Ode to Mem. 47 
Indian reeds blown from his silver /, The Poet . 13 
My tremulous / ialtereth . . Elednore . 136 
run before the fluttering t's of fire D.o/F. Worn. 30 
silver /, Cold February loved Tlie Blackbird 13 
servile to a shrewish / .' . . . Locksley II. 42 
wide in soul and bold of t, . . Two Voices 124 
Blowing a noise of t's and deeds, . 11 . 206 j 

To feel, altho' no / can prove, . 11 . 445 ' 

"lis said he had a tuneful j . . Amphion . 17 '■ 
Let me loose thy / with wine : . Vision 0/ Sin hi 
Fear not thou to loose thy t , . » . 155 

in a t no man could understand . 11 . 222 

I would that my t could utter ' Break, break? etc. 3 j 
in this frequence can I lend full t Princess, iv. 422 
every spoken / should lord you. . • • . 523 

On flying Time from all their silver t's « vii. 90 
er fickle t's may say. In Mem. xxvi. 4 

To flicker with his double /. . '■ cix. 8 

A contradiction on the /, . . 11 exxiv. 4 
made my / so stammer and trip . Maud, I. vi. 83 
With the evil / and the evil ear » x ji 

Let not my / be a thrall to my eye " xvi. 32 

By some yet unmoulded t . Ode on Well. 233 

as 3 man upon his / May break it. F.md . . 891 
neither eyes nor /— O stupid child ! Vivien . 100 
Your t has tript a little : . . 11 . 452 

let her I Rage like a lire . . •• . 650 

heathen caught and reft him of his /. Elaine . 273 
prick'd at once, all t's were loosed : 11 . 720 

such a t '1 o blare its own . . ■> . 938 

good nuns would check her gadding / Guinevere 311 
_;boundcn t Was loos'd, . En. Arden . 645 
a / that ruled the hour . . . Aylmer's F. 194 
strong on his legs, but still of his 1 1 Grandmother 13 
the / is a lire as you know, my dear rep. n . 28 

My /I rips, or 1 speak profanely Lucretius . 73 

tongue-tied. 
A It Poet in the feverous days . Golden Year 10 
thus .'-/. it made him wroth the more Enid . o6t 

too-earnest. 
Not look with that t-e eye . . Day-Dm. . 18 

too-fearful. 

t-f guilt Simpler than any child . Guinevere . 368 

took. 

So /echo with delight, rep.) . The Owl, ii. 4 

Cleaving. / root, and springing forth The Poet . 21 

1 the reed-tops as it went. . . DyingSivan 10 

ml Ofthat waste place with joy " . 21 

bells Began to chime. She /her throne: Pal 0/ Art 150 

shuddering / hold of all my mind May QueenJM 35 

He t the g K>se upon his arm, . The Goose . 41 

\ml / it . . M. d' Arthur 33 

/ with care, and kneeling on one knee, 11 ■ 17; 

Put forth their hands, and /the King. 11 . 206 

for the pleasure that I / to hear . Gardener 'sD '.223 

' the child, and went her way Dora . . 69 

she rose and/ [lie child once more, 11 , .78 

he / the boy, tli.it 1 ri'.-'l aloud •» .99 

My uncle / the boy ; >> 112 

Mary / another mate . . . •• . 166 

ic we / them — Walk. totheM. 87 

We t them all, till she was left alone 11 . 90 

swarming sound of lift . Talking O. 213 

Why /ye n"t your pastime? Lave ana D 

I .■ .45 

with a frolic welcome / hie thunder Ulysses 47 

Love / up the glass of Time, . I.ocksley II. 31 

I .' Up tll'^ harp cf Life . . ■• . 33 

she / the tax away, . . . Codtva . 78 

Who / a wife, who reared his race, Two Voices 328 
I I a pencil, and WTOte . Id. Gray . 25 

/him by the curls, and led him in Vision of Sin 6 



POEM. LINE. 

T this fair day for text, ... ><mo8 

there w-e / one tutor as to read : . 11 -177 

they saw the King : he / the gifts 11 i. 45 

she / A bird's-eye view . . •• ii. 108 

He / advantage of his strength . " . 136 

T both his hands, and smiling faintly ■• 
tum'd to go, but Cyril t the child. » . 341 

We / this palace : but even from the first " iv. 294 

dispatches winch the H ead 7'half-un.. 
She / it and she flung it. . . 1. . 575 

then / the king His three broad sons ; r v 258 

/ it for an hour in mine own bed . » .4-4 

/ my leave, fur it was nearly noon »• . 457 

T the face-cloth from the face . <: . 542 

she / it : Pretty bud ! Lily of the \ ale ! .1 vi. 175 
for she / no part In our dispute . " Con. 59 

Our voices / a higher range . In Men:, xxj. 21 

In those sad words 1 t farewell : . 11 ivii. 1 

I / the thorns to bind my brows . 11 lvviii. 7 
She / the kiss sedately . . . Maud, \.\ii. is 
t Her blind and shuddering puppies. The Brook 129 
She / the little ivory chest, . . The Letters 17 
What more* We / our last adieu, The Daisy . 85 
/ them, and arrayed hcrselllhetein, Enid . 139, 849 
Enid / his charge! 10 the stall . " . . 382 
he / me from a goodly house : . 11 . . 708 
Lnid / a little delicately » J061 

/ the word and play'd upon it .11 . 1140 

/ him for a victim of Karl Doorm, 11 . 1373 

hated her, who/ no thought of them, .• . J487 

/ his russet beard between histceil. " . 1561 

/ you for a bandit knight of Doorm : •• . 1634 

haughty jousts and /a paramour; 11 . 1680 
he / Before the Queen s fair name » . 1798 

She / the helm and he the sail : . Vivien 
t his bru>h and blotted out the bird, <i . 328 

and she / him lot the King : . •« 

suddenly she /To bitter weeping p . 703 

at her touch T gayer colours, . •' . 799 

of the crowd 5011 / no mote account Elaine . 106 
/ note that when the living smile 11 . 322 

and / the shield, There kept it, . h . 396 

he /, And gave, the diamond: . ■> . 549 

those two brethren from the chariot / ■• 1140 

Stoopt, /, brake seal, and read it ; 11 1264 

his creatures / and bare him off . Guinevere . icS 
/ Full easily all impressions . . 11 . 634 

they / her to themselves ; . . 11 

Enoch /, and handled all his limbs En. Arden . 153 
when their casks were hli'd they /aboaid 11 . 647 
T joyful note of all things joyful . Aylmer's F. '1 
innocent hare Falter before he /it •< . 491 

Seized it, / home, and to my lady.— 11 
he partly / himself lor true . . Sea Dreams j8i 
never / that useful name in vain : 11 ■ i&5 

I that / you fir true gold . . The Kinglet 32 
the master / Small notice, or austerely Lucretius 7 

tool. 
Or thou wilt prove their /. . . Maud, I. vi, 
thou their /, set on to plague I 

Him his catspaw and the Cross his /, Sea Dreams ito 

tooth. 
my teeth, which now are dropl away StS.Stylites 29 
in the teeth of clench'd antagonisms Princess, iv. .14s 
captains flash'd their glittering teeth, <• v. 19 

red in / and claw With ravine . /// Mem. Iv. 15 

russet beard between his teeth ; . Enid . 1561 

ndrel' out of teeth that ground Aylmer's F. 328 

dragon warriors from Cadmean teeth Lucretius 50 

tof 
hills with peaky t's enprail'd, . Pal. of A I 

' will yuu climb the / of Art. 

here it comes With five at / : i V. 103 

thy towery / . 'Talking O. _ 265 

The t's shall strike from Mar to star Primes*, vi. 41 
shouted at once from the /ol the house' Maud. 1 1, v. to 
to the high / of the garden-wall . Gutnetum 
j I climb'd to the / of ihc garth . Grandmother 18 
sets all the t's quivering - . . Lucretius . IK 



426 



CONCORDANCE TO 



topaz-lights. 
Myriads of t-l and jacinth work . 

topic. 
speak, and let the t die ' 

topple. 
Will t to the trumpet down 
And is down the scaler : 
A kingdom t's over with a shriek 
And t's round the dreary west. 

toppled. 
The spires of ice are t down, 



rOEM. J.INE 

M. a" A rthur 57 
Princess, iii. 189 



Princess, 



11 Con. 
In Mem xv. 



In Mem. exxvi- 1: 



TOEM. LINE. 

Had t his ball and flown his kite . Ay liner's F. 84 
7' over all her presents petulantly 11 -23s 

totter. 
Till she began to t, 
there 2 yon arbutus T's; 



. Sen Dreams 236 
. Lucretius . 185 



tottering. 
yester-even, suddenly giddily /— Boadicea 



29 



Enid 



49 1 , 



16S2 



Vivien 



. sSi 



D.ofF. Worn. 137 



174 I 



toppling. 
t ovei all antagonism 

torch 
gust of wind Puffd out his I 

tore 
With that she / her robe apart 

T the king's tetter, snow'd it down. Princess, i. 60 
in her lion's mood 7' open . 11 iv. 362 

Leaf after leaf, and t, and cast them off, Elaine 1193 
t, As if the living passion . Aylmer's F. 534 

With wakes of fire wet the dark 7 he Voyage 52 
ran in, Beat breast, / hair . . Lucretius . 273 

torn, 

T from the fringe of spray. . . D of F Worn 40 
drench d with ooze, and /with briers, Princess, v. 27 
the household flower 7~fiom the lintel :i . 123 
he' blooming mantle t, •» vi. 123 

The Mayfly is lorn by the swallow, Maud, I iv, 23 
By which out houses are t: . , n xix. 33 
All the air v/as / in sunder. , , TheCaptaifi 43 

7 or re. 
twostrcng sons Sir rand Sit Lavaine Elaine 
'Here nYi: Hurt in his hrst tilt 

was my son, Sir T *• 

added plain Sir 7. . . . u 1 

Surely I but play'd on T: . . 11 

far away with good Sir T for guide n 

7 and Elaine ! why here? . . it 

turn'd Sir 7, and being in his moods " 

the lough 7 began to heave and move, >r 

torrent, 

the t called me fiom the cieft . iHtione . 53 

She heard the /'.' meet ' Of old sat Freedom ' etc 4 

For me the t ever pour d 

roll The t s, dash'd to the vale 

roll the I out of dusky doors : 

let the t dance thee down 

Like t's from a mountain source 

flush'd the bed Of silent t's, 

t's of her myriad universe, . 

torrenl-bou>. 
floating as they fell Lit up a t-b. 

tortoise. 
Upon the / creeping to the wall . D o/F Worn. 27 

tortured. 
a twitch of pain T he* mouth. 
Me they seized ana me they t 
Tory. 
T myself. A 7' to the quick . 
Let Whig and 7' stit their blood : 
The 7' member's elder sou . 
A gathering of the T, . 

loss. 
Should /with tang'eand with shells /« Mem x. 
That t'es at the harbour-mouth; . The Voyage 
There the sunlit ocean t'es . . The Captain 



tottlcr. 
Doctor s a 'i, lass, . . . A T . Fanner 66 

touch (s.) 
And weary with a finger's/' Clear-headed friend '22 
title, place, or / Of pension 'Love thou thy land'ctc 25 
Pel haps some modern t'es here and M d' Arthur, Ef 6 
/Vsaie but embassies of love . Gardener s D. 18 

But 1 have sudden 1 es . Ed Morris . 53 

there seem'd A / of something false ■( . 74 

IVlv sense of / is something coarse. Talking O. 163 
The cushions of whose / may pies-, 11 . 379 

Baby fingers, waxen t'es, . . Locksley H. 90 
A /, a kiss ! the charm was snapt. Vay-Dm. . 1 33 
O for the / of a vanish'd hand, ' Break, break.'etc. 11 
like a / of sunshine on the rocks . Princess, iii 339 
the / of all mischance but came . 
not a thought, a /, But pure as lines 
some /of that Which kills me 
No more, dear io\e, for at a / T yield 
Tenderness / by /, and last, to these 
2 / Came lound my wrist 
Too solemn foi the comic t'es in them 



Con. 
And 1 perceived no / of change . j'k Mem xiv. 

xvi. 

xxxvii 

xhii. 



. 784 



795 
1060 



To E. L. . 


1 : 


Princes-,, v. 


340 


1' vu. 


*93 


it 


10 4 


The Letlrrs 


?0 


The Daisy . 


-4 


Lucretius . 


39 


Pal of Art 


3" 



Princess, vi. 90 
Boaduea . 49 

Walk to the M n^ 
W ill Water. 51 
Princess. Con 50 
Maud, I. xx. 33 



69 



tossing. 
t up A cloud of incense 



. Pal of Art 38 



Discuss'd a doubt and / it to and fro : Pnncess,i\. 4»a 
is. ball Above the tountain-jets . » .436 

/on thoughts that changed from hue to huei- iv. 192 
and heard her name SO / about . Elaine . 233 



3T7 

i. 66 

11 11 

v. 27 

1161 

• 798 

• 134 
149-577 

449 

636 

5 

75 

1 he Ringlet 5, 15 



The / of change in calm or storm . 

A / of shame upon ner cheek : 

some dim / of earthly things 

If such a dreamv / should fall . » 

You say. but wnh no / of scorn, . n xcv. 

Sprang up for ever at a / . . n cxi. 

/ with shade the bridal doors . 11 Con. 

gilt by the /of 3 millionaire: . Mnud, 1 i. 

heart-free, with the least little /of spleen, 11 11. 

A / of their office nugnt ha.ve sufficed 11 II. v. 

keep a / of sweet civility . . Enid . : 

pale Dlood of the wizard at her / . Vivien 

loves me must have a / of earth : . Elaine 

go down befoic your spear at a / . n 

save it be some far-off t Of greatness tr 

Courtesy with a / of traitor in it . 11 

at 3 /of light, an air of heaven, . Aylmer's F 

so finely, that a troublous / Thinn'd 

never chilling / of 1 ime 

touch (verb.) 
I'd / her neck so warm and white. Miller's D. 
with some new grace Or seem'd to / Cardener'sD. 
t my body and be heal d and live : St.S. .Stylites 
may be we shall / the Happy Isles, Ulysses 
/ him with thy lighter thought . Locksley H. 
those two likes might meet and /. Two Voices 
t'es me with mystic gleams. . . 11 

Can / the heart of Edward Gray. . Ed. Gray . 
And / upon the master-chord . Will Water. 
We * on our dead self, . . . Princess, iii. 
t'es on the workman and his work ir 

t not a hair of his head : . . ti iv 

to / upon a sphere Too gross to tread " vii. 
To / thy thousand yeais of gloom In Mem. 11". 

•• XXX. 

11 xliv. 

n lxviii. 

'i Ixxi. 

11 xcii. 

Maud, 1 xix. 
Ode on Well. 
Enid . 



55° 

187 

2S7 

377 

99 

122 

68 

17 

6 



Father, / the east, and light 
other than the things 1 /.' 
seem d to 1 it into leaf : . 
T^thy dull goal of joyless gray. 
Descend, and /, and enter , . 
Not / on her father's sin : 
7" a spirit among things divine, 
will not / upon him even i'i jest 
/ it with a sword, ft buzzes wildly Vivien 
one of all ;he drove should / me ; . 11 

1 cannot /thy !:ps, they are not mine Guinevere 
So, — from afar, — / as at once '! . Aylmer's / 
O Goddess, like ourseives 7, and be Lucretius 



174 
200 
78 
63 
54 
357 
3S0 
8 
27 
205 
305 



18 
27 
13 
17 
139 
3>* 
281 

549 

547 
580 



7E.V.V YSO.V'S WORKS. 



4^7 



toil- 

T by thy spirit's mellowness, 
T ; and I knew no more' 
'/' with a somewhat darker hue 
/ n foot, that might have danced 
in passing / with some new 



POEM. LINE. 

Elednore . 103 
D.oJF.Wom.wb 
Margaret . 50 
Gardener" sD. 1 32 
»99 



/ upon the game, how scarce it was Audley Ct. . 31 

I pwer. she / on, dipt and rose, Talking O. . 131 

7" by his feet the daisy slept . . Two Voices 276 

Are /, are turn'd to finest air. . Sir Galahad 72 

the muMC / the gales and died ; . Visiono/Sin 23 

that cold vapour / the palace gate, » . 58 

,f wrong had / her face . Princess,Pro. 213 

/ on Mahomet With much contempt » .il. "8 

but the Muses' heads were / . " iii. s 

/ upon the point Where idle boys . 11 v. 298 

since you think me / In honout — " ^ . 391 

the sequel of the tale Had / her ; . <• Con. 3: 

ladst / the land to-day . In item. xiv. 2 

God's finger t him, and he slept. . n Ixxxiv. 20 

of the state . . « Ixxxviii. 35 

The dead man t me from the past " xciv. 34 

Who t a jarring lyre at first. . n xcv. 7 

irp be /, n >r time be blown , 11 civ. 22 

t with no ascetic gloom : . . m cviii. 10 

i my hand with a smile so sweet . Maud, I. vi. 12 

For her feet have / the meadows . 11 xii. 23 

I find whenever she / on me . . " xi.x. 59 

t On such a time as goes before . The Brook . 12 

11 it. But / itiinawares: Enid . 1237 

Nor ever / fierce wine, . . Vivien . 477 

7'at all p /nits, except the poplargrove Elaine . 614 

a', limes, So / were they, 11 1279 

it, till it / her, Guinevere . 80 
ere he / his one-and-twentieth May En Arden . 57 
the second death Scarce / her . Aylmer's F. 605 
oaken finials till he / the door ; . " -823 

y.clink'd. andclash'd.an 1 vanish'd Sea Dreams 131 
[ike ou: be / . Lucretius . 81 

toothing. 
T the sullen pool below : . Miller's D. 244 

at the t ... Loiksley Jf. 38 

The moonlight / o'er a terrace . The Daisy . 83 
7" her guilt) ! . Enid . . 25 

, ' disembark M Vivien . 5< 

/ fame, howe'er you sc irn my ing, 11 . 294 

spiritual fire. And t other worlds. i> . 687 

■ home . Aylmer's F. 4' '.-, 

foremost rocks /'. upjetled Sea Dreams 5s 

tout h ■ 

the stem Less grain than /, . . Princess, iv. 314 

a cave Of/ Ay liners F. 512 

dust. 

Raking in that millennial Id . Aylmer's F. 514 
/, Strong, supple, sinew-corded . /'nut ess, v. 523 
/. heavier, stronger he that smote Princess, v. 52^ 

/ o/r 

last summer on a / in Wale-.: . Golden Year 2 

tournament. 
From spur to plume a -tar of /, . M d'A rthun 223 
fill of the tilt and /, . . Enid . . 52 

in this i I tilt, 480 : 

victor at the tilt and /, . . . " . 1808 

touri: 

that rang With lilt and / ; . . Princess, Pro. 122 

11 v. 34 \ 

iw in irn, . Emd . . 287 

nephew fights In next lay's/ ■■ 476 

wear My favour at this /f' . Elaine . 361 

tourney 'verb.) 

once more perchance to / iii 11. . Elaine ■ 806 

An - a t ma my sins, . . X. Farmer 11 

town 
'ay wills, n f's L.ofShalott, i. is 

Uuder / and balcony ... 11 iv. 37 



M. LINE 

Below the city's eastern fs: . Fatuua q 

In glassy bays among her tallest t's (Enone . 117 

in the t's 1 placed great bells . Pal. 0/ Art 1 , 
Vet pull not down my palace fs . •■ 

You pine arnonj your halls and t's : L.C. V. del 'ere^i 
:iled t. . . DofF.Woni.7VS 
waning lime the gray cathedral fs. Gardener' sD.-i\ 3 
g d her to the college t Walk.tothe M. 81 
Upon her/, the ine, . n 91 

flourish high, with leafy fs, . Talking O. 197 
clash'd and hammer'd from a hundred t's, Godi 
Tho' watching from a ruin'd / > 77 
Here droops the Lanner on the /, Pay-Din. . 33 
stept Lord Ronald from his / : .Lady Clare 65 
the mother-city thick with fs . Princess, \. 111 
white vapour streak the crowned t's 11 iii. 326 
whole nights long, up in the /, . » vi. 238 
Toll'd by an earthquake in a trembling / 11 . 312 
here and there a rustic t . . i» Con. 44 
Before a t of crimson holly-oaks, . 11 . 82 
crowded farms and lessening t's, . In Mem. xi. 11 
wildly dash'd on / and tree . " XV. 7 
And t's fall'n as soon as built— . 11 xxvi. 8 
The ruin'd -hells of hollow t's r « btxv. 16 
And tuft with -I / .• . 11 cx.wii. 20 
Dumb is that / which spake so loud, 11 Con. 106 
Still on the /stood the vane, . The Letters 1 
fall'n at length that / of strength . Ode on Well. 38 
Or /, or high full-convent, . . The Daisy . 29 
Of / or duomo. sunny-sweet, •» -4° 
had fall'n a great part of a /, . Enid . .317 
Guinevere had climb' d The giant /, " . . 827 
beheld A little town with t's, •• . 1046 
look'd a / of ruin'd mason work . Vivien . 4 
in the four walls of a hollow /, 11 58,393 
like a cloud above the gateway t's.' 11 

in her chamber up a / to the east . Elaine . 3 
climb'd That eastern /, and entering 11 . 1 i 

from the west, far on a hill, the t's. 11 
as she came from out the /. . . 11 

Then to her / she climb'd, ..11 . 396 

bore her swooning 10 her / . , 11 . 963 

in her /alone the maiden sal : 1, . 983 

wild with wind Thai shook her /, 1, 1015 

creatures to the basement of the / Guinevere . 103 
The broken base of a black / . Aylmer's F. 511 
own gray /. or plain-faced tabernacle 11 . 618 

llionlikc a mist rose into fs . Tithonus . 63 

By every town and /, . . . The Flower \s 
flutter oul upon turret and fs . W toAlexan. is 
blazed before the t's of Troy, . .S'/Vr. o/Ji 

1 stood on a / in the wet. . . ib05-i866 . 1 

T, m the deep-domed empyrean . Milton . 7 

''</. 
the pale head of him, who / Above Aylmer'i . 

ring. 
I o'er him in scrcnesl air 

ter.ver-stairs. 
she stole Down the long Is . 



/..'« re tins . 178 



Elaine 



34' 



many an inland / and haven large. CF.ntmf . 115 
thro the sky Above the pill-n'd /. Pal. of Art 124 
1 I Went tO /, . 1.. C . \' de I'eie x 

' 1 naming fs, ■ Lotos-Es, . i( ■ 

boic a I /• Worn. 47 

slept she down thro' /and Held 'Of old sat Tree,. 

The / was hush'tl beneath us . Am/ley ct. . 84 

all lhat from the / would stroll, . Talking 0. . 53 

f.ur Was holden ai the/; . . n . < ■ 

The music from the / . ■• . -'i 

when he laid a tax Upon his /, . Godiva . 14 

' kidc you naki •• , 
1 

Thro' dreaming t's I go, . Sir Galahad 50 

and of yonder / Id Gray . 1 

d by the / and out ul 'the street, /Vf/'j Song 1 



42S 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

wild woods that hung about the / ; Princess, i. 90 

Cat-footed thro' the / . it . 103 

dropt with evening on a rustic / . 11 . 168 

man and woman, t And landskip . 11 iv. 425 

I wander'd from the noisy /, IiiMemAxv'm. 5 

I roved at random thro' the t . 11 Ixxxvi. 3 

The dust and din and steam of t : ir lxxxviii. 8 
if I praised the busy / n -37 

That not in any mother / tr xcvii. 21 

And pass the silent-lighted /, . 11 Con. 112 

heart in the gross mud-honey of /, Maud, I.xvi. 5 

By twenty thorps, a little I . . The Brook . 29 
far from noise and smoke of /, To F. D. Maurice 13 

Beheld the long street of a little t Enid . . 242 

out of / and valley came a noise 11 . 247 

' What means the tumult in the tV m . . 259 

Go to the t and buy us flesh .11. . 372 

across the bridge, And reach'd the t,n . . 384 

into that new fortress by your /, . ir . . 407 

thought to find Arms in your /, . 11 . . 418 

Raised my own t against me u . 457 

by and by the / Flow'd in . i> . . 546 

Went Yniol thro' the /, tt 693 

Scatter'd thro' the houses of the t; it . . 695 
beheld A little t with towers . n . 1046 
Did you know Enoch Arden of this/?' En. Arden 846 

one of our /, but later by an hour . Sea Dreams 254 

High fs on hills were dimly seen . The Voyage 34 

By every t and tower, . . . The Flower i4 

toy. 

fs in lava, fans Of sandal, . . Princess, Pro. 18 
The tricks, which make us fs of men 11 ii. 49 

trace. 
And silent fs of the past . . In Mem. xlii. 7 

traced. 
in her raiment's hem was t in flame The Poet . 45 
deep-set windows, stained and t, . Pal. of Art . 49 
might as well have /it in the sands : Audley Ct. 49 
as he ta faintly-shadowed track, . Elaine . 165 

trachyte. 
trap and tuff. Amygdaloid and t, . Princess, iii. 345 

track (s.) 
Into that wondrous t of dreams D.ofF. Worn. 279 
I f straight thy t, or if oblique, . Two Voices 193 
the t Whereon we fared with equal feet In Mem.xxv. 1 
We ranging down this lower t, . 11 xlv. 1 

Enid leading down the fs . . Enid . . 877 
as he traced a faintly-shadow'd t, . Elaine . 165 

right across its t there lay, . . Sea Dreams 122 

track (verb.) 
t Suggestion to her inmost cell. . In Mem.xciv. 31 
I will I this vermin to their earths : Enid . .217 
I this caitiff to his hold, . . ^11 . . 415 

the subtle beast Would t her guilt Guinevere . 60 
impossible, Far as we t ourselves . Aylmer's F. 306 

tracked, 

t you still on classic ground . . To E. L. . 10 

thought Geraint, ' I have t him to Enid . . 253 

tract. 
In the dim t of Penuel. 'Clear-headed friend' etc. 29 

all dark and red— a t of sand, . Pal. of Art 65 

In fs of pasture sunny-warm, . 11 -94 

many a t of palm and rice, . . " . 114 

overlooks the sandy fs . . . Locksley H. 5 

sweep the fs of day and night . Two Voices 69 

led by fs that pleased us well, . In Mem. xxii. 2 

A lifelong t of time reveal'd : . 11 xlv. 9 

Foreshorten'd in the t of time ? . 11 lxxvi. 4 

fs of calm from tempest made . 11 cxi. 14 

In fs of fluent heat began, . . ir cxvii. 9 

but thro' all this t of years . . Ded. of Idylls 23 
Faith from fs no feet have trod, . On a Mourner 29 

trade (s.) 
Another hand crept too across his/ En. Arden . no 
set Annie forth in t ... 11 . 138 

3ut throve not in her t, . . it . 248 



trade (verb.) poem. line. 
Should he not /himself out yonder t En. Arden . 141 

traded. 
There Enoch / for himself . . En. Arden . 534 

trader. 
Never comes the /, never floats . Locksley H. 161 

tradesjnan. 
faith in a fs ware or his word ? . Maud, I. i. 27 

tradition. 
as / teaches, Young ashes . . A million . 26 
and made Their own fs God, . Aylmer's F. 795 

tragic, 
all things grew more / . . . Princess, vi. 7 

trail (s.) 
hunt old fs' said Cyril 'very well; Princess, ii. 368 

trail (verb. ) 

slowly /himself sevenfold . . The Mermaid 2$ 

Clasp her window, / and twine, . The Wijidow 22 

T and twine, and clasp and kiss . n .24 

trail'd. 

barges / By slow horses ; . . L.ofShalott,\. 20 

T himself up on one knee : . . Princess, vi. 139 

By a shuffled step, by a dead weight /, Maud, I. i. 14 

trailer. 

bell-like flower Of fragrant fs, . Eleanore . 38 

swings the / from the crag ; . . Locksley H. 162 

trailing. 
Some bearded meteor, / light, L. ofShalott, iii. 26 

tram (succession, etc.) 
Nor any / of reason keep : . . Two Voices 50 
old-world fs, upheld at court . Day-Dm. . 277 
Last of the /, a moral leper, I, . Princess, iv. 203 
A hundred maids in / across the Park n vi. 60 

behind, A / of dames : ... 11 vii. 113 

all the / of bounteous hours . In Mem. Ixxxiii. 30 
Memnius in a / of flowery clauses Lucretius . 119 

train (railway carriages.) 
I waited for tlie X. at Coventry ; . Godiva . 1 

train (verb.) 
to / the rose-bush that I set . May Queen, n. 47 

/ To riper growth the mind . . In Mem. xli. 7 

training. 
The bearing and the / of a child . Princess, v. 455 

trait. 
From talk of war to fs of pleasantry Elaine . 320 

traitor. 

sweeter dews than fs tear. . . A Dirge . 24 

that there be no fs in your camp : Princess, v. 415 

We seem a nest of fs . . . tr . 416 

Dear /, too much loved, why ? . 11 vi. 275 

And all thro' that young /, . . Enid . . 715 

make good fellows fools And fs. . 11 . 1249 

Sir Lancelot, friend ? T or true ? Vivien . 620 
shriek'd out 7 ' to the unhearing wall, Elaine . 609 

Courtesy with a touch of / in it . 11 . 636 

' T, come out, ye are trapt at last, Guinevere . 105 

left in charge of all, The / — . 11 . 194 

this false / have displaced his lord ir . 214 

So feul a / to myself and her, . Aylmer's F. 319 

traitor-hearted. 

unkind, untrue, Unknightly, t-hi M.d' Arthur 120 

traitress. 
If I be such a/. . . . . Vivien . 201 
to harry me, petty spy, And /.' . Guinevere . 359 

tram. 
laying his fs in a poison'd gloom Maud, I. x. 8 

tranip. 
To /, to scream, to burnish . . Princess, iv. 499 

trample. 
To /round my fallen head, 'Come not, when, ' etc. 3 
I / on your offers and on you : . Princess, iv. 525 
Behold me overturn and / on him. Enid . 1691 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



4-9 



POEM. LINE. 

'7"me, Dear feet, that I have follow'd Vivien . 75 
on my chargers, / them under us.' Boddicea . 69 

trampled. 
I some beneath her horses' heels, . Princess, Pro. 44 
a spark of will Not to be t out. . Maud, II. ii. 57 

trampling, 

t the flowers With clamour . . Princess, v. 237 

great self seekers / on the right : . Odeon Well. 187 

charger t many a prickly star . Enid . . 313 

trance (s.) 
Like some bold seer in a /, . L. ofShalott, iv. 11 

I muse, as in a / Eleiinore 72-5 

her, who clasp'd in her last t . D.of F.Wotn 266 
The t gave way To those caresses, Love and Duty 63 
As here we find in t's, men . . Two Voices 352 
Until they fall in t again. . . 11 . 354 

but lay like one in /, . . . Princess, vii. 136 
In some long t should slumber on ; In Mem xlii. 4 
kinsman thou to death and / . 11 lxx. 1 

th my / Was cancell'd, . " xciv. 43 
the Queen immersed in such a t, . Guinevere . 398 

trance (verb.) 
thickest dark did t the sky . . Mariana . 18 

tranced. 
So /, so rapt in ecstacies, . . Eleiinore . 78 
Hung / from all pulsation . . Gardener* sD.255 
We stood t in lone embraces . Maud, II. iv. 8 

nature fail'd a little And he lay t : En. Arden . 794 

tranquillity. 
Marr'd her friend'spoint with pale/. Elaine . 729 
Thou, Passionless bride, divine 7", Lucretius . 262 

transfer. 

sleep t's to thee . In Mem. bevii 16 

t Die whole I felt fur him to you. 11 lxxxiv. 103 

transfixt. 
So lay the man / Enid . 1015 

transfused. 
but I Thro' future time Love thou thy land,' etc. 3 

transgression. 
So for every light / . . . The Captain 11 

transient. 
Away we stole, and / in a trice . Princess, v. 37 

transit. 

wing'd Her / to the throne . . Princess, iv. 359 

transmitter. 

The one tat their ancient name, . Aylmcr's F. 296 

transplanting. 
And -Methods of / trees, . . Amphion 75 

transport. 
But heard, by secret t led, . . Tivo Voices 214 
Me mightier t's move and thrill ; . Str Galahad .-.■ 
stirring a sudden / rose and felL . Princess, iv. 11 

trap 
horncblendc, rag and I and lull", . Princess, iii. 344 
trap < ■ 
1 wild thing taken 111 the /, . Enid . 1571 

trap verb.) 
Christ the bait to / his dupe . . Sea Dreams 187 

trapper. 
sees the / coming thl I. . Enid . 1572 

tnipt adorned.) 
there she found hei palfrey t . Godiva . 51 

trupt snared.) 
' I raitor, come out, ye are / ai last,' Guinevere . 105 

tra\/t. 

talk'd The / that made me rick, . Princess, ii. 372 

' U t ' he said ' bin with .1 kernel in it' 11 . 373 

Troth Treroit, 

the waste sand-shoics of 7 7' . Elaine . 301 



travel •,.) poem. line. 

I cannot rest from t : . . . t'tysses . 6 

if it had not been For a chance of/ Maud, I. ii. 8 

overtoil'd By that day's grief and /, Enid . 1226 

travel (verb.) 
blasts of balm To one that t's quickly Gardener 'sD. 68 
He t's far from oilier skies — . Day-Urn. . 105 

foamy flake Upon me, as I / . The Brook . 60 

traveller. 
in strange lands a / walking slow, . Pal. of Art 377 
The / hears me now and then, . In Mem. xxi. 5 

traveller's-joy. 
Was parcel-bearded with the tj . Aylmcr's F. 153 

travelling. 
quite worn out, T to Naples. 
His kinsman / on his own affair 

traversed. 
Deep meadows we had / 

treachery. 
tript on such conjectural t— . 

tread .».) 
Were it ever so airy a / 



The Brook 
Vivien 



1 'ivien 



Vivien 



35 
567 



198 



. Maud. I. xxii. 68 

tread (verb.) 
/ softly and speak low, . . D.of the O. Year 4 
ere the hateful crow shall / . . Will Water. 235 
While he r'-vwith footstep firmer, L. of Burleigh 51 
Freedom, gaily doth she / ; . . Vision of Sin 136 
T a measure on the stones, . . 180 

flickers where no foot can /.' . Princess, iv. 339 

And / you out for ever : . . 11 vi. 160 

touch upon a sphere Too gross to t, •• vii. 306 
The solid earth whereon we / . //; Mem* cxvii. 8 
/ me down And 1 will kiss you forii;' Vivien . 77 

treading. 
Then her people, softly /, . L. of Burleigh 97 

treason. 
siys the song ' I trow ii is no /' . Vivien . 573 
doom of / and the 11. lining death, . Guinevere . 534 

treasure-house. 
in some t-h of mighty kings, . M.d Arthur 101 

treasure-trove. 
Found for himself a bitter /-/; . Aylmcr's F. 515 
Thro' the dim meadows toward his t-t, n . 531 

treasuring. 
7' the look it cannot find . . In Mem.xxVu. 19 

treat. 

all That ts of whatsoever is, . Princess, ii. 358 

/ Of all things cv'n as he were by ; In Mem. . 

C (heir loathsome hurls and heal . Guinevere . 678 

treated. 
Too awful, sure, Tor what ihey / of, Princess, i. 138 
waiting to be t like a wolf, . . Enid . 1705 

treatise. 
They read Botanic Ts, . . Amphion . 77 

t relic. 
With blissful t ringing clear, SirL.andQ 
tempestuous / throbb d and palpitated! 'ision if Sin 28 
liquid <' 

as far As I could ape their /, . n iv. 74 

In little sharps and /'*, . . . The Brook . 40 

trebled. 

Love / life within me, . . . Gardiner' 

for cedar t>, 
no other /did mark The level waste Mai •• . .1 ; 
Rain makes music In the / . . A Dirge . 30 
.1 . the / Stands in the sun / ove and Death 10 

shadow passeth when the /shall fall, " . >4 

Thou lint beneath tl \tOriana . 95 

wind is blowing in turret and /(rep ten 3 

ewy /'*, . /'•" 
the /. . . . May 
The ts began to whisper, . . 11 in. -7 



43o 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Their humid arms festooning / to /, D.qfF. Worn. 70 
because he was The finest on the /. Talking O. . 238 
Thou art the fairest-spoken t .. n . 263 

hangs the heavy-fruited t — - . Locksley H. 163 
A garden too with scarce a /, . Amphion . 3 
And legs of fs were limber, . 11 . 14 

Like some great landslip, / by t . " . 51 

And Methods of transplanting fs, n . 79 

Then move the fs, the copses nod, Sir Galahad 77 
fly, like a bird, from t to t : . . Ed. Gray . 30 
dies unheard within his/, ''You might have zvou' etc. 32 
green gleam of dewy-tassell'd t's; Princess, i. 93 
A t Was half-disrooted from his place ti iy. 167 

across the lawns Beneath huge t's n v. 227 

lo the / .' But we will make it faggots 11 vi. 28 

From the high t the blossom wavering n . 64 

And gazing on thee, sullen /, . In Mem. ii. 13 
wildly dash'd on tower and t . 11 xv. 7 

Within the green the moulder'd t n xxvi, 7 

fs Laid their dark arms . . ?r xciv.15,51 
My love has talk'd with rocks and fs; 11 ■ xcvi. 1 
Tolls the deep where grew the /. . h cxxii. 1 
on the /\r The dead leaf trembles 11 Con. 63 

One long milk-bloom on the t ; Maud,\. xxii. 46 
t that shone white-listed thro' the gloom. Vivien 788 
The moving whisper of huge t's . En. Ardefi . 586 
On the nigh-naked t the Robin piped it . 677 

the family t Sprang from the midriff Ay liner* s F. 15 
also set his many-shielded i ? . 11 .48 

Once grovelike, each huge arm at " . 510 

t's As high as heaven, . . . Sea Dreams 99 
by rock and cave and /, . . V. of Cauteretz 9 

bud ever breaks into bloom on the /, The Islet 32 

tree-tops. 
On the i-fs a crested peacock lit CEnoue . 102 

irellis-iuork, 
birds Of sunny plume in gilded t-w ; Enid . 650 

tremble. 
stars which t O'er the deep mind . Ode to Mem. 35 
the jewel That t's at her ear . Miller's D. 172 

leaves That /round a nightingale— Gardener sD. 249 
Begins to move and t. . . . Will Water. ^ 32 
and t deeper down, And slip at once, Princess,\\\. 54 
In that fine air I t, . . . ir _. 333 

A breeze began to t o'er . . In Mem.xciv. 54 
They /, the sustaining crags ; . ti exxvi. 11 
The dead leaf t's to the bells. . " Con. 64 

Would start and t under her feet, Maud, I. xxji. 73 
tender air made t in the hedge . The Brook . 202 
make me t lest a saying learnt, . Titkonus . 47 

trembled. 
Lovingly lower, t on her waist . Gardener* sD. 130 
A teardrop t from its source, . Talking O. 161 

voluptuous music winding t, . Vision of Sin 17 

And the voice I and the hand. . Princess, vii. 212 
Tin perilous places o'er a deep : . Sea JQreams 11 

tremblcst. 
Who t thro' thy darkling red . InMem. xcviii. 5 

trembling. 

ever I thro' the dew . . . Margaret . 52 

t, pass'd in music out of sight. . Locksley H. 34 

weird bright eye, sweating and t, AylmeVs F. 585 

trench. 
shovell'd up into a bloody t . . AudleyCt. . 41 

trenched. 
Nor quarry t along the hill, . . InMem. xcix. n 

trencher. 
tender little thumb That crost the t Enid . . 396 

trespass-chiding. 
slink From ferule and the t-c eye, Princess, v. 36 

tress. 

see thee roam, with fes unconfined, Eleanore 122 

The fragrant fes are not stirr'd . Day-Dnt. , 95 

Love, if thy fes be so dark, . ti . 131 



POEM. LINE. 

picture by my heart, And one dark/; Priucess,\. 33 
all her autumn fes falsely brown, ti ii. 426 

from my neck the painting and the / if vi. 94 

good Queen, her mother, shore the / tr • 97 



A rah tan N's. 1 38 

Princess, iv. 209 
Aylmer's F. 100 



1446 
1456 



tressed. 
T with redolent ebony . 

trial. 
Girl after girl was call'd to / : 
and true love Crown'd after / ; 

tribe. 
A I of women, dress'd in many hues Enid 
Shun the wild ways of the lawless / 11 
twelve- divided concubine To 

inflame the fs . , . . Aylmer's F. 759 
Girt by half the fs of Eritain . Boddicea . 5 
They that scorn the fs and call us 11 .7 

tribute. 
The filter'd / of the rough woodland Ode to Mem. 63 

trick. 
1 1 see it is a / Got up betwixt you Dora . . 93 
' Play me no fs, said Lord Ronald Lady Clare 73-5 
The fs, which make us toys of men, Princess, ii. 49 
a lying / of the brain? . . : Maud, 11. i. 37 
your pretty fs and fooleries, 

trickling, 
t dropwise from the cleft, 

tried. 
This dress and that by turns you /, Miller's D 
I / the mothers heart. . . . Princess, iii. 

j have often / Valkyrian hymns . 11 iv. 

I I your old friend and /, she new . n 

O true in word, and / in deed, InMem. lxxxiv. 
O true and /, so well and long, n Con. 1 

I Strange, that / / to-day . . Maud, I. xx. 2 
On all those who / and fail'd . Vivien . 440 

And many / and fail'd ti . 445 

if I tit, who should blame me then?" m . 511 

frail bark of ours, when sorely / . 

trifle fs.) 
A /, sweet ! which true love spells- 



Maud, II. i. 
Vivien 



114 



Vivien 



147 

120 

299 
5 



Aylmers F. 715 
■Miller's D. 1S7 



In MemAxv, 4 
11 Ixv'ui. 4 
Sea Dreams 140 
•• .141 

Gra nd 'mother 107 
Coquette, ;. 2 

Will Water. 232 



Like one with any /pleased, 
They chatter'd fs at the door: 
A / makes a dream, a / breaks.' 
' No /,' groan'd the husband 
There is but a / left you, 
singing airy fs this or that, . 

trifle (verb.) 
gentlemen, That / with' the cruet, 
thought that Philip did but /with her; En. Arden 472 

trifled. 
Or like a king not to be / with — . Vivien . 443 

trill. 
Upon her lattice, I would pipe and /, Princess, iv.82 
That hears the latest linnet /, . In Mem. xcix. 10 

trilleth. 
Silver-treble laughter /: . . Lilian . 24 

trim (adjO 
sward was / as any garden lawn: , Princess, Pro. 95 

trim (verb.) 
have a dame indoors, that fs us up, Ed. Morris 46 
/ our sails, and let old bygones be, Princess, iv. 51 

trinket. 
And gave the fs and the rings . The Letters 21 

Tn'nobaut. 

hear Coritanian, Ti (rep.) . . Boddicea . to 

have answer'd, Catieuchlanian, T. it . 22 

trip. 

To / a tigress with a gossamer, . Princess, v. 163 

tho' he /and fall He shall not blind n vii. 31 1_ 

made my tongue so stammer and / Maud, 1. vi. 8^ 

My tongue T's or I speak profanely Lucretius 74 

tripod. 
on a / in the midst A fragrant flame Princess t iv. 15 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



43' 



trtpt I-OEM. 1INR 

/ on such conjectural treachery . Vivien . i, 

methinks. Your tongue has / a little : n . 4^2 

That Jenny had / in hei time : Grandmother 2O 

Tristram. 
after Lancelot, T and Gerainc . Elaine 
came the. sin of 7* and Isoli ; . Guinevere . 484 

triumph (s ) 
like a bride of old In / led. . . Ode to Mem 76 
"i'hc herald of her t . . . CEnorie . iSr 

wrought With fair Corinna's / ; . Princess, iii. 311 
And felt thy / was as mine ; . .In Mem cix 14 
Peace, his /will be sung . . Ode on Well. 232 
nor cares For t in our mimic wars Elaine . 312 

What Koman would be dragg'd in/ Lucretius . 231 

triumph (verb.) 
I / in conclusive bliss, . . In Mem lxxxiv 91 

triumpli'd. 
So I / ere my passion sweeping . Locksley II. iji 

triumvir. 
The fierce t's; and before them paused Priucess,\\\ 1 1 6 

Troat 
reveal 7".ind Dion's column'dcita- 

dcl The crown of T . . . CF.none . 13 

trod. 

Old footsteps / the upper floors, . Mariana . 67 

/ on silk, as if the winds . A Character 21 

They should have / me into clay, . Oriana , 62 
over these she / : and those great bells I'nl of Arti$j 

Upon an ampler dunghill / . . Wiil Water. 125 

I filler where I firmly /, . In Mem hv 13 

the path that each man / Is dim, . 11 Ixxii. 9 

man that with me t This planet, . ■■ Con. 137 

steep hill 7*outapath: . Sen Dreams 117 

faith from tracts no feet nave /, . On a Mourner it) 

trodden. 

Had t that crown'd skeleton, . Elaine . 50 

trode 
On burnish'dhooveshis war-horse/;/. o/Shalolt.nuag 

Trojan 
tempt The '/', while his neat-herds Lucretius . 88 

troll 
To / a careless, careless tavern-catch I'nncess,W 139 

troop. 
Sometimes a tot damsels glad L.o/Skalott.u. 19 

t's of devils, mad with blasphemy. .S/.S' Stylites 4 
Thro'/'rofiinrecordiiig friends. ' J 'on might nai e rwn'7 
A / of snowy do\cs athwart the dusk Pnucess.iv. 150 
many weeks a / of carrion ciuhs . Vivien .448 

trooping. 
7" from their mouldy deus . . Vision o/S ill 171 

troth. 

I to thee my / did plight, . . Oriana . »6 

Will I to Olive plight my /, . . Talking O. 283 

w herefore break her / ' . . Pnttifts, i. 94 

then this question of your / remains : 1. v. 269 

some pretext held Ol baby /, , 11 . 388 

plighted /, and were at peace. . <• vii. 68 

I'hc heart that nevel plighted t In Mem xxvu. 10 

Forgetful of their / and fealty . Guinevere . 439 

trouble. 
T on /, pain on pain . . . Lotos-lus. . 129 
shouldst take my / nn thyself : . Dora . .116 
nevcrknow The/'x I have gone thro' ! ' ■■ . . 147 
a lip to drain thy / dry . Locksley It. 88 

t's number wiih his days : Tno Voices 3^0 
nk defying /. . . . Will Water. 94 
But a / weigh'd upon her, . . L. of Burleigh 77 
clouds of nameless / cross . . In .den: \ 
An inner / 1 behold, ... 11 xl. 18 

I find a / in thine eye 1, Ixvii. 10 

I I is the / "f my > 1 luth . . m 1 I 
Can / live with April days . . .. Ixxxii. 7 



ioem l M \ 

A woiid of / withip '. . . Maud, I. xix. 15 

lost in / and moving round . . ■■ xxi 5 

dear soul, let / ha\e rest, . . "111. vi. 1.' 
foige a life-long / for 0111 selves, . Enid . . 852 
/ which has left me thrice youi uvii:>i 
Before the useful / of the ram : . *t . 1619 

all this / did not pass but giew ; . Guinevere . 84 
his / had all Leen 111 vain . . Grandmother 66 
thankful that his t's are no more . Lucre! ihs . 143 
No is f and cloud and storm . The Window 113 

trouble 'vetb. ) 
should come like gho»ts to /joy. . Lotos E"s. . 119 
To / the heart of Edward Cray. . Ed. Gray . 20 
Be still, lor you only / the mind . Maud, 1. \ 

troubled 
Grow long and / like a rising moon Princess, i. 58 
His dear little face was /, . . Grandmother 65 

Eeing /, wholly out of sight . Lucretius . 15.' 

trouble-tost. 

I lull a fancy /-/ . . . . In Mem. Ixiv. 2 

troubling. 
And the wicked cease ftom / . MayQueen.m. 60 

trout. 
Then leapt a /. In lazy mood . Miller s D. 73 
he caught the younker tickling t—ll'alk. lotheM.i$ 
here and there a lusty /, . . The Brook . 57 

Troy. 
I will rise and go Down into T . OLnone .. ^58 
the ten years' war in /', . . Lotos-Es. . 123 
on the ringing plains of windy 7* . Ulysses . 1; 
blazed befoic the towers of /', . Spec. 0/ Iliad 18 
did greet T's wandering prince . On a Mourner 33 

truck 
Grimy nakedness diagging his t's Maud, I. x. 7 

true 

'Love,' they said, 'must needs be t, Mariana in theS. 63 
this be /, till I ime shall close * Love thou tnyland' 79 
Vet this is al-o /. that, long lieloic Gardener's D. 60 
'lis /, we met : one hour I had, . Ed. Morris 104 
undo One riddle and to find the /, Two Voice* 213 
Vet glimpses of the /. . . . Will Welter. 6a 
' O mother,' she said, * if this be /, Lady Clare 30 
'I',' she said, 'We doubt not that Pnmess,Pto 166 
there was a compact : that was / : .1 1. 46 

dark and / and tender is the North " iv. 80 
To such as her ! ll Cyril spake her /, 11 V. 161 

As /to thee as false, false, false to me ■■ vi. 187 
flashes into false and /, . . . In Mem xvi 19 
I hold it t, whate'er befall i . . •■ xxvu. 15 
What keeps a spirit wholly / . 11 li. 9 

Who battled lor the 7, the Just . 11 lv. 1S 

thou wert strong as thou werl tl . ■■ lxxii. 4 
() / in wold, and tried 111 deed, . 11 lxxxiv. 5 
If not so fresh, with love as /, 1. . mi 

Should prove the phantom-warning /, <• xci. 12 

But ever strove to make it / : . 11 xcv. 8 
King out the false, ring in the /. . •• cv. 8 

dream my dream, and hold it / ; . 11 cxxii. jo 
<)/ and tried so well and long, . n Con. t 

.Maud is as / as Maud is sweet : . Maud. I. xui. 32 
a cause that I felt to be pure and / •■ III vi 31 
O iron neive to / occasion / . . Ode on Welt. 37 

we doubt not that foi one so / . .. . 255 

if ever yet was wife 7* to her lord Enid . . 47 
taking / for false, and false for /; . " . .853 
1 beautifully and keep her /'- .. . . 889 
And half believe her /.• . . Vivien 42, 250, 742 

Lancelot, friend '! 1 raitor or / .' . 11 . 620 

O / and tendel I O my liege 11 . 640 

Ilavcall men/and leal, all women pureo . 643 

what shame in love, So love he /, •• .711 

faith unfaithful kept him falsely /. Elaine . 873 
then will I, fir /jou arc and sweet " . oso 

for good she was and /, ,, 1284 

oily I to dream untruth . Gumnere . 537 
like proven golden coinage / . Aylmer's I. ■ i 

She must prove /; ... n ■ 3*4 



432 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

. Sea Dreams 1S1 
. N. Farmer. 5 
. Tithonus . 48 
. /I Dedication 1 

. Princess, Can. 20 



he partly took himself for t ; 
for a says what's nawways t : 
far-off, on that dark earth, be t ? 
Dear, near, and t — no truer . 

true-heroic* 

why Not make her t-h— 

true-love. 

He gave me a friend, and a true t-l } D. of iheO. Yearly 

truer, 
t to the law within ? 
be t to your faultless lord V . 
no t Time himself Can prove you . 

truer-hearted. 
There is no t-h — ah, you seem 

true-sublime. 
make her true-heroic — t-s ? . 



Princess, v. 181 

Elaine . 120 

A Dedication 1 

Princess, ' iii. 192 

Princess 3 Co7i. 20 

trumpet. 

And t's blown for wars ; . . D.ofF, Worn. 20 

bade him cry, with sound of t, . Godiva . 36 

The shattering t shrilleth high . Sir GalaJiad 5 

with a blast of t's from the gate . Princess,Pro. 42 

Will topple to the t down . . it ii. 214 

A t in the distance pealing news . 11 iv. 63 

A moment, while the t's blow . w . 558 

With the air of the t round him, . 11 v. 155 

till the t blared At the barrier . 11 . 474 

once more The t, and again : . ■ 11 . 477 

Altho' the t blew so loud . . InMem.xcv. 24 

A martial song like a t's call ! . Maud, I. v. 5 

Last the Prussian t blew ; . , Ode on Well. 127 

Yniol's nephew, after / blown ; . Enid . . 551 
Sound onadreadful t, summoning her; 11 . 1232 

and anon The t's blew ; . . Elaine . 453 

Far off a solitary t blew. . . Gui7ievere . 525 

Thro' the thick night I hear the t if . 565 

Warble, O bugle, and / blare ! . W. toAlexan. 14 
Lady, let the t's blow 'Lady, let the rolling,' etc. 5 

t ru mpet-bloiuings. 
Such fire for fame, Such t-b in it . Vivien . 268 

trumpeter. 

blew the swoll'n cheek of a /, . Princess, ii. 343 

trundled. \ 

Her mother t to the gate . . Talking 0. .111 : 

trunk. ' 

Ruin'd t's on withered forks, , Vision of Sin 93 \ 

trust (s.) 
fallen from hope and t : . . D. of 'F. Worn. 257 

breathing love and/ against her lip: Audley Ct . 68 
Go, vexed Spirit, sleep in /: . Two Voices 115 

Jock and seal : betray the /: 'You might have tuon* 18 
t in all things high Comes easy . Princess, vii. 310 
rack'd with pangs that conquer t ; In Mem. xlix. 6 
whether t in things above Be dmixn'd \\ Jxxxiv. 9 
Cry thro' the sense to hearten t . ir cxv. 7 

■why not? 1 have neither hope nor t ; Maud, 1. 1. 30 
Godlike men we build our t. . Ode on Well. 266 

As proof of/. O, Merlin, teach it me Vivien . 180 
feeling that you felt me worthy / . rr . 183 

curious Vivien, tho' you talk of / . ti . 208 

if you talk of / 1 tell you this, . ir . 210 

Vivien had not done to win his t . 11 . 712 

That proof of /—so often ask'd in vain! m . 769 

Should have in it an absoluter t . Elaine 1186 

On providence and / in Heaven, . En. Ardeti . 205 

trust (verb.) 
I could / Your kindness. . . ToiheQtieen 19 
* 7* me, in bliss I shall abide . Pal. of Art 18 

T me, Clara Vere de Vere . L. C. V.de Vere 49 
I think my time is near. I / it is May Queen, iii. 41 
I / That I am whole and clean, . St S.Stylites 209 
/ me on my word, Hard wood I am Talking O. 170 
T me, cousin, all the current . Locksley H. 24 
He t's to light on something fair ; Day-Din. . 120 
/ me while I turn'd the page, . To E. L. . 9 



POEM. LINE. 

1 1 / you ' said that other ' for we two Princess, n. 315 
all, 1 /, may yet be well.' . . 11 . 340 

/ that you esteem'd us not Too harsh ti iii. 182 

To harm the thing that t's him, . 11 iv. 229 

none to / Since our arms fail'd — 11 v. 416 

I / that there is no one hurt to death n vi. 225 
And /, not love, you less. ti . 278 

sweet hands in mine and / to me. n vii. 345 

And yet we / it comes from thee , In Mem. Pro. 23 
I / he lives in thee, . . » 11 -39 

if some voice that man could / , 11 xxxv. x 
Nor dare she / a larger lay, , 11 xlvii. 13 

we / that somehow good . . i« liii. 1 

I can but / that good shall fall ■ 11 . 14 

And faintly t the larger hope. . if liv. 20 

I that those we call the dead . 11 cxvii. 5 

I / I have not wasted breath : . if cxix. 1 
To one that with us works, and /, 11 cxxx. 8 

I / if an enemy's fleet came yonder Maud, I. i. 49 
I / that it is not so. » , it xvi. 30 

I / that I did not talk 11 xix. 12,16 

Henceforth I / the man alone . The Letters 31 
' / me not at all or all in all' . Vivien 234-48-99 

as I / That you / me . , . Elaine 11 88 

from the nursery —who could ta child? Ay Imer'sF. 264. 
first I fronted him Said */ him not;' Sea Dreams 71 
May / himself ; and spite of praise A Dedication 6 

trusted* 

declined, And / any cure: . . Pal. of Art 156 

Who / God was love indeed . In Mem. Iv. 13 

Too much I /, when I told you that, Vivien . 211 

by God's rood, I / you too much.' n ■. 226 

Have I not sworn? I am not / . 11 . 377 

A woman and not t, . . . n . 380 

To have / me as he has / you . Elaine . 589 

/ as he was with her, . . . Aylmer's F. 293 

fool ! and / him with all, . . Sea Dreams 76 



Ed. Morris 121 



trustee. 
Ts and Aunts and Uncles. . 

truth. 
Fair-fronted Tshall droop not t Clear-headedfriend , i2 



18 



The Poet 
Pal. of Art 



Weak T^a-leaning on her crutch 

wasted /'in her utmost need 

The winged shafts of /, 

Thus / was multiplied on /, . 

Not less than / design'd. 

She spake some certain t's of you. L.C. V. de Vere 36 

Her open eyes desire the /. l Of old sat Freedom' 17 

follow flying steps of T * Love thou thy land,' etc. 75 

a / Looks freshest in the fashion . The Epic . 31 

to feel the / and stir of day . M. a" Arthur, E p. 19 

in the round of time Still father TI Love and Duty 5 

man feel strong in speaking t ; . 11 . 

quiet eyes unfaithful to the t, . u 

t's of Science waiting to be caught Golden Year 

speak, and speak the / to me, . Locksley H. 

lies that warp as from the living /.' 11 

this is / the poet sings, 11 

This / within thy mind rehearse . Two Voices . 

Still moving after / long sought . n 

Named man, may hope some / to find " 

Cry, faint not: either T is born . 11 

/ that sways the soul of men ? . Day-Dm. . 

Nor finds a closer t than this . n 

The /, that flies the flowing can, . Will Water. 

I speak the /: you are my child, (rep. J Lady Clare 24 

point you out the shadow from the / .' Princess, i. 83 

to speak the /, I rate your chance 

so mask'd, Madam, I love the /; . 

So my mother clutch'd The / at once, 

To blind the / and mc : 

I know the Prince, I prize his /; . 

dream and / Flow'd from me ; 

call her hard and cold whichseem'da t: 

less for / than power In knowledge, 

but the needful preludes of the t: 

Forgive them where they fail in /, In Mem. Pro, 

I held it / with him who sings . n i. 

To which she links a / divine 1 • n xxxiii. 



Con. 



19 
26 

33 
92 



68 

91. 

17 

2 3 

60 

75 

25 

62 

176 

281 

72 

249 

171 



*59 
395 
45 
96 

217 
530 
83 

221 
74 
43 



TENA'YSOWS WORKS. 



433 



LINE. 

Tho' t's in manhood darkly join, InMem.xxxvi. i 
/ in closest words shall fail . • n .6 

comfort clasp'd in / reveal'd ; . if xxxvii. 22 
reaps A / from one that loves . 11 xli. 12 

who would preach it as a / . . 11 hi, n 

I wake, and I discern the /; 11 lxvii. 14 

This /came borne with bier and pall, ti lxxxiv. 1 
Ring in the love of / and right, . 11 cv. 23 

Nor dream of human love and /, . 11 cxvii. 3 
liecause lie felt so fix'd in /, . 11 cxxiv. 8 

.ming social / shall spread, . 11 cxxvi. 5 
'1 he t's that never can be proved . n cxxx. 10 
I have walk'd awake with T. . Maud,\.x\x. 4 
never sold the / to serve the hour, Ode on Well. 179 

II I tell you/? You seem'd . Vivien . 150 
I tell you the clean /, . . . n . 193 

not found it therefore : take the /.' 11 . 569 

Urged him to speak against the / Elaine . 93 

In Ueuofidly dallying with the/ . 11 . 588 

I swear by /and knighthood that I gaven 1289 

love of /, and all that makes a man. Guinevere . 479 
Trying his / and his long-sufferance En. Arden 467 
/ and love are strength, . . Aylmer's F. 365 

That a lie which is half a / . Grandmother 30-2 
I know for a /, there's none of them 1. . 85 

So I pray you tell the / to me. . The Victim . 50 
To make a / less harsh, . . Lucretius . 222 

golden work in which I told a / . 11 . 256 

truth-lover, 

T-l was our English Duke : . Qdeon Well. iE; 

truthful. 
half as good, as kind. As /, . -. Princess, v. 194 

truth-teller. 
T-t was our England's Alfred named;<?<&<>« Well.iSS 

try. 
Twere well to question him, and / Talking O. . 27 
thro' the questions men may /, . In Mem. c.vxiii. 7 
tries the bridge he fears may fail, Enid . 11 52 

/ this charm on whom you say you love.' Vivien 375 

trying. 

And / to pass to the sea ; . Maud, I xxi. 7 

7'ius truth and his long-sufferance, En. Arden 407 

tryst. 
That ever bided / at village stile . Vivien . 128 

Tudor-ehimnied. 
a T-c bulk Of mellow brickwork . Ed. Morris. 11 

tuff. 
horneblcndc, rag and trap and /, . Princess, iii. 344 

tuft s.) 
yon whispering /of oldest pine . O'.none . 86 
In ft of rosy-tinted snow; . . Two Voieet 60 
A light-green / of plumes she liorc SirL.andQ. G 26 

tuft 'verb.) 
When rosy plumelets/ the larch, . In Mem. xc. 1 
And / with grass a feudal tower ; 11 cxxvii. 20 

tulip. 
mes a Dutch love for ft Gardener's D 189 
Deep t's dash'd with fiery dew, In Mem. bucrii. 1 1 

tun:' . 
with her venturous climbing! and t's Maud, I. i. 6g 

. En. Ard, h 
Should 1 tlounderawlule without a t Uendecasyllabi, j-; 

turn 
mounted Ganymede*. T" /. Vulcans, Princess, iii. *f* 
ulks that /half alive, . . InMem.Xwx. 1 1 
teakcr on chalk and 

. . Enid . 
Lesl hi ' / . /■;,; Arden . 775 

ird is it only nol to /. Hendeeatyllabict 13 
how they /the blossom, the mad little Tk 

turn 

the fragments / from the glens 

And lull tiit chimneys /. . . The Ccose . 4a I 



POEM. LINE, 

every Muse /a science in. . . Princess, ii. 377 
/ on the purple footcloth . . ,, j v at7 

had a cousin / on the plain . . ,, vi. 299 

/half the mellowing |x:ars ! . In Mem. Ixxxviii. 20 
That / in the Godless deep ;. . ,, exxiii. 13 

T the tawny rascal at his feet, . Aylmer'i E. 230 
you / down and broke The glass . Sea Dreamt 137 

tumult. 

/ of their acclaim is roll'd . . Dying Swan 33 

Laid by the /of the fight. . .Margaret . 26 

and the /of my life . . . Eocksley Ii. no 

call'd Across the / and the / fell . Princess, iv. 476 

The cataract and the / and the kings „ . 542 

Is wrought with /of acclaim. . InMem.lxxiv.m 

And saw the / of the halls ; . . n Ixxxvi. 4 

O'erlook'st the / frum afar, . . 11 cxxvi. 19 

For a / shakes the city, . .Maud, 11. iv. 50 

What means the/ in the town?' . Enid . . 259 

ate with / in the naked hall, 11 1453 
in an hour Of civic /jam the doors. L ucretius 

tumultuously. 
t Down thro' the whitening hazels En. Arden . 375 

tune. 
Their hearts of old have beat in /, In Mem. xcvi. 10 
wildest waitings never out of / . Sea Dreams 224 

howl in / With nothing but the Devil .. . 252 

Tnrbia. 
What Roman strength T show'd . The Daisy . 5 

turbulence. 
in that realm of lawless /, . . Enid . 1370 

turbulent. 
I that knew him fierce and / . Enid . , 447 

turf Is.) 

In cool soft / upon the bank, . Arnbiau.Y's. 96 

all the / was rich in plots . . Enid . 

turf [verb.) 
after furious battle t's the slain 

turkis. 
T and agate and almondine : 
Each like a garnet or a / in it ; 

turn (s.J 
thro' many a bowery / . . . Arabian .Vs. 56 
In every elbow and / . . . Ode to Mem. 62 
Every / and glance of thine . . Eleanore . 52 
Some /this sickness yet might take Two Voices 55 
with every / Lived thro' licr . . Princess, ii. 25 

made a sudden / As if to speak . 11 iv. 375 

Katie, once I did her a good /, . The Prook . 74 
As some wild / of anger, . . linen 

Might feci some sudden / of anger 11 . 381 

' Mine too' said Philip '/and /about ' En. Arden 39 
Has given all my faith a / f . . The Ringlet 52 

turn (verb.) 

But when I / away . . Madeline . 36 

did I / away The boat-head . . At 

ae arms, / to thy rest, . A Dirge . 3 

Thou wilt not / upon thy bed ,11 .15 

1 T and look on me: . . . D.ofE.Wom.aso 

1 lie sea ; . .ludleyCt. . 54 

/ the horses' he;,, N ami home again Walk totH 

I / to yondex oak .... Talking O. . 8 

lightly .' ■ ,//, j,, 

What is that which I should / to . 11 . 99 

I will / that earlier page. . . ,, 17 

[ will tell it. y'yimr face, . . Day-Dnt. . i-> 

half the power to / This wheel . Will Water. 8j 
And beneath (I 

Proudly ft he round and kindly, . n ' . 55 

. Prim ess, r 

ft . 11 

but brooding t \ ,, 

ard lain 11 \ n. 138 

t heard her / the page ; . . 11 .175 

lei right ; InMem.y 
1 should / mine ears and hear . .. x. v . , 

2 E 



Vivien 



507 



The Merman 32 
Enid . 



434 



CONCORDANCE TO 



lxxix. 12 

ci. 21 

ToF. D. Maurice^S 

Enid , . 347 

ii . . 966 

Vivien . 37 

11 . 701 

En. Arden . 814 

The R ingle t 6,16 

On a Mourner 2 

Lucretiusi2. 



Dora . 
Audley Ct. 
Ed. Morris 



Locksley H. 



POEM. LINE. 

t thee round, resolve the doubt luMem.xl'm. 14 
Yet t thee to the doubtful shore, . ir Ix. 9 

1 t about, J. find a trouble . . 11 Ixvii. 9 
t's a musing eye On songs . . 11 lxxvi. 2 
t the page that tells A grief, 
t's his burthen into gain 
I I to go : my feet are set 
Till you should t to dearer matters, 
T, Fortune, t thy wheel (rep.) 
i to fall seaward again . 
with graver fits, T red or pale, 
in a wink the false love t's to hate) 
to all things could he t his hand. 
Will t it silver-gray 
Imitates God, and t's her face 
i and ponder those three hundred scro^ 

turiied. 
Tto tower'd Camelot. . . L.ofShalott/iv. 32 
where'er she t her sight . . Pal. of Art 225 

Growths of jasmine /Their humid arms/X o/F. lVo?n.6y 
True love Ground on fixed poles, l Love thou thy laud' 5 
Eustace t, and smiling said to me, Gardener's D. 
look ! ' Before he ceased I t 3 11 

nor from her tendance t 
Then he I His face and pass'd 
And all my heart t from her, 
She t, we closed, we Viss'd . 
fled by night, and flying t: . 
I t once more, close-button'd 
And t the cowls adrift . 
That show the year is t 
And she t— her bosom shaken 
and t it in his glowing hands ; 
Are touch'd, are t to finest air. 
Bitterly weeping I t away : . 
trust me while I t the page, 
i and kiss'd her where she stood 
i to me with ' As you will ; . 
i to go, but Cyril took the child 
we t, we wound About the cliffs, 
She spoke, and t her sumptuous head 
t Your warmer currents all to her, 11 . 282 

Half-drooping from her, t her face, n . 349 

camp and college t to hollow shows ; » v. 467 

And t each face her way : . . if vi. 128 

t half-round to Psyche as she sprang 11 , 192 

t askance a wintry eye : 11 . 310 

their fair college t to hospital : . u yii. 2 

She t ; she paused ; She stoop'd ; ti . 139 

even when she t, the curse Had fall'n InMem.vi. 37 
But thou art t to something strange, ti xl. 5 

childhood's flaxen ringlet t . . 11 lxxviii. 15 

left his coal ail t into gold . . Maud, I. x. 11 
his essences t the live air sick . u xiii. 11 

t our foreheads from the falling sun, The Brook 165 
X t and hummed a bitter song . The Letters 9 
With half a sigh she t the key, . 11 .18 

Flash d as they t in air . . Li. Brigade 28 

back t, and bow'd above his work, Enid . . 267 
T. and beheld the four . 11 . 558 

Who, after, t her daughter round h . . 740 
like that false pair who t Flying u . 1025 

the loss of whom has t me wild — 11 . 1157 

t and look'd as keenly at her . u . 1279 

t all red and paced his hall, . 11 . 1516 

t his face And kiss'd her climbing, n . 1608 

saw her Pass into it, t to the Prince 11 . 1735 

t to tyrants when they came to power) Vivien . 368 
she t away, she hung her head,. 11 . 736 

to his proud horse Lancelot t, . Elaine . 346 

he t Her counsel up and down . ti . 367 

sharply / about to hide her face, . 11 . 605 

foot to forehead exquisitely t: . it . 640 

/ Sir Torre, and being in his moods 11 . 795 

t Sighing, and feign'd a sleep . ti . 837 

now to right she t, and now to left, 11 . 896 

half t away, the Queen Brake . 11 1191 

then / the tongueless man . . ti 1254 

till it touch'd her, and she t — . Gtdttevere . 80 
And pale he t t and reel'd, , , if . 302 



120 

143 
*47 
53 
114 
11 . 134 

" . 136 

Talking 0. 48 
176 
27 

ir .31 

Sir Galahad 72 
Ed. Gray 6,34 
To E. L. . 9 
Lady Clare 82 
Priu cess, Pro. 214 
if ii. 34i 

111. 341 
iv. 134 



327 

57° 

40 

270 



POEM. LINE. 

even then he t ; and more and more Guinevere 594 
when he t The current of his talk . En. Arden . 202 
t her own toward the wall and wept. 11 . 282 

There she t, She rose, and fixt . if . 321 

crippled lad, and coming I to fly, . Ayhner's F. 519 
half t round from him she loved ; . Sea Dreams 274 
he t, and I saw his eyes all wet . Gra7id?nother 49 
But he t and claspt me in his arms, 11 . 55 

T as he sat, and struck the keys . The Islet . 7 
Pale he t and red, .... The Captain 62 
And bird in air, and fishes / . . The Victim 19 

turning, 
t round a cassia, full in view . Love and Death 4 

And / look'd upon your face . Miller's D. 157 

t yellow Falls, and floats . . Lotos-E's. . 75 

/ on my face The star-like sorrows D. o/F. Wont. 90 
t I appeal'd To one that stood . 11 .99 

t saw, throned on a flowery rise, . m . 125 

T^to scorn with Hps divine Of old sat Freedom' etc. 23 
dropt the branch she held, and t, . Gardeuer'sD.154 
t round we saw The Lady Blanche's Princess, ii. 299 
t to her maids, ' Pitch our pavilion u iii. 

Half t to the broken statue, . 11 iv. 

t saw The happy valleys, . . n Con. 

Not t round, nor looking at him, . Enid . 
the armourer t all amazed ir 283 

the two Were t and admiring it, . 11 . . 637 
t round she saw Dust, and the points 11 . 1297 

in a manner pleased, and t, stood. n . 1305 

unswallow'd piece, and t stared ; . 11 . 1479 

Roll'd into light, and t on its rims Elaine . 52 

found no ease in t or in rest ; . ir . 897 

Strange music, and he paused and t Gtdnevere . 237 
t now and then to speak with him En. Arden, . 756 
He therefore t softly like a thief . 11 . 772 

t to the warmth The tender pink . Ayhner's F. 185 
T beheld the Powers of the House n . 287 

turnpike. 

where this byway joins The t ? . IValk. toiheM. 5 

turnspit, 
t's for the clown, .... Princess, iv. 495 

turret. 
The wind is blowing in t and tree (rep.) The Sisters 3 
t's lichen-gilded like a rock . . Ed Mo?-ris 8 
clings to the t's and the walls ; . Maud, II. iv. 34 
In the garden by the t's u - 79 

the daws About her hollow t . Enid . 1105 

Flags, flutter out upon /'sand towers: W.toAlexan. 15 

Tuscaji. 
read The T poets on the lawn: In Mem. lxxxviii.24 

tutor {s. ) 

his t, rough to common men, . Pri?icess,Pro.zi.% 

there we took one / as to read : . tt . 177 

of that and this, And who were t's it i. 229 

tutor (verb.) 
nor tame and / with mine eye . D.ofF. Worn, 138 

iuwhit. 
Thy./'j are lull'd I wot (rep.) . The Owl, ii. 1 

tumhoo. 
Thy t's of yesternight (rep.) . . The Owl, ii. 2 

twang (s.) 
sharp clear t of the golden chords Sea-Fairies 33 

twang (verb.) 
T out, my fiddle ! shake the twigs ! AmJ>hion . 61 

twanging. 
Fly t headless arrows at the hearts, Princess, ii. 3S0 

twelve-divided. 
like the /-^concubine . . . Aylmer's F\ 759 

twenty-five ■, 
so bitter When I am but t-f? . Maud, I. vi. 34 

twig. 
Twang out, my fiddle ! shake the t's! Amphion 61 



TL7.YXVS0.VS WORK'S 



435 



twilight 

In the purple i's under the sea , . 
me— gray / 
iry silver .... 
either / and the day between 
l J il .t-, of the purple t, . . 
he t dim 
melted into morn 
died into the dark. 
: tirnful / mellowing. . 
And / dawn'd : and morn by morn 
And / gtoom'd : and broader-grown 

the courts of/ 
The /of eternal day. . 
All winds that roam the /came 



POEM. LINE. 

The Mermaid 4 4 
Pal. 0/ Art 85 I 
Audley Ct . & 1 

Ed Morris ' 37 
Lotksley If. 122 
T-10 Voices 263 
Day-Dm. 



Princess, vi, 

vii. 30 j 

_ • « 
Con 11, 

In Mem xlix. 16 

11 lxxviii. 11 



twofooted 1 

T at the limit of his chain, . . Aylmer's i. 1.7 

twy-natured. 
T-n is no nature : . . . . Lucretius .151 

type rs.) 

her fairest forms are fs ol tlice, . Isabel . 

Decaine an outward breathing /, . Miller's D. 

188 • That I of Perfect in his mind . 'J to I 'ekes 

174 j carved cross-bones, the fs of Death. Will Water, 243 

' And ev'n for want of such at. In Mem. xxxiii. 16 

So careful of the / lv 1) . . » hv. 7 

She cries ' a tin usand fs are gone : " lv 3 

trod this planet, was a noble / . " Con. 13 

Maud, II. iv 



1: . 



When / was falling, . . • Maud.l.xn. 2 
I watch the / falling brown . ToF.D.Maurue 14 
thro' the feeble /of tin-, world - £««* ■ • S54 
In either / ghost-like to and fro . Elaine . 845 
November day WasgtowingduUer /, En. Ardenj23 



beat the / into flakes of fire 
the purple-skit ted robe Of / 
sets at / in a land of reeds. 



Tit '/ton ns 
The Voyage 
Coquette, i. 



■;-■ 



14 



twin. 

not the fs I ler brethren, tho" they love Princess.l 1 3? 
1 iwned fs. Commerce and conquest, n v. 410 

A lusty brace Of fs may weed her " . 454 

twin-brother. 
Sleep, Death's/-/', (rep) . In Mem. lxvii. 

twine (s.) 
reverend beard Of grisly / . . Princess, \\. 83 

twine (verb ) 

thechild would /A trustful hand, . TnMem.cvm. 1S 

Clasp her window, trail and /, . The Window 22 

I and / and clasp and kiss . 11 .24 

twined. 

a drooping / Round thy neck . Adeline . 57 

1 fragment / with vine CEnone . 19 

; bis ancle / her hollow feet Vivien ■ £9 

twinkle (s.) 
There is not left the / of a fin 

twinkle (verb } 
■I see his gray eyes / yet 
lights begin to / from the rocks . 

;reen and gold 
A livelier emerald t s 111 the grass 

twinkled 
all the haft / with diamond sparks .V. d' Arthur 56 

>34 



l'ass, thou deathlike / of pain, 

type (verb ) 
Dear, but let us / them now 
If so he * this work of time . 

tyranny. 
play the slave to gain the /. . 

now should bend or cease. . 
Thought on all her evil tyrannies 
out ol / / buds . 



?0 



58 



Princess, vii. 281 
In Mem. ^\ 

Princess, iv. 11 \ 

Maud. 1 1 1. vi. 20 

Boaduea . 80 

11 . 83 



tyrant. 

Faster binds a fs power ; . . Vision 0/ 'Sin i?3 

And the fs cruel glee ... 11 • ,2 9 

■ Kill him now. The/.' . . Pnneess.Pro.am 

' makes von fs in youi iron skies, . Maud,\. win. 37 

2 I our dead captain taught '1 he /, . i >de on Well. 70 
hardest fs in their day of power, Enid . i54.t 

3 tum'd to/* when they came to powei) Vivien 36S 
Pity, the violet on the t 1 grave. . Aylmer's P. 845 

Tyrol. 
A cap of Tborrow'd from the hall. Princess, iv. 578 



u 

udder. 



Enid 



T the innumerable ear and tail. 

iivinn'd. 
/ as horse's car and eye. 

twin-sister. 

Than your /-.<• Adc '• 



Tlie Brook 



Princess, 



Margaret , 4S 
likeV-A grc'w/TVj differently beautiful i.d Morris^ 

twist&A 

A / of gold was round her hair ; . Vivien . 70 

twist 'verb ) 
f his girdle tight, and pat TalkmgQ.. 41 
^raiu with such a roar . Princess, v. 517 

twisted 
7"as tight as 1 could knot the noose StS. Strides 64 
. . . Vision of .Sin 40 
Wn'iine his eyes, and / all his face Elaine uw 

upon lliemselves./O'/wcr'j F 755 

tioisting. 
Is / round the polar star ; 

twitch. 
a / of pain ToTtur'd her mouth 
ut a sudden / of Ins iron mouth ; 

twitter. 

and / twenty million loves . . Princess, iv. 83 
twocelld. 
. I heart beating with one full Princess, VII. '289 



Nosing the mother's 11 

ulcer. 
1323 the 11, eating thro' my skin, . 
umpire. 
Miller's P . 1 1 by common voice, Elected 11, 

54 unarmed. 

1,1 Mem xi. a lllo - 1 ,jj e „ r $ not doubt 
Maud, 1. xvui.51 an j thought to find 

He sits 11 ,■ I hold a linger up 

unashamed. 
;s brawling judgments, 11, 
unasked. 
A trustful hand, «, in thine, 
tending her rough !oid, tho' all u, 
lowed me 11 ; 

unauthorised. 
that I came not all « . 

unavenged, 
life-long injuries burning ;/, . 

unbeheld. 
Mays! well behold them u, 

unit 
Not u men that strove wil 

unbeguiled. 
At me you smiled, but 11 

unbiassed. 
U by self-profit 

unbind. 

u my heart that I may weep.' 

unblest 

never child he born of me, / '. 



Lucretius . 100 



StS.Styliles 66 



CEnone 



Enid 



Vivien 



83 



• 4'7 
11S6 



• 5>5 



In Mem. c. 12 

Princes', vi. c 1 
Aylmer's /•'. 73 2 



. tn Mem cviii i 1 
Enid . 

Vivien . 1,7 

Princess, iv. 447 



Enid . 






Ulysses 



E7 



L.C. V.aeVere 5 






156 



Guinevere . 164 



CEnone 



»3' 



care no longer, being all « : ' Come not, when,' ttt . A 

unboding. 
U critic -pen, Will Water. 4.- 



436 



CONCORDANCE TO 



•unborn. poem. line. 

village eyes as yet u ; . . . In Mem. Con. 59 
cackle of the u about the grave, . Vivie7i . 357 

unbound. 
being, as I think, U as yet, . . Elaine iyn 

unBurnisk'd, 

To rust 71, not to shine in use ! . Ulysses . 23 

uncalled for. 
(power of herself Would come uf) CEnone . 145 

uncanceled. 

if left 7t, had been so sweet. . . Maud, I. xix. 46 

uncaredfor. 

Uf spied its mother and began . Princess, vi. 120 

Uf, gird the windy grove, . . In Mem. c. 13 

He must not pass uf. . . . Elaine . 535 

uncertain. " 

U as a vision or a dream, . . En. A rden . 353 

unchariiy. 
Fought with what seem'd my own u ; Sea Dreams 73 

uncharmed. 
assure you mine ; So live u. . Vivien . 400 

unclad. 

U herself in haste : adown the stair Godiva . 48 

unclaimed. 
query pass U, in flushing silence, The Brook . 105 

iinclasped. 
I scarce should be u at night. . Millers D. t86 
sweet Europa's mantle blew u, . Pal of Art 117 
U the wedded eagles of her belt . Godiva . 43 

unclasping. 
U flung the casement back, . . Elaine . 975 

uncle. 
Dora felt her u's will in all, . . Dora . . 5 
my us mind will change ! ' . n . -45 

have obey'd my 21 until now. .if . • 57 

I will set him in my us eye . . ir . -65 

make him pleasing in her ?i's eye. v . .82 
* My ?c took the boy ; . . " . . 112 

Trustees and Aunts and U's. . Ed. Morris 121 
and a selfish 7t's ward. . . . LocksleyH. 156 
Had babbled ' U' on my knee ; In Mem. lxxxiii. 13 

uncoiled. 

the braid Slipt and zc itself, . . Vivien . 738 

7i7icoi7iforted. 
U, leaving my ancient love . . CEnone . 256 

7inconfi7ied. 
From cells of madness u, . . Two Voices 371 

uncongeal. 

When meres begin to 7(, . . Two Voices 407 

7in conq uerable. 
I believed myself U, E7iid . 1683 

unconsc ions. 
feeble, all 71 of itself, . . . Pri7icess, vii. 102 
U of the sliding hour, . . . InMem.xln. 5 

uneourteous. 

in his heat and agony, seem U, . Elaine . 851 

uncurled. 

Did he push, when he was u, . Maud, II. ii. 18 

widazzled. 
Slowly my sense 71. D.ofF. Worn. 177 

7cnderc2irre7it. 
but for some dark 71 woe. . . Maud, I.xviii. 83 

7inder-flame. 
Grew darker from that u-f: . . Arabian N*s. 91 

under fringe. 

Eroad-faced with 71-f of russet beard, E?nd 1386 

u?tdergQ7ie. 
both have » That trouble . . Enid . 1584 



7itiderground. poem. line. 
Will vex thee lying 71 ? . . Two Voices in 

when the next day broke from u, Elaine . 412 

when the next sun brake from 71, . n 1131 

underhand. 

of a kind The viler, as «, . . Maud, I. i. 28 

7171 der-kingdo77t . 
The hundred 7i-k"s that he sway'd Vivieti . 432 

underlip. 

7i, you may call it a little too ripe Maud, I. ii. 9 

7inderpropt. 
71 a rich Throne of the massive ore, Arabia7t JV.y.145 

7i7ider~roof 
An u-r of doleful gray . . . Dying Swa7i 4 

7i7iderscored. 
only yours ; * and this Thrice 71. . Ed. Morris 107 

under-shapen. 
His dwarf, a vicious 7t-s thing, . E7iid . . 412 

under-sky. 

And floating about the 7t-s, . . Dyi7ig Swan 25 

7i7idersia7id. 

(For you will u it) To . With Pal. of Art 2 

None else could 74; . . . Talking O. . 22 
easy things to 71 — . . . Locksley H. 55 

He answers not, nor 71 s. . . Two Voices 246 
when thy nerves could u . . VisionofSi7i 160 
tongue no man could 71 : m . 222 

songs they would not 7C : . . Pri7icess, vi. 24 
The words were hard to 7t. . InMem.lxviii. 20 
* I cannot 7C : I love. ir xcvi. 36 

What is and no man u's . . 11 cxxiii. 22 
nursed at ease and brought to 7t . Ma7td, I.xviii. 35 
Thou canst not u . . . tr II. iii. 3 

could he 7i how money breeds . The Brook . 6 
I hold a finger up ; They 71 ; . E7iid . 1187 

you are man, you well can u . Vivie7i . 547 

Was loosen'd, till he made them 71; E71. Arde7i . 646 
mark me and u, While I have power u . 877 * 

7i7i dersta7idi7ig. 
u all the foolish work Of Fancy, . Pri7icess y vi. 100 

7i7idersto7id. 
kep un, my lass, tha mun 71 ; . iV. Far77ier . 23 

7i7iderstood. 

A notice faintly 7( t ... Two Voices 431 

The land, he u, for miles about . Pri7icess, i. 189 

Loved deeplier, darklier 7c . hi Mem. cxxviii. 10 

prophecy given of old And then not u Maud, II. v. 43 

by her that bore her u, . . . E7iid . . 511 

thou that stonest, had'st thou 71 . Aylmer*s F. 739 

U7ider-totie. 
from within me a clear 71-t . . D. ofF. Worn. 81 

underwent. 
Did more, and u, and overcame, . Godiva . 10 

7i7iden.uorld. 
brings our friends up from the u, . Pri7icess, iv. 27 

7i7idescried. 

tho' 71 Winning its way . . . Isabel . . 22 

7i7idissolvcd. 

A sleep by kisses u, Day-D77i. . 263 

7t7ido. 

Thoroughly to 7i me, , . . Lilian . 11 

in seeking to 7c One riddle, . . Two Voices 232 

To know her beauty might half u it. Maud, I. xvi. 19 

never could 71 it : ask no more : . Vivie7i . 536 

undone. 

What harm, 71? deep harm to disobey M. d'A rthur 93 

U7idrai7iable. 
labour'd mines 71 of ore . . . CE7io7ie . 113 

undulated. 
7t The banner : anon to meet us . Prt7icess, v. 243 

undulation. 

cries, And u's to and fro. . . I71 Mem. cxii. 20 



TEXXYSOX'S WORKS. 



437 



undying. poem, line. 

Clear, without heat, 77, . . . Isabel . . 3 

unequal 
in true marriage lies Nor equal, nor »; Princess,vu. 285 

unexhausted. 
bloodily fall the battle-axe, it, . Docidicea . 56 

unexpress'd. 
I leave thy praises u InMem Ixxiv. j 

unfair. 
Who shall call mc ungentle, u. . Mated, l.xw, 14 

unfaith. 
Faithand ;*can ne'er beequal powers: Vivien . 233 
U in aught 15 want of faith in all. . 11 . 239 

unfarrowed. 
so return*d u to her sty. . Walk, to the M.92 

unfetter d. 
U by the sense of crime, . . In Mem. xxvii. 7 

unfinished. 
work is left U—if I go. . . Lucretius . 104 

unfit. 
U for earth, u for heaven, . . StS.Stylites 3 

unfold. 
I see thy beauty gradually u, . EleSnore . 70 
a flower that cannot all », . . Princess, vii. 126 

77>///7r/, 
7/ the maiden banner of our rights, Princess, iv. 482 

ungathered. 

To-night « let us leave, . . In Mem. civ. 1 

ungenerous. 

' U, dishonourable, base, . , Ay Inter's F. 292 

ungentle. 
Who shall call mc 77, unfair, . . Maud, I. xiii. 14 
to be gentle than u with you ; . Enid . 1564 

ungracious. 
'U? answer'd Florian "have you learnt Princess.W. 370 
1 am more « ev'n than you, . . Ay Inter's /•'. 247 

ungraciousness. 
I seem to be u itself.' . . . Ay Inter's /•'. 245 

ungrateful. 
ill to thine ear. . . InMem.-xxxvxa.fi 
unhaiVd, 

u The shallop (littcth silken-sail'd /-. of Shatott,\. 21 

unhappy, 
Nor /,-. ... Adeline . 4 

< on this earth CEnone . 235 
andpass'd 77 that I ami . .Dora . 
The spindlings look » . . . Amphion 
Not all ,y, I, iving loved God's best. Elaine 1087 

II u E, t . Arden. 800 

unheard. 
behold them unbcheld, k Heir all CEnone . 87 

unhecdful. 
or as once we met U, . . . Cardener'sD. 261 

uninvited. 
The Abominable, that » came . CEnone . 220 

union. 

'uaskmevihy,' etc.tn 

1 us 111 thl . //, . . Elaine 

unity. 

eet, . 7Yeio PWr« 421 

'-' • . . In Mem. xli. 3 

universe. 

in. ate '/ /) Character t, I 

iii a boundless u Is 

1 » .230 

f Princess. 
' myriad «. . Lucretius . 19 

fleeting thro' th . ,<;, 

university. 

to found an U For maidens, . Princess, i. 149 



unkept. H line. 

vintage, yet 77, Had relish . . /<'/// Water. 97 

unkind. 
Ah, miserable and k, untrue, . M.d' Arthur \\ry 

be jealous, and bard, and u ? . Grandmother 54 

uukiudli/iess. 
KiU'd with unutterable u < . . Vivien . 735 

unkntghtly. 
U, traitor-hearted ! Woe is me I M d' Arthur 120 
u with flat hand, However lightly Enid . 1365 

left a want « before : . . Miller's D. 228 

Known and 7* .* human, divine, /» Mem. cxxviii. 5 
Sweet were the days when I was all u Vivien . 351 
hide it therefore • go 77: . . Elaine . 151 

Known as they are, to me they are u.' 11 . 186 

since I go to joust as one u I. . 11 . 190 

That he might joust 77 of all, . 11 . 582 

The maiden buried, not as one 11, n 1324 

many a week, », among the nuns ; Guinevere . 145 

unlaced, 
it my casque And grovell'd . . Princess, vi. j j 

unlading. 
At lading and 77 the tall barks ; . En. Arden . £17 

unlearn d. 
In grief I am not all 77; . . ToJ.S. . 18 

unled. 

gentle charger following him 77) . Enid . 1419 

unified. 
V was the clinking latch : . . Mariana . 6 

unlike. 
happy tears, and how 17 to these ! CEnone . 231 

unlikeness. 
As his u fitted mine. . . JiiMem \sx\ii\. 20 

unloveable. 
l'.v'n when they seem'd 77 . . Vivien . 32 

unmanacled. 
U from bonds of sense, . . Two I 'oices 236 

nnmann'd. 
but that my zone U me : . . Princess, li. 399 

unmannerly. 

U, with prattling and the tales . Guinevere . 314 

unmark'd 
Enwind her i /« Mem. xcvii, 1 

unmarried. 
Dora lived it till her death. . . Dora . . 1C7 

unmeet. 
you arc all 77 for a wife. . . Maud, I. iv. 57 

unmortised. 
The feet 77 from their ankle-bones Vivien . 402 

unopened. 
dash'd U at her feet : . . . Princess, iv. 450 

nnpalsied. 
if when he met with Death, . InMem. exxvii j 

unpen rived. 

il Artist . Gardener's D 24 
With Cyril and with Florian, «, . Pis: 

un/'i/ied. 

U: for he groped as blind, . . Ay Inter' t ]•'. £;i 

unrelieved. 

ever 77 by dismal tears, . . Pal. of Art 271 

unrep-ess'd. 
Ceasing not, mingled, 7/, . . Arabian N't. 74 

77// ' 
The wild 7/ that lives in woe . In Mem. xv. 1 ^ 

ai despair and wild u . „ xvi. 

unrrvealed. 

The rest rcmaincth 77 , . . ./«.!/< m. xxxx. 14 



438 



CONCORDANCE TO 



unriddled. 
Shall be it by and by. . 

unroll* d. 

sitting on a crimson scarf u . 
to the banner of battle u f 

unsaid, 
what I see I leave u t 

unscathed. 
Render him up u; 



POEM. LINE. 

. Miller's D. 20 

. D. of F. Worn. 126 
. Maud,Ul. vi. 42 

In Mem. lxxiii. 10 

. Princess, iv. 389 

unseen. 
leaping out upon them u . . The Merman 33 
the dark East, U, is brightening . Gardener sD 72 
Hislovc, u but felt, o'ershadowThee, Ded.ofI dllysw 
with her feet // Crush'd the wild passion Elai-te . 737 
Had his dark hour u, . . En. Arden . 78 

Her face was evermore #, . . The Voyage 61 
Into the it for ever . . , Lucretius . 255 

unshaken. 
kept her throne u still. . . . To the Queen 34 
Ida stationed there U, . . . Princess, v, 333 

uiishorn. 
saw him lying unsleek, u t 

unskilV d. 
let the younger and u go by . 

unsleek, 
saw him lying u, unshorn, 

71 ?i solder, 
it's all The goodliest fellowship 



unsown. 

sat upon a mound That was u, 



Elaine . 811 
Elaine 1352 

Elaine t 811 

M. d' Arthur 14 
Dora- . . 71 



unspeakable. 
memoriesroll upon him, U for sadness En. Arden 726 
twisted shapes of lust, u, . . Lucretius . 157 

unstained, 
A lovelier life, a more u, than his ? Ded. of Idylls 29 

U7isuhject. 
U to confusion, .... Will Water. 86 

nnsweet, 
faith as vague as all 7/ ; . , . In Mem. xlvi. 5 

imtaken. 
hath left his prize U, . . f Elaine . 530 

untarnisli d. 
name will yet remain £/as before ; Enid . ,, 501 

untold. 

Nor left u the craft herself had used: Enia 1242 

untouch ' d. 
U with any shade of years, . „ Miller's D. 219 

untrue. 
Ah, miserable and unkind, u, . M d Arthur 119 
might by a true descent be u; . Maud, I. xiii. 31 

untruth. 
never had a glimpse of mine «, . Elaine . 126 
Too wholly true to dream uva thee, Guinevere , 537 

untuneful. 

That her voice u grown 

unvext. 
tt She slipt across the summer 

unwedded. 
I was wife, and thou U : 

unwise. 
What wonder I was all u, 

unwodd. 
u of summer wind' . . . Arabian N^s. 80 

unworihier. 
we, u. told Of college* . , Princess, Pro. no 

unworthily. 
some 2<! ; their sinless faith . , Princess, v. 177 



unworthy. poem. line. 

three times less 71 1 . . . Love and Duty 20 

Hadst thou less u proved — . . Locks ley H. 63 

most Predoom'd her as u. . . Elaine . 725 

unwounded. 

To find him yet u after fight, . Enid , 1220 

1l7l7UOVe. 

Wove and u it, till the boy return' d Enid . 1109 

upbore. 

but her deep love i/her; . . Elaine . 857 

His resolve U him, and firm faith, En. Arden . Soi 

upbredking. 

the heavens u thro' the earth, . Gui7ievere , 3S8 

np-clomb. 
U the shadowy pine . . . Lotos-E's. . 18 

upcurled. 
wreaths of floating dark n, . . The Poet . 35 

updrag 
'Rise .' and stoop'd to u Melissa: Princess, iv. 347 

uphold. 
break the heathen»and n the Christ, Guinevere . 467 
didst ?t mo on my lonely isle, £/me, En. Arden . 784 

upjeited. 
11 in spirts of wild sea-smoke, , Sea Dreams 52 

upland. 

Piling sheaves in u*s airy, > » L.ofShalott'x.'H 
realms of u, prodigal in oil, . . Pal. of Art 79 

uplift. 
A lever to u the earth . ._,./« Mem. cxii. 15 
pure Sir Galahad to ?* the maid ; . Elaine 1258 

uplifted. 
I The bold Sir Bedivere u him , 71/. d' Arthur 6 
■ £/" high in heart and hope are we, Ode on Well. 254 



The Owl ii. 



upreared. 
in his chair himself u, . 

upright. 

U and flush 'd before him : 

uprising. 
The knife u toward the blow, 

uprose. 
7/ the mystic mountain-range : 

npshoot. 
All round a hedge lis, . 

upspruug. 
In closest coverture u, . 

upstarted. 
Scared by the noise u at our feet, . Vivien 



Day -Dm. . 150 
Vivien . 761 
The Victim 71 
Vision of Sin 208 
1^ ay-Din. . 61 
Arabian N 's. 68 
. 272 
. Day-Dm. . 97 



unworthiness. 
Contemplating her own u ; . . Enid 



upswell 
its The gold-fringed pillow . 

Urania. 
U speaks with darken'd brow : In Mem. xxxvii. 1 

Uranism, 

o'er his head U Venus hung, , Princess, i. 239 

urge. 

To which the voice did u reply , . Two Voices 7 

En. Arden , ^26 ■ lhat l COme t0 u thy crime * * Guinevere . 528 

urged. 

r . I nnd the poet little « . . . The Epic . 48 

Gtanevere , 119 , t « the fierce inscription . , Princess, lii. 125 

j U him to speak against the truth, Elaine . gj 

Day-Dm. , 273 

urn. 

From fluted vase, and brazen u . ArabiarN's. 60 

Drawing into his narrow earthen 71 Ode to Mem. 61 

white dust, shut in an u of brass ! Lotos-E's. , 113 

Soft lubtre bathes the range of it's Day-Dm. 29 

with great u's of flowers. . . Princess, ii. 12 

Thro' prosperous floods his holy u. In Mem. ix. 8 

on the board the fluttering u. . w xciv 8 
An angel watching an ic . . Maud, I. viii. 3 

> 533 lying with his u's and ornaments, Aylmers F. 4 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



439 



■uze T IBM. LINE. 

kecT a thing, its it will conic ■ 4- 

: woman for the « of man Ed.Morrts 91 

it to shine in «/ Ulysses . 23 

what /<V shall we put . Day-Dm. . 201 
'twere to cramp its 7/, it 1 . . " ..- 211 

idOf«andglorytoyourselves/'>-»«-«J ) u. 29 
this Oasis, 11 
public;* required she should be known; ir IV. 317 

oath was ta en for public «, 11 .• 3 lS 

r the « of men. " vi. 31 

What » to keep them here now? . 11 ..• - i 

void was her it ; . . ■ ■ " VM - *S 

A u in measured language lies ; . In Mem. v. 
one wreath more for U and Wont. n XXIX. II 
learns the « of ' 1 ' and ' me,' . » xliv. 6 
This « may lie in blood and breath, 11 ... 13 

with long 7* her tears are dry. . » Ijtxvii. 20 
bare The it of virtue out of earth : " Ixxxi. 10 
broke the bond of dying « . . 11 civ. 12 

And soil'd with all ignoble «. . " ex. 24 

shocks of doom To shape and ;« . 11 cxvn. 25 
I will make m of all the power I have ■£«*« . 1194 
count it of small ;< To charge you, 11 _ . 1265 

»andnameandfame(iS3,i9o,224,8i9)Kiww/« . 03 
' Rather it than fame' ..." ■ 33° 

U gave me Fame at first, " • 343 

Fame again Increasing gave me «. ti .344. 

rather dread the loss of ;< than fame ; » . 3°9 

lay as dead, And lost all it of life : " 

m'snotthe king's— For public «: £/*"«« . <;> 
shall grow In « of arms and manhood, n . 05 
put my wits to some rough «, . » 1298 

part of me; but what « in it! . " 1406 

shut from all Her charitable «, . AylmeVs F. 566 

■ ! they come too late for it. Sea Dreams 67 
koind o' u . . -V. Farmer 6 

.-, what it to answer now? . The Victim 59 

of older it All-seeing Hyperion— . Lucretius . 125 

, childly wont and ancient it . 11 . 206 

use (verb.) 

7* Her influence on the mind, . Will Water. 11 

grant me lie.:: I w it I .Princess, iu._ 219 

to u A little patience ere I die; . lnMem.xxxiy.il 

with such craft as women » . . Enid . 1201 

7* lioth grace and will to pick . 11 . 175° 

.id it's, careless of the rest ; Vivien . 313 

hi u it to the harm of anyone, " . 535 

I cannot u it, you may have it.' Elaine . 199 

pray you, 11 some rough discourtesy 11 . 968 

to be plain and blunt, and 7*, . 11 1293 

used. 

and 11 Within the Present, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 2 

II all her fiery will, and smote . Wilt Water, m 

the lefi eldomw; . Princess, in. 22 

great i to great ends; . » iv. 120 

—you isly— . . 11 v. 207 

It is all »< up for that. . . . Maud, II. v. 6.» 

ntle, nave not * my power : Enid . -4 U 7 

the craft herself had ;;; . . 11 . 1242 

you it worse than that dead man ; 11 . 1583 

mi : .. . 1742 

So was I. My daily wonder is, . Vivien . 385 

turtesy that he u . Elaine . 982 

used (accustomed.) 

We arc u to that .... Princess, iii. 260 

useful. 
Subdue them to the it and the good. Ulysses . 38 

itsh, -i 
Who it in the dolorous hour . . In Mem. IxxL 9 

jtxiu f. 
like the hand, and grew With u; . Princess, ii. 133 

1 ol 1 Caerleon upon U Enid . . 146 

'I 1 ,',: liors-, and f.. riled U, >6l 

By the Hal meadow.n . 831 

II tided I ', Before he turn 11 . 9 6 S 

With Arthui i'„. 1794 

in thy bowers of Camelot or of U Guru . trt . 499 



usury. M. LINK. 

kiss for kiss, With u thereto.' . Talking O, 1 , S 

mythic £/'* deeply-wounded son . Pal. of Art 

bis father £/ left in charge Enid . 17-t 

utter. 
would that my tongue could n ' Break, I ' r. 1 1,' . te. 3 

.■: more sweet than 
U your jubilee, steeple and spire ! W. ttt.-Uej.au. 17 

utterance. 
thro' all change Of liveliest u. . D.o/F.Wom.xfZ 
perfect Joy, perplex'd for » . . Gardener' 



1 by the yearning ol an eye Love and I 
speak, but ;* failing her. 



Went on in passionate it. 
their anger in miraculous it's 



Princess, iv. 376 
Guinevere . 60s 

• 23 



uttered. 
brows Of him than* nothing base ; To the Queen 8 
He r* rhyme and reason, . . The Goose . 6 
He 11 words of scorning ; . . 11 -42 

whole of love and 7* it. . . Love andDuty So 

She nor swoon'd, nor 7* cry ; .Princess, v. 533 

faint eyes, and 7* whisperingly . 11 vu. 139 
Bosv'd at her side and it whisperingly Enid 1 1 i 
While lie it this, Low to her c ' ■ 3 l 7 

U a little tender dolorous cry. • » • 813 

kneeling u ' Queen, Lady, my liege, » 

there the tale lie 11 brokenly, . En Arden 

uttering. 
all in passion « a dry shriek, . Enid . 1310 

uttet I 
aid me Heaven when at mine it, . Enid . 

.i\e her to the u M.,7 

;/ 1 orioitsness. 
molten down in mere u. . . Enid . 
And accusation of it. . . n 



vacancy, 

we shall see The nakedness and :; Deserted II. 1 1 

vacant, 
v of our glorious gains, . . Lotltslty II. »75 

vague. 

v in vapour, hard to mark ; 'Love thou thy Ian,/. ' 

all unsweet: . . In Mem.xlvL 5 

who liaUi not children, v . . Vivien . 350 

vail. 

handGrasp'd, made her v her eyes Guinevere . C55 



28 
15 
14 



vain. 

Of knitted purport, all were r>. . Two Voices 
The chancellor, sedate and v, . 1 'ay- I'm. . 
1 iii and v ; ■ ■ Pm 

I low v am I ! In Mem. Iix. 
With fifty Mays, thy songs are v; » Ixxv. 
Thy lil em .1 mi hi 1 unt it v. . " xa. 2 

Half-grown as yet, a child, and v •• cxiu. •> 
fonder of glory and v, ■ . ■ Maud, I. iv. 37 

loud and v ■ Ode 
Shemurmused 'v, in v: it cannot be. Elaine 

vainlier. 

7/ than a hen To her false daughters, Princess, v. 318 

7Y7/c\ 

Winds all the:' in rosy folds, . Millers D. 242 

There lies a v in Ida . • ■ (Euan* ■ ■ 

many a v And river-sunder* d champaign n . m 

in thef of Avalon . I al. of Art 107 

in the V,' . II . 291 

.ml me. Hi" w, . Lotos-El. . aa 
the thick leaved platans of the v. . Princess, 

I ie torrents, dash'd to the v: . >• v. 340 
• Pretty budl Lily of the v I . n vi >:'■ 
all the t?t Await thee : . » ' 

wn the v, . InMem.exxt. < > 
up the El of 1:1; By the Bat meadow Enid . Sy 



440 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Re-makes itself,and flashes down the v — Guinevere6o^ 
Light, so low in thez\ . . . The Window 186 

Valence. 

O ay, what say ye to Sir V , . Vivien . 555 

Sir ^wedded with an outland dame, tr . 564 

charged by V to bring home the child ir ■ 568 

Valentine. 
birds that piped their V's, . . Princess, v. 229 

Valkyrian. 

ourself have often tried V hymns, Princess, iv. 121 

valley. 

all the v's of Ionian hills . . CEuoue . 2 

Behind the v topmost Gargarus .11 . to 

■while I sat Low in the v n . 211 

In this greeny underthisgreenhill tr . 228 

As I came up the v . . May Queen, i. 13 

AH the v, mother, ill be fresh . 11 • 37 

up the v came a swell of music . 11 iii. 32-6 

Wild flowers in the v » -52 

above the v stood the moon . . Lotos-E's. . 7 

Far below them in the v's, 11 . 157 

others in Elysiau v's dwell, n . 169 

The v's of grape-loaded vines . D.ofF. Wom.219 

white convent down the v there . StS. Stylites 61 

from the vs underneath . . Amphiou . 31 

From some delightful v. . . Will Water. 120 

come, for Love is of the v (rep.) . Princess, vii. 183 

To find him in the v 11 . 195 

saw The happy v's, half in light . 11 Con. 41 

Ringing thro* the vallies . . Maud, I.xii. 10 

And the v's of Paradise . . n xxii. 44 

To bicker down a v. . . The Brook . 26 

Followed up in v and glen . . Ode on Well. 114 
A thousand shadowy-pencil'd v's . The Daisy . 67 

/Vll in the v of Death (rep. ) . . Jit. Brigade 3 

thro' many a grassy glade And v, . Enid . . 237 
street of a little town In a long v . 11 . . 243 

out of town and v came a noise v 247 

Was climbing up the v; . . Aylmer's F. 228 

All along the v (rep. ) . . V. o/Cauteretz 1 

Above the v's of palm and pine. . The Islet . 23 

and jutting peak And v . . Spec, of Iliad 14 

yon dark z's wind forlorn, . . On aMourner 22 
Fly to the light in the v below (rep. ) The Window 99 

valour. 

V and charity more and more. To F. D. Maurice 40 

valoroits. 
One of our noblest, our most v, . Enid . 3758 

value. 
To loyal hearts the v of all gifts . Elaine 1208 

valued. 
he knew the man and v him. . En. Arde7i . 121 

7'alu ing. 

V the giddy pleasure of the eyes . M.d" Arthur 128 

valve. 

betwixt were v's Of open-work . Princess, iv. 184 

marble stairs, And great bronze vs w v. 355 

Descending, burst the great bronze v's r vi. 59 

van. 
spread his sheeny v's for flight Love and Death 8 

Van Diemcn. 
From England to V D. . . Amphion . 84 

va?ie. 
County Member's with the v : Walk. totheM. 8 
Still on the tower stood the v. . The Letters 1 

vanish, 
v friendships only made in wine. . Enid . 3328 

vanish'd. 
The days have v, tone and tint . In Mem. xhii. 5 
v panic-stricken, like a shoal . Enid . 1317 

Until they v by the fairy well . Vivien . 278 

i\ and his book came down to me.' n . 500 

v suddenly from the field , . Elaine . 507 



POEM. LIN". 

upon him A piteous glance, and v Aylmers F. 284 
clink'd, and clashed, and v, . . Sea Dreams 131 

vanishing: 
grave itself shall pass, Katomand void Lucretius 253 

vanity. 
Like poets, from the v of song ? . Gardener* sD. 99 

vanquish. 
knew that Love can v Death, . D.ofF. Worn. 269 

vanquished. 
when our side was v Princess, vi. 8 

Wev, you the Victor ... 11 . 151 

van tage-ground. 
nor a v-g- For pleasure ; . . Ded. of Idylls 22 

With such a v-g for nobleness . Aylmer's F. 387 

vapour. 
swimmings slopes athwart the glen CFuone . 3 

vague in v, hard to mark, "Love thou thy land' etc. 62 
When the ranks are roll'd in v, . Locksley H. 104 
Comes a v from the margin 11 . igi 

High up the v's fold and swim : . Two Voices 262 
Faint shadows, v's lightly curl'd, . Day-Dm. . 25 
range Of v buoy'd the crescent bark w . 186 

breath to heaven like v goes : , St Agnes* Eve 3 
In crystal v everywhere . SirL.andQ.G. 5 

A v heavy, hueless, formless . Vision of Sift 53 

cold v touch'd the palace gate . n . 58 

soft white v streak . . . Princess, iii. 326 

a purple-frosty bank Of v, . . In Mem. cvi. 4 
All night the shining v sail . . tr Con. 111 

yellow v's choke The great city . Maud t II. iv. 64 
baleful star Veil'd in gray v: . Vivien . 112 

moony v rolling round the King, . Guinevere . 595 
belt, it seem'd, of luminous v, . Sea Dreams 203 
v's weep their burthen to the ground Tilhouus . 2 
Roll'd the rich lyfarinto the heaven Spec, of Iliad 8 

vapo u r-bra ided. 
sweet the v-h blue .... The Letters 42 

varier. 
pious v's from the church, . . Sea Dreams 19 

varieties. 
all v of mould and mind) To With Pal. of Art 7 

various. 
All ?', each a perfect whole . . Pal. of Art 58 
Each month is v to present . . Two Voices 74 

vary. 

The violet varies from the lily as far Prhicess, v. 174 

As the light of Heaven varies . Enid . . 6 

make her beauty v day by day, .11 . -9 

value of all gifts Must v as the givers Elaine 1208 

v from the kindly race of men, . Tithouus . 29 

varying. 
v to and fro, We know not wherefore. Aylmers F. 73 

vary-colo ured. 
A walk with v-c shells . . . ArabianN*s. 57 

vase. 
From Anted v, and brazen urn . Arabian N's. 60 
from 7Ain the hall Flowers of all Priucess y Pro. 11 
The Danaid of a leaky v, . . n ii. 319 

Break, thou deepz; of chilling tears In Mem. iv. 11 

J'ashti. 
O V, noble VI Summoned out She Princess, iii. 210 

vassal. 

Not v's to be beat, . . . Princess, iv. 128 

makes it v unto love : . . .In Mem.xlvii. 8 

v s of wine and anger and lust, . Maud, II. i. 43 

whom his shaking v's cali'd the Bull *£uid. 3288 

no more a v to the thief, . . u i5oi 

work as v to the larger love, . . Vivien . 341 

7'ast. 
Thine own shall wither in the v, In Mem. Ixxv. 11 
A soul shall draw from out the v . u Con. 123 



TEXNYSO.V'S WORK'S. 



441 



In Mem xcvi. 7 



In Mem. iii. 
11 Ivii. 

11 lxxi. 

Mil . 



vaster, foem. LINE, 

one music as before But v. . In Mem. Pro. 29 

till aa v grew the shore, . . 11 cu. 2 5 

vaslness 
In v and in mystery, . 

7 at. 
flask of cider from his father's r'j, AudleyCt '._. 26 
red with spirted purple of them's, Princess, vn. 187 

:«>»// s I 
Imbower'd r/i of pillar d palm, . /! ra^<t« Ns. __ 39 
Norany cloud would cross the v, Mariana in tAeS.jfi 
glimmering v's with iron grates, . D 0/ F Worn. 35 

tess in the v's of Death, 
In vs and catacombs, they fell , 
up thy v with roaring sound 
I ar beneath a blazing v, 

vault (verb.) 
lightly z-from the throne and play The Mermaid 33 

• a lilted. 
V o'er the dark-blue sea. . . Lotos-Es. . 85 

veil 
Slow-dropping 7''* of thinnest lawn l.otos-E's. . 11 
time Is come to raise the v. . . Gardener's D.269 
Inner impulse rent the v. . ■ Two Voices 
thro' thick v's to apprehend . . 11 

draws the v from hidden worth . Day-Dm. . 
rose of Gulistan Shall burst her v Princess, iv. 
From orb to 01 b, fiom v to v.' In Mem x.vx. 
Behind the v, behind the v. . . » Iv. 

A lucid v from coast to coast, . 11 Uvi. 

We heard behind the woodbine v. •■ Ixxxviu. 
A faded mantle and a faded -•, . Enid . 
in her ^enfolded, manchet bread 
teanng oft" her v of laded silk 
the maiden rose, While as her v, 

vi il ;\erb ) 
I cannot v, or droop my sight, 
nor v his eyes : . . ' Love thou thy land, etc 1)0 
bow'd as if to V a noble tear . . Princess, 111. 27a 
i#His want in forms for fashion's sake In Mem. ex. 5 
might 1 wish to v her wickedness Guinevere . 209 

veiTd. 

v picture— J', for what it holds . Gardener' sD 265 

v the world with jaundice, . . Walk, to theM 14 
v her brows, and prone she sank. Primus, y. 104 

a siaii h they sang: . fuMem.cn. 12 

which, tho' v, was known to me . n . 1 ; 

baleful star V in gray vapour . Vivien . 112 

he v His face with the other, . Aylmer's F. 808 

veileth. 

spreads above And v love, . . Two Voices 447 

vein 's ) 
a languid fire creeps Thro my v's . EleSuore . 130 
can talk: yours is a kindly «: . Ed. Moms 81 
stays the blood along the Vs. . Day-Dm. . 24 
summer of the vine in all his v's— Princess, " 
branches current yet in kindred v's ? " 
From out a common v ol memory >i 

felt my v's Stretch with fierce heat ; " 
wolfs-milk curdled 111 their v's, . ■■ 

now the wine made summer in his v's Enid 



7 enorrt. 
Not one to flirt a V at her eyes, 






tlNE. 

• 4:; 



venture. 
my poor v but a fleet of glass . Sea Dreams 134 

ventured. 
And boldly v on the liberties. . Princess, i. 202 
Alone at home, nor v out alone . En. Arden . 513 

/ \11vs. 
o'er his head Uranian V hung, . Princess, i. 239 
Is this thy vengeance, holy V, .Lucretius . 67 

verbiage. 
This barren v, current among men Princess, ii. 40 

I 'ere de I 'ere. 
Lady Clara V de V L. C. V. de Vere i.etpass. 

stamps the caste of V de V . . 11 



verge. 

lent broad v to distant lands, 

Float by you on the v of night. 

black dot against the V of daw n 

May from * lo T, . 

Sinks with all we love below the v; Princess, 

Hie slope of ^ea from v to shoie, 

on the low dark v of life 

■erged 



. 11 . 40 

. Pal. of Art 30 
. Mar caret . 31 
. M. ii Arthur 27: 
Gardener'^ 

29 

23 

InMeiii.xhx. 15 



206 I kinds of thought, That V upon them Gardener 'fD.JO 



Guinevere 



Eleauore 



104 
103 
28 
28 
14 
5° 
'35 
389 
1363 
36. 

87 



Princess, vi. 246 
Ma nd, 11 v. 58 
Enid . .217 



11. 227 

• 293 

y. 526 

vii. 115 

. vfi 

brooking not the Tarquin in her v's, Lucretius . 234 

vein 

all the gold That v's the world 



t ernieil-iuhite. 
near her, like a blossom 7 -:e, . Enid . . 364 

vermin. 
fancies like the v in a nut 
curse me the British v the rat 
1 will track this v lo llieir earths : 

versatility. 
The grace and v of the man— . Elaine . 471 

terse 
How may full-sail'd v express . Eleauore . 44 
invade Even with a v your holy woe. 'lo J S. . 8 
another which you had, 1 mean of v The Epic . 26 
In :• that brings myself relief . In Mem. \xxiv 2 

Take one v more— the lady speaks Vivien . 293 
gave the 7' • Behold Sour house . Aylmer's .' 
Calliope to grace his golden v— . Lucretius . .,4 

versed. 

In many a subtle question <■, .InMeiu.xcv. 6 

Verulam (Lord Bacon.) 

Plato the wise, and largc-brow'd V, Pal of Art 163 
Homer, Plato, V; . ■ . Princess, 11. 144 

Verulam (Roman Colony.) 
London, V. Camulodune. . . Boddicea . 86 

vessel 
On the coals I lav A V full of sin St S. Stytites 167 
ihe v puffs her sad. . . • Ulysses 44 

I he .silver v r sparkle clean . . Sir Gala. 
Reporting of his v China-bound . En. Arden . 122 
the moment and the V past " . 243 

The V scarce sc.i-worthy ... " .. 6$7 

name Of his v great 111 story, . Tlie Captain :9 

veteran. 

Me the sport of ribald Vs, . . Poadicea . 50 



Princess, iv. 522 



velvet. 

dusted v's have much need of thee : To J. M. A' 
. of the costliest . 

veneer'd. 
V with sanctimonious theory. 

'a tor. 
not a scorncr But '', . 

ante, 
1 hi h bloody v on you both? 
Is tins thy v, hoiy Venus, . 



Aylmer's F. 804 

Princess, I'n. 1 17 



Princess, iv. 403 



Mind 



(I: none 
Lotksley II. 



Primes*, iv. 
Lucretius . 



251 
85 
110 
298 
102 



Knot thou the poet's mind 'rep.) 
to v me with his father's eyes I 
in eye shall v thee 

Will v thee lying underground ? . Two Voices 

The end and the beginning V 
I will not v my bosom : . . Amphion 
I pence, WhichV«publicmen U'ttiH 
1 were born toe us? . . Princess, ■■ 
misled the girl To v true hearts : . ■• vii. 137 

daily v'es hou . . In Mem. xx\x. 2 

1 v my heart with fancies dim : . 11 XJL 1 

Let this not 7- thee, I . •■ Uxviii. 2 

An old song v'es my car . . . Maud, II, ii, 47 
ive to v him eating, . . Enid . 1409 



442 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. 

Guinevere 



LINE 

. 68 



"began To v and plague her 

v an ear too sad to listen to me, * tr . 313 

it would v him even in his grave, En. Arden . 302 

my dead face would v her after-life 11 . S92 

vexed — text 
V with a morbid devil in his blood Walk.toiheM. 13 
The farmer v packs up his beds . •• . ^1 

rainy Hyades V the dim sea , . Ulysses . it 
they v the souls of deans ; . . Priucess,Fro 161 
cursing Cyril, v at heart, . . u iv 153 

Fool that lam to be v with his pride Maud.\ xiii. 5 
7^ with lawyers and harass'd with debt' " xix. 22 
He v her and perplext her . . u xx, 6 

James departed v with him and her/ The Brook tio 
A little v at losing of the hunt, . hind . . 234 
'No, no," said Enid, v, 1 will not eat, 11 . 1504 

V at a rumour rife about the Queen Vivien . 10 

Lancelot v at having lied in vain : Elaine . io^ 

so sullen, v he could not go : . ir . 210 

I should evermore be z> with thee Guinevere . 501 
if he come again, v will he be . En Arden . 300 
/"with unworthy madness, . Aylmer's F. 335 

Then their eyes r> her ; . . . •• . S02 

What time have I to be v ? , Grandmother io$ 

tual. 

A man with knobs and wires and v's Princess.Pro. 65 

viand. 
Lay out the r/$ .... Princess, iii. 329 
Fruit, blossom, v 3 amber wine, . ir iv. 17 

vibrate 
the Queen's shadow, v on the walls, Elaine 1169 

Star to star v s light. ,. . . Aylmer's F. 578 

vice. 

crush her, like a v in blood, . . In Mem. lit. 

whirl d into folly and v. . . Maud, I. iv. 

doubling all his master's v of pride, Enid . 
stirr'd this v in you which ruin' d man Vivien 

well, I will not call it v '. . » = 

would make you Master of all V.' \, 



vicious. 
Who being c, old and irritable, 

victim. 
death quiver'd at the v s throat; 
dress the v to the offering up, 
took him for a x> of K Doorm, 
the z>'s flowers befor he fall. 1 
slimed his v ere he gorged ; . 
Till the v hear within 
seem d a v clue to the Priest . 
Priest was happy His v won 
The rites prepared, the v bared, . 

vie tor 
Whichever side be V, in the halloo 
bearded V of ten-thousand hymns. 
We vanquish d, you the V of your 
fawn at a v's feet. 
The gi eat World-victor's v . 
And V he must ever be 
the z 1 , to confound them more, 
•y at the tilt and tournament, 
prize and could not find The v 

Victoria. 
V, — since your Royal grace . 

victory. 
Arac, satiate with his v. 
Bellowing v, bellowing doom: 
Whether you wish me v or defeat, 
down their statue of Kfell. . 
and there cometh a v now. . 

victual. 

Bare 7: for the mowers ', 
Ate all the mowers' v unawares . 
fetch fresh v for these mowers 
return With v for these men, 



Enid 



I) o/F Worn. 
Princess, iv. 
Enid . 1 

Elaine 
Sea Dreams 
Boadu en 
The Victini 



Princess, ii. 7T3 
11 111. 334 
will " vi. 351 

Maud\ T. vi. 50 
Ode on Wed. 42 
. 258 
Enid „ 3018 



Elaine 



627 



To the Queen 5 



Princess, 


vii. 75 


Ode on Well. 66 


Enid . 


• 9 2 9 


Boaduecx. 


30 


'■■ 


. 46 


Enid . 


I05I 


u 


IO64 


ii 


1074 



Z'ied. POEM LINE. 

Sappho and others v with any man: Princess, ii. 348 

Vienna. 
in V's fata 1 walls .... InMem.lxxxW 19 
1 have not seen, I will not see V . 1, xcvii. 12 

view 
full in V Death, walking all alone . Love and Death x 
When thushe met his mother's z, L. C V.deVere^ 
Half-invisible to the v, . . Vision of Sin 36 

telescopes For azure r's; . . Princess, Pro 68 
Her early Heaven, her happy v's; InMem. xxxiii 6 
somewhere, out of human v, . ■. lxxiv. 18 

tho' it spake and bared to v . . 11 xci. 9 

to reprove her For stealing out of v Maud, I. xx. 9 

vignette. 

In bright v's, and each complete, . 

vigorously. 
So v yet mildly, thai all hearts . 



The Daisy . 45 



Enid 



1S05 



vigour. 
my v, wedded to thy blood . 
The faith, the z; bold to dwell 
shall see my v is not lost ' 

vile, 
v ; t were For some three suns to store Ulysses 28 
' This is more z,' he made reply, . Two Voices 103 
men sought to prove me 7', . . Vivien . 345 

Hned animalisms, v as those that made Lucretius 53 

vileness. 

No innet v that we dread? . 
mean V, we are grown so proud 

viler. 
of a kind The v, as underhand, 



. CEnone . 158 
. InMem. xciv. 29 
. Enid . . 93T 



. In Mem !. 4 
Aylmer's F. 756 



Maud, I. i. 28 

village. 

Two children in two neighbour v's Circumstance 1 

The httle v looks forlorn ; . . In Mem. lix. 9 

Mauri the delight of the v, . . Maud, I. 1. 70 

Below me, there, is the v, . . n iv. 7 

almost all the v had one name : . Aylmer's E\ 35 

village-c h urls. 
And there the surly v-c . L.o/Shalotl,\i. 16 

villager. 
slavish hat from the v's head? . Maud, I. x. 4 

villain. 
One says, we are v's all. . . Maud, I. i. 17 
lurk thiee v's yonder in the wood, Enid . . 991 

villainy. 

V somewhere ! whose? One says Maud, I. i. 17 
I will tell him all their v. . . Enid . . 981 

vine. 
comest not with shows of flaunting v's Ode to Mem 48 
silent in its dusty v's . . Mariana in the S. 4 
leaning on a fragment twined with v CEnone . 19 
overhead the wandering ivy and ~' 11 . 97 

Fromcave to cave thro'the thick-twined7'Zo/os-£'s. 340 
The valleys of grape-loaded v's . D. o/F Worn. 219 
chimneys muffled in the leafy v . Audley Ct. r8 
old elms came breaking from the v Amfhion . 43 
The v stream d out to follow . 11 .46 

by tilth and grange, And v's, . Princess, i. 1 to 
summer of the v in all his veins — n __. 181 

friends, none closer, elm and v . 11 ii. 3r6 

] hook'd my ancle in a z; . . ir iv. 249 

foxlike in the v ; .... " vii. 188 

Summer belts of wheat and v InMem. xcvii. 4 
Beating from the wasted v's . Ode on Well. 109 

olive, aloe, and maize and v. . The Daisy . 4 

from the vast oriel-embowering v Elaine 1 192 

from a bower of v and honeysuckle, Aylmer's F. 156 
Mixt with myrtle and clad with v The Islet . 19 
V, v, and eglantine, . . The Windozv 21, 2S 

vine-bunches. 
Between the shadows of the v-b . CEnone . 177 

zu'ne-clad. 
an oriel on the summer-side, V-c, Elaine 11 72 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



4-13 



vineyard. 
Peace in her V— ves !- • 

The torrent V streaming fell 



POEM LINE. 

Maud. 1 . 1. 36 
77;.- ZJimy . 10 



vintage. 
Whether the ». yet unkept . . Will Water. 97 
with meats and v of their hest . Btaine ■ 266 
Raised thewaningred,andtold The • AytmefsF. 4°7 

behold our sanctuary U v, . 
ta.it she now peifoice must V it 
violated 
So was then sanctuary :•, 

l the bond of like to like 



rOEM. LINE 

. Golden Year 58 
Locisiey II • 

. Pay- I'm. . 14 

. Sir Galahad 45 

• Vuumo/Sin r 
'.8 
Primess, in 

In Vent XCl. 



It3 



Princess, vi 44 
/.«;^ . 1216 

Princess, v.i. 1 



violate 



Llame 
Boddicea. 



50 



Vision 0/ J ;« 



mine of itifnan f : .' 

Moved «wtn v changed in hue. 

snatch me ftom him as by v ; 

bare her by main v to the board, - ■' • »S° a 

wtought upon himself After a life of* » ■ >7 01 

small' v done Rankled in hire . Guinevere . 49 

and shriek d ' Thus, thus with r, (rep ) SeaDreamsis 



on this v of the golden year. 

Saw the <•' of the world 

see the v that I saw. 

Ah, blessed v ! blood of God ' 

had a v when the night was late 

K $ of a perfect Stale : 

the wend V of our house : . 

If any V should reveal 

I dream d a v of the dead, . " CU 

nor would he tell His v: . . Guinevere 

Uncertain as a » or a dieam, . £n. ArOen . 

vsm the Northern dreamers heavens..-! ylmefsl-.v r 

sleptagain, and pieced The broken v Sea Dreams to6 

For one fair V eve. fled • The ! oyage 57 

visit O 
later, pay one 7 here, . 7oFD. Maurice 45 

visit iverb j 
oh, haste, V my low desire .' . Ode to Mem. 4 



3 

3 r l 
353 



Adeline 

tliuoue 



1 75 



Edith e\cr z with him, 



visitant. 



Ay-liners P. i65 



MayQneen,m. 4 I 



VtOUt. 

With what voice the s woos . 

/'. amaracus and asphodel 

from the v's her light fool Shone 

and now the v 's here. . 

O sweet is the new v, . ■ ■ " • 5 

The smell of v's, hidden in the green .£■*/£» om 77 

The z-ofa legend blow . Will Water. 1^ 

In mosses mix'd with V . SirJ.. anJQ. G. 30 

vanes from the lily as far 
The -J of his native land. 
A wither'd v is her bliss : 

The v comes, but we ate gone. 

By ashen roots the v's blow 

Becomes an April v. 

In v's blue as youi eyes . "'"■;;'' 

Crocus, anemone, v. . 7oP D M*«™M 

Pity, the v on the tyrant s grave. AylmerS fi. B45 
Violet. 

/', she that sang the mournful song, Princess.vi. 298 
violet-hooded. 

Epics lilted out By v-h Doctors. . Princess, ii. 354 



. princess. 

In Mem. xviii. 

11 XCVL 

ii civ. 

11 C.MV. 

Maud. I. xxii. 



vioim. 
Struck up with 



twangling v 

Soldier-laddie, 

heaid The lluic, v, bassoon . 

viper. 

fling it like a v off, and shriek 

stood Stiff as a V frozen : 



Princess, Pro. 85 
Maud, I. xxii. 14 

Princess, vii. 70 

Vivien . 604 



stood btitt as a v irozen ; . '«""" .,■ ", 

Jenny, the Z', made me a mocking Grandmother 40 

Vtrgilian. 

The rich F rustic measure . . 2 r *« -"""7 • 75 

virgin. 
Christ the /'Motherland the Saints StS Stvlitesno 
\ was ever v save for thee, . Guinevere . 553 

The f Mother standing with herchildi*«^««»f»34 

virtue. 
He spake of » : not the gods 
K.'— to be good and just— . 
The use of v out of earth : . 
words have v such as diaws . 
Like V firm, like Knowledge fair 

/' like a household god 

1 . of V, to fight, to struggle, 

if the wages of V be dust, . 
visage. 

His V all agrin as at a wake, 



visiting. 
there Ftom college, z. the son,- . I rnuess, t ro. 7 

visor. 
and lhe knight Had 1 up. . 

I 1- at Rtx. 
Death is king, and V R ■' • 

Vivian. 
Sir Walter Call a summer's day 
Vivian-place. 
we were seven at V-p ■ 
miss-d the mignonette of K-/ 
climb'd The tlope to V-p 

Vivien. 
At Merlin's feet the wily /•' lay . Vivien 
The wily V stole from Arthur's court 11 
V, being greeted fair, Would fain >i 

V should attempt the blameless king » 

V tollow'd, but he mark'd her not " 

V ever sought to work the charm 11 
lissome V, holding by his heel . 11 
«o V call'd herself Hut rather seem d .. 
tricksandfoolenes, O f.thepreaml 

V bath'd your feet before her own? .1 
'I ake V for expounder ; . . •" 
Too curious V, tho' you talk of trust, -i 
V. like the lenderest-hearted maid " 
being found lake heed of V. . '< 

V breaking in upon him, said : n 
• You read the book, my pretty r ! 
V, frowning in true anger, . . " 

V deeming Merlin overborne. . » 
/-', gathering somewhat of his mood " 
/ 'had not done to win his trust . 11 

V fearing heaven had heard . " 
lissome V, of her court The wiliest Guine-jete 

Vizier. 
Vs nodding together . 

vo&ted, 
a knaws 1 hallus v wi' Squoire 



Enid . 1 89 

Vision of Sin 179 

Princess, Pro r 



. Princess, Pro. 9 
11 . i04 

11 Con. 40 



64 
87 
1 10 
"5 
1 13 
r 8 
208 
227 

43c 
. 517 
. 541 
. 649 
, 691 
. 712 
• 7S9 
. 29 



Maud, I vii. 1 r 
. N I .inner . 13 



A Character 11 
Vision oj Sin 11 1 

InMt vH.lxxxi. 10 
11 lxxxiv. j 3 
'I he Voyage 68 
On a Mourner 30 
Wages . 3 
11 . 6 

Prtmecs. v. jio 



iision. 
With dazed v unawates 
there a v caught my eye : 

moves among my VS of the lake 



Arabian X's. 11: 
Millers P. 76 
ha. Morris ii\ 



'ocal'itlary. 
Scatter'd all over the v 

vocal. 
1st in its wooded walls ; 
V, with here and there a iilcncc, 

voice. 
Old v's call'd her ftom without . 
That her l trntiineUil gtewn 
With what- the viclet woos 
tho lis r. be so clear and full 
With an inner v the river lan, 
anon her awful jubilant 
nil the sea-halls with a*cl 
i,v common v. Elected umpire 
llieu fiistl heaidthe* of her . 



Ay Inter's F. 540 

In Mem. xix. 1 1 
Aytmers F. 140 



Mariana 
TheOv.1, ii. 

■ 

Mind 
/)_) tng .S a'.ix 

: The Merman 
(Enont 



68 
6 
i' 
M 
5 

98 
:o 
82 
105 



44* 



CONCORDANCE TO 



FOEM. LINE 

'No v 'she shnek'd in that lone hall Pal. of Art 258 
No v breaks thro' the stillness . ir . 259 

And sweeter is the young lamb's v May Queen t \\\. 6 

blessings on his kindly v . 11 . 13 
The v, that now is speaking, - u -54 
His v was thin, as v's from the grave Lotos-E's. 34 
my z' was thick with sighs . D.ofF. Worn. 109 

1 heard a v that cried ' Come here, ir . 123 
Her warbling v, a lyre of widest range ti .265 
a low z-, full of care, Murmur'd . n . 249 
in her throat Her v seem'd distant To J. S. . 55 
fragments of her mighty zv 'Of old sat Freedom,' etc. 7 
v, or else a motion of the mere. . M.d' Arthur 77 
one v, an agony Of lamentation, . ir . 200 
let thy v Rise like a fountain . m . 248 
further inland, v's echoed — 'come v Eft. 27 
v's of the well-contented doves Gardener's D. 88 
such a v Call'd to me from the years 11 . 175 
silver fragments of a broken v 11 . 229 
v fled always thro' the summer land Ed. Morris 67 
lower v's saint me from above . StS. Stylites 152 
a heart, And answer'd with a v. . Talking O . . 20 
sent her v thro* all the holt n . 123 
low v, Faltering, would break its Love a?id Duty 38 
the deep Moans round with many v's Ulysses . 56 
for a tender v will cry . . . Locksley H. 87 
A still small v spake unto me, . Two Voices 1 

* O dull, one-sided v,' said I . n . 202 

* If all be dark, vague v ' n . 265 
z' with which I fenced A little ceased, ir . 317 
The still v laughed. ..." . 385 
The dull and bitter v was gone. . n ., 426 
A second voice was at mine ear . 11 . 427 
What is it thou knowest, sweet vV it . 440 
commune with that barren t', . u « 461 
"whisper* d vs at his ear. . . Day-Dm. » 124 
I hear a v, but none are there ; . Sir Galahad 30 
Wings flutter, v's hover clear • . n -78 
A deedful life, asilent v : ' You might have won, "etc .8 
The v grew faint : Vision of Sin 207 
I heard a V upon the slope m . 219 
Between the rougher v's of the men, Princess, Pro. 237 
a V Went with it, ' Follow, . 11 i. 98 
crack'd and small his v 11 . 113 
Hers are we,' One v, we cried : 11 . 232 
full v which circles round the grave, n ii. 31 
all her v Faltering and fluttering . 11 , 169 
so rapt, we gazing, came ay, , 11 . 297 
sweet a v andvague, fatal to men i» iv, 46 
still my v Rang false . 11 . 302 
love their vs more than duty . u . 491 
and heard The </s murmuring. . n . 537 
v is heard thro* rolling drums, . ir . 554 
stumbled on a stationary v, . u v. 2 
She moan'd, a folded v. 11 .69 
she lifted up her z' and cried _ it .78 
every 7' she talk'd with ratify it, . it .127 
an awful v within had warn'd him ir . 328 
Ida with a v, that like a bell . it vi. 311 
Then the v Of Ida sounded . . ti . 352 
Low v's with the ministering hand it vii. 6 
Sweeter thy v, but every sound is sweet n . 204 
the v trembled and the hand . n , 212 
v Choked, and her forehead sank it .230 
A Spirit, not a breathing v . .In Mem xiii. 12 
Four vs of four hamlets round . n xxviii. 5 
Each v four changes on the wind, .it 9 
echo-like our v's rang ; ... it xxx. 13 
Our v's took a higher range : .it .21 
if some v that man could trust . n xxxv. 1 
many an abler v than thou . . n xxxvii. 4 

for thy v to soothe and bless ! . ti iv. 26 
The v was low, the look was bright ; it Ixviii. 15 
The v was not the v of grief . tt . 19 
v, the richest-toned that sings . v Ixxiv. 7 
So loud with vs of the birds, . «t xcviii. 2 
Like strangers* v's here they sound 11 ciii. 9 
A potent v of Parliament, . . .11 cxii. 11 
that dear v, I once have known . tt cxv. 11 
v's hail it from the brink : \* cxx. 14 

1 heard a v ' believe no more.' . 11 exxiii. 10 



POEM. LINE. 

I n Mem. exxvi. 4 

exxix. 1 

. 35 

6 



A deeper v across the storm, 

Thy v is on the rolling ail ; . 

I prosper, circled with thy v ; 

A v as unto him that hears, e . » exxx. 

A v by the cedar-tree, . . . Maud, 1. v. 

v pealing up to the sunny sky. 

Silence, beautiful v I 

Not her, not her, but a v. 

simper and set their v s lower 

the v of the long sea-wave as it swell'd 11 xiv. 

v from which their omens all men Ode on Well. 

He knew their v's of old 11 

with those deep v's wrought u 

With those deep v's our dead captain tt 

thro' the centuries let a people's v (rep.) h 

A people's v, when they rejoice . ti 

A people's v, we are a people yet. 11 

We have a v, with which to pay . tt 

His v is silent m your council-hall n 

V in the rich dawn of an ampler day Ded. of Idylls 35 

hearing any more his noble v, , Enid 

The v of Enid, Ynioi's daughter, . u 

as the sweet v of a bird, . h 

Sweet v of Enid moved Geraint . «i 

by God's grace, is the one v for me.' tt 

soldiers wont to hear His v in battle, n 

low firm v and tender government, it 

many a v along the street, . . it 

tender sound of his own v . . w 

with a big v 'What, is he dead?' . it 

answer'd in low v, her meek head 11 

* The v of Enid,' said the knight ; tt 

reverent eyes mock -royal, shaken v; Vivien 

O my Master, have you found your v?n 

So tender was her v, so fair her face, 11 

heard their v's talk behind the wall, u 

false v made way broken with sobs " 

v clings to each blade of grass . Elaine 

And every v is nothing, . . u 

vermin v's here May buzz so loud — 11 

Won by the mellow v before she look'd 'r 

Seeing me, with a great v he cried 11 

like a friend's v from a distant field ti 

High with the last line scaled her v, 11 

crying with full v 'Traitor, come out, Guinevere 

silence, then a v Monotonous . .1 

warhorse neigh' d As at a friend's v, n 

there her v brake suddenly, B . it 

from the v's crying ' shame ' . . tt 

where beyond these v's there is peace 



13 

19 
28 

35 
3 1 
36 
63 
67 
69 
142 
146 
*5* 
156 
174 



327 
3 2 9 
334 
344 
3024 
1043 
1119 
1197 
1390 
1488 
1628 
13 
118 
251 
481 
706 



En Arden 



Aylmer's F. 



. 109 

• i39 

■ 243 

■ 309 

• 993 
1013 

. 104 
. 416 

• 527 
. 601 
. 664 
. 690 

. 2 6 3 

• 394 

. 441 

. 461 

. 583 

912 
60 
J 73 

695 
74i 
756 



pay the v who best could tell 

their v's make me feel so solitary . 

v beneath him thro' the wood 

and his v Shaking a little 

Nor ever hear a kindly z*, 

Crying with a loud v ' a sail ! 

ever call'd away By one low v 

a v Of comfort and an open hand . 

Low was herz/, but won mysterious 

no prophet but the v that calls 

I wish'd my v A rushing tempest 

your rough v (You spoke so loud) Sea Dreams 269 

Deepening thy v with the deepening V.ofCauteretz'z 
I living v to me was as the v of the dead 11 . 8 
' v of the dead was a living v to me »t . 10 

Roll and rejoice, jubilant v. . WJoAtexan. 22 

I shall know Thy z>,and answer i My life is full,' etc. 10 

murmurs of a deeper v, . On a Mourner jt 

Paid with a v flying by to be lost . Wages . 2 

and the bird Makes his heart v . Lucretius . 101 

voiceless. 
creatures v thro' the fault of birth Enid . 1115 

void. 
Not v of righteous self applause, . Two Voices . 146 
Naked I go, and void of cheer: . n . 239 

The stalls are z/, the doors are wide, Sir Galahad 31 
z-* was her use ; .... Princess, vii. 19 
A v where heart on heart reposed In Mem xiii. 6 
cast as rubbish to the v, . . it liii. 7 

V of the little living will . . Maud^lSx. 14 



TENNYSOX'S WORK'S. 



445 



POEM LINE. 

A v was made in Nature . . Lucretius . 37 
Yanisliing, atom and v, atom and #, n . 254 



volley'd. 
volubility. 



V 3.U& thunder'd 

in her fierce v, 

volume. 
found it in a v, all of songs, . 
held a v as to read, 
A v of the Poets of her land : 
at her feet the v fell. 



Lt. Brigade 21,42 

. Boddicea 4, 72 

. A ud ley Ct. . 56 

. Princess, ii. 431 

11 vii. 159 

. 238 



voluptuousness. 
in his lust and v, . . . . Boadicea 



66 



vote. 
A wretched v may be gain'd. 



Maud, I. vi. 56 



vow. 
O would she give me v for v, . Miller's D. . 119 
died, To save her father's v; . D.ofF tVom.vfi 

v's, where there was never needofv's Gardener's D. 253 
That oft hast heard my v s . . Talking O. . &S 
name 1 carved with many v's . 11 . 154 

my v Binds me to speak, . Princess, ii. 184 

breathe a thousand tender v's . In Mem. xx. 2 
At one dear knee we proflfer'd v's . <> lxxviii. 13 
early faith and plighted v's ; . " xcvi. 30 
Before you hear my marriage v . The Letters . 8 
They bound to holy v's of chastity 1 Vivien . 543 
swearing men to v's impossible, Elaine . 131 

Full many a holy v and pure resolve " . 875 

Kissing his v's upon it like a knight. Aylmer's F.4J2 

vow'd. 
v that could I gain her, our kind Queen Enid . 787 

voyage, 
after my long v I shall rest ! 
the story of her dolorous v . 
go This v more than once ? . 
this v by the grace of t.od 
dull the V was with long delays, 
T hen he told her of his v, . 



Elaine 
En. Arden 



»°55 I 
'3J3 
142 
. 190 
. 656 
, 862 

Vulcan. 

mounted, Ganymedes, To tumble, V's,Priucess,'m 50 

vulture 
For whom the carrion?' waits ' i'011 might have won' ^ 
swoops The v, beak and talon, .Princess, v. 373 

w 

ivaiiste. 

an' I a stubb'd Thornaby to. . M. Fanner . 28 

mould the to, my lass? . m .29 

Dubbut looak at the to: . 11 .37 

wader. 

toward us, like a w in the surf, . TIte Brook . 117 

waft 

With one to of the wing. . . The Captain 72 

waft 'verb 

me from the harbour-mouth') 'on ash me. why'?*, 
Spread thy full wings, and w him o'er In Mem. be. 4 

wafted 
the woodbine spices are w abroad Maud, I. xxii. 5 

wat;. 
10 w their baldness up and down . Princess, v. 18 

I to not any feud with Death . Iv Mem Ixxxi. 1 
To to grim war against Sir Lancelot Guinevere . 191 

W such unwilling tho' successful war Vivien . 421 

The w of sin is death : if the to of 

virtue be dust .... Wages . 6 
Civc her the to of going on, . .10 



;;ed. poem. line. 

eye darken'd and his helmet w; . Enid . 1354 

waging 

while the King Was TO war on Lancelot : Guinevere 1 54 
From to bitter war with him : . „ . 431 

waif. 
rolling in his mind Old w's of rhyme The Brook . 199 

wail s 1 
whose dying eyesWere closed with to In Mem lxxxix 6 
Phantom zt of women and children, BoSdieea . 26 

gets for greeting but a to of pain ; Lucretius . 138 

wail fverb. ) 
Here it is only the mew that w's . Sea-Fairies 19 
Cease to 7ii and brawl 1 . . . T-.iv I 'oices log 
Dead March il's in the people's ears Ode on IVell. 267 
not dead, Why to you for him thus? Enid . 1396 

wherefore 10 for one Who put your u , 1522 

burst away To weep and w in secret ; Elaine j 238 

wailed. 
and to about with mews. . . Princess, iv. 263 
They wept and w, but led the way In Mem cii. 18 
wind like a broken worldling to, . Maud, I. i. 11 
to and woke The mother, . . Sea Dreams 57 
Claspt, kiss'd him, to: . . . Lucretius . 276 

wailing. 
on the mere the w died away. . M d' Arthur 272 
hear me like a wind IV fur ever, . Princess, 
Your w will not quicken him : .Enid . 1398 

the owls IV tiad power upon her . Elaine . 995 

After much w, hush'd itself at last Aylmer's F 542 
Their wildest w's never out of tune Sea Dreams 224 

wain. 
or when the lesser to Is twisting . In Mem. c. 11 
The team is loosen'd from the to . 11 cx.v. 5 

Wainscot. 

Behind the mouldering w shriek'd, Mariana . 64 



the girdle About her dainty dainty w Miller's D. 176 
You should have clung to Fulvia'sTO./' of P. Horn. 259 
Lovingly lower, trembled on her w— Gardener sD 130 
She strove to span my to: . . Talking. O. 138 
round her -c she felt it fold, . . Day-Dm. . 166 
her lound the knees against his to, Princess, ii. 342 
doth of gold Drawn to her to, . Elaine 1152 

waist-deep, 
w-d in meadow-sweet. . . . The Brook . 118 

wait. 
eyes That said, We to for thee . Pal. of Art 104 
And theie to to a litttle while . MayQveen,w.si 
those, not blind. whoTOforday 'Love thou thy land 15 
IV, and Love himself will bring . Love and Duty^T, 
IV: my faith is large in Time . 11 .25 

the Powers, who to On noble deeds, Godiva . 71 
Forme the Heavenly Bridegroom w's St Agnes' Eveyi 
whomthecarrion vulturcTO'j ' 'Von might have won' 35 
thoughtsth.it Ti'On you, thcircentre Princess, iv. 423 
1'd to to behind her lips, <• . 451 

As vis a river level with the dam . .1 . 452 

'The second two: they tw' he said i> v. 4 
every captain w's Hungry for honour n . 303 

zfuponnim, Like mine own brother, u vi. 279 
The Shadow sits and to'i for me. . In Mem. xxii 20 
doubt beside the portal w's, . . 11 xciii. 14 
vhite-favour'd horses tv; . n Con. 90 
And the lily whispers, ' I to.' . Maud, 1 x 

with me,' she said . Enid . . 180 
W here, and when he passes , 11 . . 978 

Enid 51 W the event, . 11 . 1003 

'dear Philip. w a while : . . En. Arden . 427 
n> a year, a yeai njj: , n .429 

wiser in .1 year : O to a little I' n . 431 

I well may to a little.' •■ . 433 

11 . 572 

the shall know, I 10 His time. . ■■ . bi2 

but he, he could not -", . . Sea Dreams 146 

IV.i little, to a little, Von shall name The H'indowiji 



4-1-6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



waited. poem. line 

I to underneath the dawning hills CEuone . 46 
To me, methought, who 7V with M d 'Arthur \Ef> 20 
tell him Dora zo with the child ; . Dora . . 74 
I 70 long ; My brows are ready. . StS. Sty hies 202 
/ w for the train at Coventry ; . Godiva . 1 

thronging in and in. to where they w. Vision of Sin 26 
a group of girls In circle w, . . Princess, Pro. 69 
let us know The Princess Ida to; ii ii 7 

and to, fifty there Opposed to fifty, " v. 47? 

while he ?v in the castle court . Enid . . 326 
stood behind, and w on the thr*ee n , , 392 
TV there for Vniol and Geraint u . ' ■ 538 

Then Enid to pale and sorrowful, » . . 932 
while we to, one, the youngest of us, Vivien . 265 
* Annie, as I have 70 all my life . En. Arden . 432 
Mute with folded arms they to— The Captain 39 

waiter. 
halo lives About the w's hands . Will Water 1 14. 
Slip-shod to, lank and sour. . . Vision of Sin 71 

waitest. 
What aileth thee? whom w thou . Adeline _. 45 
Poor child, that to for thy love ! . In Mem yi. 28 

waiieth. 

standeth there alone And to at the D.oftheO Year 51 

waiting. 

My whole soul 70 silently, . , Fatima . 36 
Kept watch, w decision, . . CEnone . 141 

IV to see me die D0fF.W0m.w2 

truths of Science to to be caught— Golden Year 17 
W to strive a happy strife, . . Two Voices 130 
So quickly, w for a hand, - . In Mem. vii 4 
That Shadow iv with the keys . ti xxvi. 15 
Now to to be made a wife . . ir Con. 49 
stood a maiden near, W to pass. . The Brook . 205 
stay'd W to hear the hounds. . Enid . . 163 
In shadow, w for them, caitiffs all ; u , . 907 
by the rock W to fall on you, u , . 922 

Three other horsemen to, wholly i» . . 970 
■7C to be treated like a wolf ir 1705 

Ready to spring, to a chance : . Guinevere . 13 
to by the doors the warhorse neigh d ti ■ 526 

A shipwreck' d sailor, to for a sail En. Arden . 591 
by their chariots, to for the dawn. Spec of Iliad 22 



waive. 
she will not : to your claim . 



Princess, v. 28 



wake (festival.) 
visage all agrin as at a to, . , Princess, v. 510 

wake (track ) 
in the white w of the morning star Princess, iii. 1 
With w's of fire we tore the dark ; The Voyage 52 

wake (verb.) 
while a sweeter music 7v's, . . To the Queen 33 
I 70 alone. I sleep forgotten, I 70 

forlorn.' .... Mariana in theS 35 
You must w and call me early, . MayQueen,\ 1,41 
I shall never 70 If you do not call me loud u . 10 
to sit, to sleep, to to, to breathe . Ed. Morris 40 
I 7v: the chill stars sparkle . . StS.Stylttes 112 
freer, till thou to refreshed . . Love and Duty §4, 
We sleep and w and sleep, . . Golden Year 22 
/Eolian harp that w*s No certain air Tivo Voices 436 
'O to for ever, love,' she hears, . Day-Dm. . 175 
thy kiss would 7t< the dead ! ' . m .184 

w on science grown to more, . " . 222 

pass on : His Highness 70's , Princess, v. 5 

70s A lisping of the innumerous leaf n 12 

With morning w's the will, and cries InMem iv. 15 
To whom a conscience never w's ; ti xxvii. 8 
I almost wish'd no more to to, , ti xxviii. 14 
I to, and I discern the truth . . 11 lxvii. 14 
wherefore to The old bitterness again i> lxxxiii. 46 
And I to, my dream is fled . . Maud, II iv. 51 
Let it go or stay, so I TOto the higher u III vi. 38 
but as one before he w's . . The Brook . 215 
Enid had no heart To to him, . Enid , 1219 

of Fame while woman w's to love.' Vivien . 310 



POEM LINE. 

'/■■f him not: let him sleep * . En. Arden . 232 

a storm never 70's on the lonely sea The lilet . 33 

waked. 

to sleep with sound, And w with M. d* Arthur, Ep. 4 

wakefulness. 

After a night of feverous to, . . En. Arden . 230 

waken. 

The fire-fly to' 's : 70 thou with me. Pri'picess, vii. 164 

7t/\y at this* hour of rest . , . In Mem. ciii. 6 

in my breast Spring w's too : . 11 cxiv. 38 

waken d. 

the first matin-song hath w loud . Ode to Mem. 68 

eyes, like thine, have to hopes? . Day-Dm. . 257 

at the last he w from his swoon, . Enid 3431 

thrice I to after dreams. . . Lucretius . 34 

wakenest. 

Who to with thy balmy breath t In Mem.xcvYn.T3 

waking 
W she heard the night-fowl crow : Mariana . 26 
If you'ie 70 call me early, . . MayQueen,\i 1,52 
come to her 70, find her asleep, . Maud, II. ii. 81 
And Enid started to, . ... Enid . . 674 
7K laughter in indolent reviewers Hendecasylldbics 8 
dreams that come Just ere the7w . Lucretius . 36 

Wales. 
last summer on a tour in W : . Golden Year 2 

7valk (s.) 
A to with vary-colour'd shells . Arabian N's. 57 
sob and sigh In the 70's ; 'A spirit haunts,' etc. 6 
The secretest w's of fame : . The Poet . 10 

said Death, ' these 70's are mine.' Love and Death 7 
yielding, gave into a grassy 7v . Gardener sD no 
caught And blown across the w. . 11 . 324 

With words of'promise in his 7c, . Day-Dm. . 323 
7cV were stript as bare as brooms . Princess, Pro 382 
bells Call'd us : we left the w's ; . n ii. 447 

on the sward, and up the linden 7vs, ir iv. 391 

Nor waves the cypress in the palace to if vii. 362 
In those deserted 7v's, may find . InMem. viii. 34 
m the flowery 70 Of letters, . . tr lxxxiii. 22 
Up that long 70 of limes I past . if Ixxxvi. 35 
saw thro' all the Muses' to; . . » eviii. 4 
light foot along the garden w, . Maud } I. xviii. 9 
To gentle Maud in our w . if xix. 33 

the meadow your 70's have left so sweet 11 xxii. 39 

Katie somewhere in the 70's below, The Brook . 80 
70 s in Boboh's ducal bowers . - The Daisy . 44 
or gamboll'd down the 7v's; . . Enid , 665 

ran a ?e Of shingle, and a 7t> divided it En. Arden 737 
Enoch shunn'd the middle 70 . -i . 739 

often, in his w's with Edith, claim Aylmer's F. 61 

walk (verb.) 
In sleep she seem'd to 10 foriorn . Mariana , 30 
1 7/', I dare not think of thee, . Oriana . 93 
IV s forgotten, and is forlorn.* Mariana in the 5. 48 
So sweet it seems with thee to w. Miller's D. 29 
made it sweet 1 o 7y, to sit, to sleep Ed. Morris 40 
slip its bark and w. . . . Talking O . 1S8 
any man that 7o's the mead, . . Day-Dm. _ . 265 
cares to 7cWith Death and Morning Princess, vii. 1S8 

we will w this world Yoked. . u . 339 
Nor follow, tho ! I 70 m haste . InMem. xxii. j8 
nothing 70's with aimless feet , h liii. 5 

1 to as ere I walk'd forlorn, . . it lxvii. 5 
From state to state the spirit w*s; u Ixxxi. 6 
to 70 all day like the sultan of old . Maud, I. iv. 42 
70' s with his head in a cloud of poisonous it . 54 
There she -v's in her state, . . 11 xiv. 3 
Katie 70's By the long wash . . The Brook . 193 
He that 7f , 5' it, only thirsting . Ode on Well. 203 
JFyour dim cloister, and distribute Guinevere . 675 
to So freely with his daughter . Ayhner's F. 269 

walked. 
as he w, King Arthur panted hard M. d' Arthur 376 
I'm glad I to. How fresh . Walk, to the M. 1 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



4-: 7 






POEM. LINE. 

One iu between his wife and child Two Voices 412 
The htile maiden iu demure, . r, . 419 

while I to and talked as heretofore Princess, i. 16 
One iu reciting by herself . . 11 ii. 430 

she you iu with, she Vou talk'd with 11 vL 237 
Wat their will, and everything was " . 363 

■where the path we to bewail . . In Mem. xxii. 9 
I walk as ere 1 iu forlorn, . . 11 Ixvii. 5 
In walking as of old we to . . ir Ixx. 12 

first he 7y when claspt in clay ? . it XCU. 4 

out he w where the wind like a broken Maud, I i. 1 1 
/Kin a wintry wind ... m iii. 13 

I have iu awake with Truth. . it xix. 4 

had he a home? His him.-, he iu. En. Arden . C70 
for she to Wearing the light yoke Ay Intel's F. 707 
now on sand they iu, and now on cliff Sea Dreams 37 
that the woman to upon the brink 11 . 108 

1 to with one I loved . . . V. o/Cautcretz 4 

Wal'. 

Death, -0 all alone beneath a yew Love and Deaths 
W the cold and starless road of Death Ginone . 255 
in Strange lands a traveller 71; slow Pal. oj Art 277 
Beauty and anguish to hand in hand D.o/F.H cm. 15 
W about the gardens and the halls M. d Arthur 20 
Met me to on yonder way, . . Ed. Gray . 2 
IV up and pacing down, . , /,. oj Burleigh 90 
In to as of old we wajk'd . . fn Mem.\\\. 12 

I v. as w a mile Maud, I.ix 1 

She is iu iu the meadow . . .. II. iv. 3/ 
once, when Arthur iu all alone, . Vivien . g 

care no more for Leolin's iu with her Ayljner's F. 124 

•wall s.) 
■ 1 stone-cast from the lb . Mariana . 37 
A pillar of white light upon the iu Ode to Mem. 5 ; 
falls Upon the storied to\j; . . 11 .86 

She stood upon the castle to, . Oriana . 20 

lovers whispering by an orchard iu; Ctteutnstance 4 
Four gray iu's and four era] towers, L.o/Shalott,i. 15 
Struck upagainst the blinding iu. Mariana in the i.56 
one black shadow from the TO . n .80 

yonder m's Rose slowly to a music Ginone . 39 
bellowing caves, lieneath the windy iu. Pal. of Art 72 
That stood against the iu. . ,, 244 

With blackness as a solid IV, . 11 . 274 

between vfs Of shadowy granite . Lotos- E's. . 48 
the tortoise creeping to the iu; . D.o/F. Worn. 27 
All thine, against the g trden iu. . The Blackbird S 
its vfs And chimneys muffled . Audley Ct. . 17 
thou art staring at the iu . . Lockstey II. 
blind iu's Were full of chinks and holes ; Codiva 
thro' the Gothic archways in the to, u 

That watch the sleepers from the to. Day-Dm. 
All creeping plants, a iu of green . •• 

He watches from his mountain iu's 77 



34,123 
• 45 
. 99 

I. 106 

II. £6 

■ 449 

111. 348 

iv. 464 

v. 6 

vi. 362 



vn. 

i' Con. 

InMem. xix. 

" Ixvi. 

11 Ixxxiv. 

u l.sxxvi. 

cii. 

( on. 



100 

109 

>4 

4 

»9 

1 

8 

63 



LINE, 

• 505 
IOI3 
1122 

H90 
1252 

58,393 

■ -SI7 

. 481 
. 609 
. 802 

• 9 6 4 
.987 



on the iu's. Betwixt the monstrous Princess, Pro. 22 
beat her foes with slaughter from her vis •• 
whelm d with missiles of the to, . 1 

broken statu- 1 t the iu, , 

from the basti m'd :«'.> lake threaded 1 
foundress of the Baby Ionian to, . 
two streams of light from to to iu . 1 

1 plendour falls on castle vfs . 
some that men were in the very iu's 1 
By glimmering lanes and vis of canvas' 
two hosts that lay beside the iu's 
inward from the deep-, a m of night, 1 
silent light Slept on the painted iu's • 
the iu' I about us . 

Is vocal 10 led iu's 

1 glory on the iu's 
Thru iti .1 iu's 

I past beside the reverend iu's 
A river sliding by the 7</. 
The blind :«i rocks, and on the trees 
With tender \ the iu; ■■ 

clings To the turrets and the vis; Maud. WW. 34 
cannon . on Welt. 173 

entcr'd. and were lost behind the vfs. Enid . 252 I 
ivy-stems Claspt the gray iu's . 1, . . 323 I 



and now and then from distant iu's Enid 
the long sltore-cJin's windy iu's . u 

] drave backward to the iu, . ,, 

r than a w. - there is the keep ■■ . 

1 like a household Spirit at the ii''s ,. 

in the four iu's of a hollow tower 
wizard brow bleach 'd on the iu's : „ 

to him the to That sunders ghost, „ 

heard their voices talk behind the iu. t, 
'traitor' to the unhealing iu, . Elaine 
the casque Of Lancelot on the iu : 11 
to him thro' those black vfs of yi 
grew between her and the [ 
Queen's shadow, vibrate on the w's. >t 
from the high 7c and the 11 . ,.■ Guinevere 3 

keeps the rust of murder on the vfs .. . -\ 

turii'd her own toward the 7<. and wept En. A 1 . 
Annie with her brows against the to n . 313 

late and early r w . 11 

>'d round by the blind to of night 11 
blown across her ghostly 7c: . 11 

Up by the to, behind the yew : ,, j 40 

Stood from his nfs and wing'd . A \ liner's F. 18 
I cry to vacant chairs and widow'.l iu's 11 . 7.0 

Staring fur ever from their gilded vfs it . 833 

A mountain, like a iu of burs . Sea Dreams 115 
But thieves from o'er the to . . The Flower 11 

lual/ 1 
To embattail and to to about thy cause To J. M. A" S 
splinter'd crags that to the dell V.u/E. II ei 

wall'd, 

a little garden square and iu: . En.Ardcn . - 5 

I wallow. 

They graze and w, breed and sleep ; Pal, of Art. 202 
from the wilderness, iu in it, . Bo&dtcea . 15 

lualliKum ;*. 
great with pig, w in sun and mud. Walk, to the M. to 

walnut. 
Across the vfs and the wine— 

Waller: 

O IV, I have sheltered here . 
the son A I: 'too,— 
that morning W show'd the house 
Ask'd W, patting Lilia'shead 
IV hail'd a score of names upon her 
I! nodded at me : lie began 
mouth at tlii-, 
we saw Sir W where he stood 

waltstng-circle. 
Vet in the w-e as we went . .Coquette, ii. 5 

watt. 

tinged with iu from lack of sleep, Princess, iii. o 
to was her cheek With hollow watch t> vi. 123 
As a/, as chill, as wild as now j . //.- Mem. lxxi. 17 
face contracting grew Careworn and w;£n. Am 

wand. 
held his sceptre like a pedant's ; 

but as lissome as a ha/el 71/; . 
over these is laid a silver iu, . 



. Milter's D. 


32 


. Talking O. . 
Princess, Pro. 


37 
8 


j 11 




10 


er 11 
11 


Ccn. 


»55 



Princess, i. 77 
The Brook . 70 
Enid . 4S3, 549 



wander. 

IV from the side of the morn, 
Light and shadow ever iu 
Wild words iu here and there 
Alone I w to and fro, . 
then we would iu away, away 
ai night I would if away, away, 



.= - 



Adeline 

A Dirge . 

,, " ' *l 

('nana . 8 

'/erman 18 



brother manners, we will not wmorc Lotcs-Efs. 173 
there to w faraway . . . Locksley H. 157 
might a man not 7it from his wits . Princess, ii. 417 
ten falling lame . . /h Afeni. xxiii. 6 
Io to on a darken'd earth, . . 11 Ixxxiv. 31 
">ui al your will : . . Maud. I. , 

uinevere 576 
Hope u other Hope and it/* far .Coquette, i. ic 



443 



CONCORDANCE TO 



•wander d poem lixe. 

A walk with varycolour'd shells W Arabian N* s. 58 
had iv far In an old wood: . . Dof F Worn 53 
nor having iv far Shot on the sudden To J. S. . 27 

yes, she iv round and round . Talking '. . 157 
Here about the beach I iv, . . Locksley I/. 11 

1 blest them, and they it* on: . Two Voices. 424 
I w from the noisy town, . In Mem Ixviu. 5 
Wat will, but oft accompanied . Ay oner's F. 337 
Who knows? but so they iv, . u . 141 
Years have 7V by . . . The Captain 66 
Nor w into other ways : . * MyiiJeisjitliJ etc. 3 

wanderer. 

Charm, as a w out in ocean, . Milton . 12 

TVs coming and going . . 1865-1866 . 7 

•wandering 

'The w's Of this most intricate Universe A Cluiracter2 

From w over the lea . . . Sea-Fairies. 11 

CEnone, iv forlorn Of Paris . CEnone . 15 

fold our wings. And cease from ws. Lotos- E' s 65 

as that other, 7V there . . . In Mem.viii. 13 

How often, hither w down, , . r lxxxvin. 5 

(For often in lonely w s . . Maud. I xix. J4 

wane. 
The long day w's : the slow moon climbs : Ulysses 55 
when a thousand moons shall iv In Mem lxxvi 8 

Sorrow, then can sorrow -uf . n ixxvii. 15 
as it waxes, of a love that iv's ? . Elaine *392 

waned 
councils thinn'd, And armies w. . Vivien . 423 

waning. 

The pale yellow woods were w, L ofShalott, iv. 2 
Bitter barmaid, 7V fast ! . . Vision of Sin 67 

Von orange sunset w slow : ' Move eastward} , etc. 2 

wanrid. 
Psyche flush'd and iv and shook Princess iv. 142 
and ever w with despair . . Maud, I. 1. 10 

want (s.) 
left a w unknown before ; . . Millers D. 228 
Shall sing for w. ere leaves are new. The Blackbird2^ 
'tis from no iv in her : . . . Ed. Morris 85 
the w, that hollow' d all the heart, Love and Duty bo 
Cursed be the social iv s . . Locksley H. 59 
that eternal iv of pence . . Will Water. 43 

any of our people there Tn iv or peril. Pnncess,h. 248 
dear are those three castle^ to my iv's 11 . 395 

either she will die from iv of care, 11 v. 82 

nay, but full of tender ids, . . n vri. 300 

And ev'n for iv of such a type. /;; Mem xxxni. 36 
love be blamed for w of faith? . m I. 10 

And he supplied my iv the more . " Ixxviu. 29 
a thousand ids Gnarr at the heels 11 xcvii. 16 
Ring out the w, the care, the sin, 11 cv. 17 

veil His iv in forms ..." ex. 6 

Unfaith in aught is w of faith in all Vivien , 239 
must die for w of one bold word ' Elaine . 923 

nor compensating the 7£/ By shrewdness. En. A rdeni^Q 
thro' the w of what it needed most, 11 . 264 

No iv was there of human sustenance u . 55^ 

Doubled her own, for<v of playmates, Aylmer'sF.81 

want (verb.) 
those that w, and those that have Walk totheM. 70 
you w me, sound upon the bugle-hom Locksley H. 2 
More life, and fuller, that I w.' . Two Voices 399 

1 iv her love. .... Princess, v. 130 
"When the man ids weight, the woman n . 434 
/ iv forgiveness too : tr vi. 272 
if he a/, me let him come to me. . Enid . 1086 
doubt her fairness were to w an eye Elaine 1367 
her pureness were to w a heart — .1 1368 

wanted. 
truth I I know not : all are w here. Enid . . 2S9 
I vi warmth and colour . . Guinevere . 640 

Another ship (She iv water) _ . En. Arden . 629 
nor w at his end The dark retinue Aylmers F. 841 

wantest. 
What w thou ? whom dost thou seek, Oriana . 71 



wan t-begotten. poem. line. 
Nor any w~b rest. , . InMem. xxvii. 12 

wanting. 
He look'd and found them :o . Enid . 1783 

impute themselves, W the mental range ; Vivien 676 
iv yet a boatswain. Would he go ? En Arden 223 
grieve to see you poor and w help it . 403 

wanton ladj. and S.J 
fresh to men, And iv without measure : Ampkion 58 
What did the w say ? . . Vivien . 661 

wanton .Verb.) 
Say to her, I do but vu m the South, Princess, iv 91 

war (&) 

let the world have peace or ws . Pal. of Art 182 
of the ten years' w in Troy, . Lotos-Es. . 222 

hearts worn out by many ws . " . 131 

trumpets blown for iv's , . . D.ofF. Worn. 20 
fresh from iv's alarms ... n . 149 

the brazen bridge of re — ' Love thou iky land, 1 etc. 76 
all good things, and iv shall be noM.dA rt/iur, Ej>. 28 
it. upon each other for an hour . Godn>a . 34 
all the iv is roll'd in smoke.' . Two Voices 156 

At such strange iv with something good " . 302 

sleep thro' terms of mighty ws, . Day-Dm. . 221 
Communing with his captains of the w. Princess,\. 66 
Canan Artemesia strong in iv . 11 ii. 67 

arts of iv The peasant Joan . 11 . 246 

more and acted on, what follows? iv; ?i . 211 

I spoke of iv to come and many deaths n iii. 234 
clad in iron burst the ranks of w t u iv. 483 

clapt her hands and cried for w, . 11 . 567 

o'er the imperial tent Whispers of w. 11 v. 20 

ied-faced w has rods of steel and 

fire ; She yields, or wJ 1 . m . 114 

say you, ~v or not ? ' 'Not re if possible 11 .219 

lest from the abuse of w u . 220 

this knot By gentleness than iv. . n . 130 

would the old God of to himself were deadii . 139 

To our point : not w : Lest I lose all.' u . 196 

yet my father wills not w: . . 11 . 267 

'sdeath ' myself, what care I, iv or no? u . 268 

loth by brainless iv To cleave the rift » . 290 

As one would sing the death of w, In Mem. cii. 33 
Ring out the thousand ws of old, n cv. 27 

heart of the citizen hissing in w . Maud, I. i. 24 
Is it peace or 7v f Civil w, as I think, tr . 27 

Is it peace or w? better iv ! loud km rep. V . 47 

At 7v with myself and a wretched race," x. 35 

This huckster put down 7v! » - 44 

iv be a cause or a consequence? .11 -45 

each is at 7V with mankind 11 . 52 

I swear to you, lawful and lawless w n IT. v. 94 
a hope for the world in the coming ivsw III. vi. 21 
iv would arise in defence of the right, 11 . 19 

The blood-red blossom of iv n -53 

and the iv roll down like a wind .11 • 54 

Great in council and great in iv, . Ode on Well. 30 
Such a iv had such a close . n .218 

the leader m these glorious ws m . 192 

Which made a selfish w begin ; ToF. D. Maurice 30 
whether ws avenging rod Shall lash " . 33 

with the gloom of imminent iv . Ded. of Idylls 12 
Far-sighted summoner of W and Waste 11 . 36 

Waged such unwilling tho' successful w Vivien . 420 
The lady never made univillingiv m . 453 

you know Of Arthur's glorious ws Elaine . 285 

then the w That thunder'd in and out it . 290 

cares For triumph in our mimic 7v's, 11 . 312 

in this heathen w the fire of God . n . 3r5 

From talk of w to traits of pleasantry it . 320 

Arthur's iv's were rendered mystically •■ . 797 

King Was waging ~v on Lancelot Guinevere . 254 
To wage gnm w against Sir Lancelot it . 291 

the bard Sang Arthur's glorious ws, u . 284 

From waging bitter iv with him ; . 11 . 431 

His bashfulness and tenderness at iv, En. Arden 288 
They hate me : there is iv between us, Aylmers F. 424 
these all night upon the bridge of w Spec, of Iliad 9 



TENNYSON'S IVOR AS. 



449 



war (verb.) POEM. line. 
pleasure can we have To w with evil ? Lotos-E's. 94 
To w with falsehood to the knife, Two Voices . 131 

•warble (s.) 
at first to the ear The w was low, Dying Swan 24 
Wild bird, whose w, liquid sweet Th JUemAxxxyu. 1 

warble (verb.) 
thou may'st w, eat and dwell. . The Blackbird 4 
he that w's long and loud ' You might have won ' 33 
IV, O bugle, and trumpet blare . IV. to Alexan.14 

warbled. 
That she w alone in her joy ! . Maud, I. x. 55 

warbler. 
Dan Chaucer, the first w, . . D.o/F. Worn. 5 

warbling. 
springs By night to eery w's SirL. andQ. G.34 

war-cry. 
Spurr'd with his terrible w-c . Enid . 1019 

ward (minor.) 

and a selfish uncle's w. . . LocksleyH. 156 

ward (guard. ) 
Keep watch and w (rep.) . . Maud, I. vi. 58 

warder. 
The w's of the growing hour ' Love thou thy land' 61 

war-drum. 
Till the w-d throbb'd no longer . Locksley II. 127 

ware (adj.) 
they were TOThat all the decks were M.d' Arthur iq$ 

ware (s. ) 
As when a hawker hawks his w's . The Blackbird 20 
faith i:i a tradesman's w or his word ? Maud, I. i. 26 
sold her w's fot less Than what she En. Ardeu 254 

war-horse. 
On burnished hooves his w-htrodc T.. of Shalott jm.it) 
waiting by the doors the w neigh'd Guinevere . 526 

warm (adj.) 
take the goose, and keep you w, . The Coose 7, 43 
"lis little more : the day was w . Talking O. . 205 
The slumbrous light is rich and w Day-Dm, . 83 
() heart, with kindliest motion w, lnMem.lxxxiv.34 
'Twas well indeed, when w with wine 11 lxxxix. 9 
where the sunbeam broodeth w, . 11 xc. 14 

w in the heart of my dreams, . Aland, 1. vi. 18 
The birds were w, the birds were w Aylmcr's /•'. 260 
worldless heart had kept it w . 11 . 471 

warm (verb.) 
Roof-haunting martins w their eggs: Day-Dm. . 37 
New life-blood w the bosom, . IV ill Water. 22 
w's another living breast . In Mem. lxxxiv. 116 

warm-asleep. 
When you arc w-a, mother, . . MayQucen, li. 24 

warm-blue. 
ThcTO-<5breathingsofahiddcn hearth A ylmcVs A". 155 

warmed. 
One hope that w mc in the days . Two Voices 122 
And iu in crystal cases. . . Ampluon . 88 

he.-irts arc ~.u and faces bloom, . //; Mem. Con. 82 
colours, like an opal w. . Vivien . -jt)t) 
tifwith his wines, or taking pride in Aylmtr's F. 554 
fondled on her lap, IV. ;it her bosom? 11 .687 

wartfting. 

Alone and wnrminq hi-, five wits . The Owl, i. 6, 13 
w with her theme She fulmined out /'hue est, ii. no 

warmth. 
So full of summer to, so glad, . Miller's D 14 
doubled his own w ."i^ninst licrlips, Gardener" sD. 137 
1 ill '.mi. . . Talking O. . 254 

And the w of hand in hand . . Vision of Sin 162 
loyal w of Florian is not cold . Princess, ii 

1 u; about my barren breast 11 vi. 185 
broke A genial w and light once more ir . 26s 



POEM. LINE. 

A rosy w from marge to marge . In Mem. xlv. 16 
A central w diffusing bliss . . 11 lxxxiii. 6 
the herb was dry ; And genial w ; 11 xciv. 3 
A w within the breast would melt 11 exxiii. 13 
1 wanted w and colour . . . Guinevere . 640 
new w of life's ascending sun . En. Arden. 38 
all the w, the peace, the happiness, n . 762 

the w and muscle of the heart, . Aylmcr's F. 180 
turning to the w The tender pink . 11 . 185 



war-music. 
when first I heard IV-m, 



Princess, v. 256 



warn. 

part against himself To w us off LovcandDuty 46 

divine to w them of their foes: . Sea Dreams 69 

waved my arm to w them off . 11 . 128 

wanid. 

spoken. And to that madman . Vision of Sin 50 

An awful voice within had w him Princess, v. 328 

w me of their fierce design . . Elaine . 274 

warning. 
Take w ! he that will not sing . The Blackbird 21 
by the 7</ofthe Holy Ghost, . StS.Stylites 216 

like a weasel on a grange For w: . Princess, ii. 189 
Did I wish \ our w or your silence 1 Enid . . 926 
not to give you w, that seems hard ; 11 . 1271 
yet to give him w s for he rode . 11 . 1300 

lake w: yonder man is surely dead 11 . 1520 

he read God's w 'wait.' . . En. Arden . 572 

warp (s.) 
wonder of the loom thro' w and woof Princess, i. 1 1 

warp (verb.) 
W us from the living truth ! . . Locksley II. Co 
'Ye are green wood, see ye w not. Princess, ii. 61 



warped. 
Walter w his mouth at this . 



Princess.Pro. 2cS 



warrant. 
\w, man, that we shall bring you round En. Arden S42 

warren. 
waster than a w : .... Amphion . 4 

warring. 
IV on a later day, . . . . OdeonlVell. 102 

warrior. 
like a w overthrown : . . Two Voices 150 

made the old W from his ivied nook /'riucess, Pro. 104 
1 saw The feudal w lady-clad . 11 .119 

in thunder-storms, And breed of w's n v. 430 

Home tlicy brought her w dead : . n .532 

Lightly to the w stept, . . it • 54t 

happy w's, and immortal names . 11 vi. 77 

a grace to mc I I am your w: . n . 207 

W's carry the to" s pall, . . . Ode en Well. 6 
heated the strong w in his dreams Enid . . -ji 
At which the w in his obstinacy . 11 . '303 

laughs at iron— as our w's did — . Vivien 
rode an armed to to the doors. . Cuisievert 
to battle where thy w stands: 'Lady,/,!: 
Glory of «;, glory of orator . . Wages . 1 
No dragon w's from Cadmean teeth Lucretius . 50 

war -song. 
His country's w-s thrill his ears: . Two Voices 151 
many a noble w-s had he sung, . Guinevere 

was. 
w, and is, and will be, arc but is ; Princess, iii. 307 

wash (s.) 
long to of Australasian seas . . The Brook . 194 

wash (verb.) 
mercy I to away my sin. . , St S. Sly lit 
that the gulfs will w us down : . Ulysses 

wash'.l. 
/("'with still rains and daisy-blossom - ilC/V.»wf//Tfff<- 7 
low broad stream, . . Gardener si) 40 

shone Their morions, w with morning. Princes 
little lootprmt daily w away . . En. Arden 
2 F 



450 



CONCORDANCE TO 



Washing I'GEM. LINE, 

heard the ripple to in the reeds, M d'Arthuryo. 117 

zvasp. 
IV's in our good hive, . . . Princess, iv. 514 

wassail, 
pledge you all Tn to ; . , , Princess, Pro z%\ 
Nor bovvl of to mantle warm • . In Mem. civ, 18 

ivassail-bozvl. 

host and I sat round the iv-b, . The Epic . 5 
I ' quoth Everard, ' by the w-b ' . if -23 

waste (adj and s. ) 
The level iv, the rounding gray . Mariana . 44 
across the to His son and heir D of theO.Year 30 
molten on the iv Becomes a cloud Princess, iv. 54 
And to it seem'd and vain : . . <• vii 28 

think, that somewhere in the iv , In Mem xxii. 19 
iv s where footless fancies dwell . Maud, I xviii 69 
of all his lavish zv of words . . The Brook iqi 
Far-sighted summoner ofWarand W Ded. of Idylls 36 
glancing round the iv she feared . Enid . . Sq9 
and she drove them thro' the w tr 049 

Here in the heart of w and wilderness 11 . n 62 

sent a thousand men To till the zvs, >t . 3790 

drove him into w's and solitudes . Elaine . 252 

bv glimmering to and weald . . Guinevere . 127 
heaid the Spirits of the iv and weald 11 , 128 

AmongtheM/andlumberoftheshore En Arden . 16 
Like colts about the iv. n . 304 

tall mill that whistled on the iv. , n . 340 

one small gate that open d on the 7V, n . 734 

wrought Such zc and havock Aylmers F. 640 

Doom upon kings, or in the iv 'Repent?' 11 . 742 

ivaste 'verb ) 
if I zv words now, in truth , , Miller's D. 191 
sea iv s all : but let me live my life Audley Ct. . 50 
To iv his whole heart in one kiss SirL. andQ. G. 44 
like a broken purpose iv in air : . Princess, vn. 199 
So iv not thou . but come ; . . u . 200 

I iv my heart in signs : let be. . n 338 

Half the night I iv in sighs . . Aland, II. iv. 23 
dared to iv a perilous pity on him : Enid . 1374 

shall I iv myself in vain ? . . Elaine , 667 

wasted. 

My heart is w with my woe, . Oriana . 1 

Last night I w hateful hours . Fatima . 8 

have if here health, wealth, and time Princess, iv. 333 
1 trust I have not iv breath : . In Mem. cxix 1 

I that iv time to tend upon her, . Enid . 887 

He iv hours with Averill , . . Aylmers F. 109 

beat me down and marr'd and iv me Tithonus . 19 

There they ruled, and thence they zv Boddicea . 54 

waster, 

zv than a warren : . . , . Amphion . 4 

wasting 
iv odorous sighs All night loiig . Adeline . 43 
greet her, iv his forgotten heart . Aylmers F. 68y 

watch (vigil, etc.) 

Kept iv, waiting decision . CEnone . 141 

wan was her cheek With hollow iv Princess, vi. 129 

iv es in the dead, the dark . . .. vii. 88 

Come: not in iv'es of the night . In Mem xc. 13 

Keep iv and ward, keep wand ward Maud,i.\i. 58 

did Enid, keeping iv, behold . Enid . . 967 

watch (time-piece.) 
seal, that hung From Allan's iv, . Dora . . 133 

watch (verb ) 

I w thy grace ; and it its place . Eleanore . 127 

I w the darkening droves of swine Pal. of Art 199 

w the crisping ripples on the beach Lotos-E's. . 106 

To iv the long bright river . . tr . 137 



POEM. LINE. 

j That w the Meepers from the wall. Day-Din. . 44 

j He iu'es fiom his mountain wails, The Eagle . 5 

I iv me from the glen below. ' Moz'e eastward, 1 etc. 8 

j w A full sea glazed . Princess, 1. 243 

1 O to '<(< the thirsty plants Imbibing' i» ii. 400 

! Or seem'd to iv the dancing bubble, it iii 8 

\ iv The sandy footprint harden -t 

j eye which iCes guilt And goodness InMem xxvi 



=53 
5 
15 



those wild eyes that w the wave 

Ye iv, like God, the rolling hours n 1. 

So may st thou iv me wheie 1 weep, 11 Ixii. 9 

To those that w it more and more i» Ixxiii. 2 

, 1 iv thee from the quiet shore , . tr Ixxxiv. 81 

' who was ieft to iv her but I V . Maud, I xix. 10 

. iv her harvest ripen, her herd increase n 111. vi. 25 

i I iv the twilight falling brown To E\ D Maurice 14 

! iv his mightful hand striking . Enid . . 95 

! bethought her how she used to iv, 11 . . 647 

I Not dare to iv the combat ir 1003 

: as who should say ' You iv me,' . 11 . 1294 

! the Seer Would iv her at her petulance Vivien 31 

; laugh As those that iv a kitten . ,, . 33 

I iv the curl'd white of the coming wave ii . 141 

1 sand To zv them overflow'd . . En. Arden . 20 

I often as he watch'd or seem'd to iv, 11 . 6oi 

'Good ' said his friend 'but ?i'/' . Ayhi.er's F. 275 

one was set to zv The watcher " . 551 

I used to zo— if I be he that watch'd Tithonus 52 

Fancy iv'es in the wilderness . Coquette, i. 12 

watched. 

She w my crest among them all, 
j 1 iv the little circles die 
I 1 zv the little flutterings, 
I And iv by weeping queens . 
I And zv by silent gentlemen, . 
j Maiden, I have iv thee daily, 

iv it lying bath'd In the green gleam Princess, 1. 

While Psyche iv them, smiling . !r ii. 

w Or seem d to watch the dancing bubble 11 iii. 

w the swallow winging south . n iv. 

iv them well, Saw that they kept apart 11 

who sat apart And iv them, . . In Mem. cii. 

w her on her nurse's arm . . t: Con. 

but iv awake A cypress . . The Daisy . 

While he that iv her sadden, , Enid . 

j zv The being he loved best . 11 

zv the sun blaze on the turning scythe, n 

one had iv, and had not held his peace Vivien . 

iv their arms far-off Sparkle, . Elaine 

many a time have w thee at the tilt 

in a cove, and w The high reed wave 



Oriana 
Miller s D. 



30 

74 

11 . 153 

. Pal. of Art 108 

. U'ltl Water. 231 

. L.,f Burleigh 3 

93 

344 

7 

71 

320 

30 

46 

8r 

67 

95i 

1101 

18 

394 

1350 

3380 



To w the emerald-colour'd water 



41 



Wwhat main-currents draw ' Love thou thy land' 21 
Jf'what thou seest, and lightly M a? Arthur rfifiz 
saw An angel stand and w me, . St S. Stylites 34 
did we iv the stately ships, . . Locksley H. 37 
To w the three tall spires ; . . Godiva . "3 



last dip of the vanishing sail She iv it, En. Arden 245 

often as he iv or seem'd to watch, n . 601 

Miriam w and dozed at intervals, ir . 908 

and Sir Aylmer Aylmer iv. . Aylmers F 

conscious of the rageful eye That iv him n 

made occasion, being strictly iv . •, 

grove of pines, W even there . ir 

and Sir Aylmer iv them all, . ,, 

the wife, who iv his face. Paled . 11 

I used to watch— if I be he that 7</— Tithonus . 

There was one who w and told me Boddicea 

watcher. 
w on the column till the end ; 
A lidless to' of the public weal 
watching like a w by the dead 
kinsman left him iv o'er his wife 

Heard by the zv in a haunted house, Guinevere . 73 
one was set to iv The watcher . Aylmers F. 552 

watchest. 
Thou zv all things ever dim . . InMem.cxx. 3 

ivatcheth. 
shepherd who to the evening star. Dying Szvan 35 

watchful. 
Leolin ever to of her eye . . Aylmer's F. 210 

watching. 
Tho' to from a ruin'd tower . . Two Voices 77 
Sat to like a watcher by the dead . Princess, v. 59 



277 
337 
478 
55i 
552 
73i 



St S. Stylites 160 
Princess, iv. 306 

lr . '.' v 59 

Vivien . 556 



TEWXYSO.VS ll'ORA'S. 



45' 



POEM. LINE. 

With Psyche's babe, was Ida to us. Princess, v. 501 
jMI her maidens, to, said, 11 . 534 

one mute Shadow 70 all. . . In Mem xxx. S 
In 70 thee from hour to hour, . n cxi. 12 

An angel to an urn . . . Maud,X.\m. 3 

Darken'd to a mother decline . 11 xi.x. 8 

to here At this, ourgreat solemnity Ode on Well. 243 
Now :« high, on mountain cornice The Daisy . 19 
Wyour growth, I secm'dagaintogrow.^y/OTfr'j./^g 

watchman. 
w peal The sliding season : . . Gardener sD. 178 

watch-word. 
Nor deal in to-to'j overmuch, ' Love tltou thy land' 28 
this proud w rest Of equal . . Princess, vii. 282 

70rt/>r. 

A sluice with blacken'd zv's slept . Mariana . 38 

Adown to where the w slept . . Arabian N's. 30 

trenched to'* run from sky to sky, Ode to Mem 104 

Holy w will I pour . . Poet's Mind 12 

\\ inds were blowing, 70' j flowing . Oriana . t . 

Their moon-led to'j white . . Pal. of Art 252 

night-dews on still -m's . . . Lotos-E's 4 S 

His w's from the purple hill- . „ . I3 8 

watch the emerald colour'd w falling n . 141 

Scaffolds, still sheets of jo, . . D ofF.lVom 3, 

on one Lay -.1 great 70, . . .M.d' Arthur 12 

the wild jo lapping on the crag.' . .. 71-116 

Many an evening by the w's . Locksley II. 37 

and as jo unto wine ... ,, ,„ 

Kift the hills, and roll the w's, '. ,. ' !86 

woodlands, echoing falls Of jo . To E. L. '. 3 

from butts of jo on the slope, . Princess.Pr'o 60 

like a wrinkling wind On glassy jo ,, 1 us 

Over the rolling jo\s go, . . „ ;,' .,-' 

like a clouded moon In a still w: . „ vi ' I s . 

The forest crack'd, the w's curl'd, In Mem. xv * 5 

Is on the w's day and night . . ,, X vii 1 1 

As drop by drop the to falls . . ,. hii' 3 

By that broad to of the west, . ,, | X vL 3 

I hear thee where the 70' j run, . n exxix. 2 

Beyond it, where the w's marry— The Brook '. 81 

To meet the sun and sunny to'j, . The Daisy 11 

she slipt like jo to the floor. . . Elaine \ 826 

Heardon the winding jo'j, eve and morn 1. '1308 

I he blaze upon the w's . . . En. Arden 505-7 

Another ship (She wanted jo) . „ "— 

silent jo slipping from the hills . ,, .634 

where the rivulets of sweet jo\t ran : ■■ ! 6j< 

Like fountains of sweet to in the sea, 11 804 

tn the JO, a long reef of gold . . Sea Dreams la • 

all night above the brim Of w's . The Voyage 26 

Down the waste 7o\r day and night, 11 58 

along the valley, where thv w's flow, V. o/Caute'relz 3 

broad 70 sweetly slowly glides . Reqmescat . 2 

bide by side beneath the 70 . . T/ie Captain 67 

waterbreak. 
With many a silvery 70 . . . The Brook . 61 

water-course. 
The tangled w's slept. . . . Dying Swan ro 
A riotous confluence of to'j . . Lucretius . 30 

. watered. 

Seal d it with kisses' jo it with tears? (htione . 230 
waterfall. 
wert not nursed by the 70 . Ode to Mem 51 
.hower the gambolling w's. Sea-Fairies 10 
flag. 
I here in the many-knotted n/f . M d Arthur 63 

water-lily. 
She saw the w / bloom . . L.o/S/ialgtt.iiLx 
as a 70 starts and slides . . Princess, iv. 336 

II 'aterloo. 
VT'' ■ IV. . mil Water. ,00 

.V!' 1 '" . thquakc. //-".' . Ode on Welt. ,3, 

Ih.ui when he fought at //', . „ " 

water-pipes, 

Uccps to the garden w /> beneath Doff. Worn, joi 



~, , , . water-side. POEM. line. 

1 he first house by the to-j . L.ofStuilott, iv. 34 

water-smoke. 
thousand wreaths of dangling w-s. Princess, vii. 198 

water-world. 
Thro' his dim jo-jo .' . . . Maud, II. ii. 20 

wave(s.) 
The slumbrous to outwellcth . Clarilel 1% 

rainbow hangs on the poising jo . Sea-Fairies' 20 
shook the jo as the wuid did sigh ; Dying-Swan is 
the to would make music above us The Merman 22 
adown the steep like a jo I would The Mermaid 39 
ihro the jo that runs for ever L.ofShatolt.i. 12 
w's that up a quiet cove Rolling slide Eleanore ' 10S 
J loved the brimming 70 that swam Miller's D. 97 
an iron coast and angry to'j . . Pal. of A , . 
back again with summer o'er the w MayOucen/n. 19 
mounting 70 will roll us shoreward Lotos-E's. 
gushing of the 70 Far far away . ,, ' [ -~ t 

island home Is far beyond the jo: „ .' ? 5 

ever climbing up the climbing jo? 11 ) 95 

wind and 70 and oar ; ... ,1 ' ,-, 

holy organ rolling jo'j Of sound . D.ofF. Worn. 191 
the bounteous 70 of such a breast Gardener 'sD. 133 
Came wet-shot alder from the jo . Ampliion . 41 
Thy tribute 70 deliver : . . A Farnvelt 3 

Rising, falling, like a 70 . . Vision of Sin 125 
70 s of shadow went over the wheat, Poet's Song 4 
No rock so hard but that a little w Princess, ill. 133 
old-recurring jo'j of prejudice ,1 .224 

drench his dark locks in the gurgling 70 •, j V- ,r , 

like a beacon-tower above the 70' j 11 .-_. 

a double light in air and 70, . . 1, vii! 152 

jo'j that sway themselves in rest, In Mem. xi. 18 
And in the hearing of the jo . 1, xix. 4 

the jo again Is vocal . ,, .13 

those wild eyes that watch the 70 ,, xxxvi! 15 

The lightest 70 of thought shall lisp, 1, xlviii 5 
every pulse of wind and 70 . . ,, lxxxiv. 73 
Or cool'd within the glooming to; nlxxxviii! 45 

Upon the thousand jo'j of wheat, n xc 11 

all my blood, a fuller w, . . „ C xsi. 12 
beach dragg'd down by the 70, . Maud, 1. Hi. 12 
the long jo'j that roll in yonder bay .1 xviii. 63 
all Calamity's hugest tj/j confound Will . . 5 
flying over many a windy 70 . Enid . . -37 

that echoes round the world; 1. . \ 420 
keeps the wear and polish of the 70 11 . .682 
blind 70 feeling round his long sea-hall Vivien '. 8: 
watch the curl'd white of the coming to .. .141 

such a 70, but not so pleasurable, . 11 \ ij 3 

You seem'd that to about to break .. ' , s f 

as a wild to in the wide North-sea, Elaine \ 481 
the steep cliff and the coming jo; Guinevere .278 
alter tempest, when the long jo broke 11 -Ys 

■■■ ipitous rivulet to the to, /:;;. Arden '. 5^8 
U ho still d the rolling to of Galilee Ay Inter's i 
great to Returning, while none mark'd Sea Dreams? j(> 
W e came to warmer 70' j, and deep The Voyage 77 
Now high on tr/j that idly burst . 
IV's on a diamond shingle dash, . The Islet 
IV s on the shingle pouring . itCs-ibCo n 

toot-,- (verb.) 

w5? ,. • sccn her "'" ll<:r ,,a " d ? • L.ofShalottX. 24 
I J all its la,y lilies, . . . <;„,,. 

bottom agates seen to to and float Princess, ii 306 
Nor to j the cypress in the palace walk : .. vii.' 1C2 
since the grasses round me to, . InMem.xxi 3 
in a cove, and watch'd The high reed to, Elaine 1361 

waved. 
She spoke, and bowing BfDismisnl : Princess.il 84 
ding, or her hands . . „ [ v . 501 
She to to me with her hand. . Maud, I. be. 8 

wrist is parted from the hand that to / '.-. 
glanced not up, nor To his hand, . Elaine . 980 

cv nit hand and went hi* way, . in. Arden 237 
to my arm to warn them oft ; . Sea Drear. 



warn 

when a sunbeam to'j warm 



Miller's D. 79 



452 



CONCORDANCE 70 



POEM. LINE. 

this great bow will iv in the sun, . Pal. of Art 43 
The gas-light w's dimmer ; . . Will Water. 38 

wavered. 
The crowds, the temples, w , . D o/F. Wont. 114 
for thus at times He w ; . . Vivien . 43 

wavering, 
w Lovingly lower .... Gardener 'sD. 129 
happy shade— and still went w down, n , 131 

From the high tree the blossom w fell Princess, vi. 64 

wave-worn, 

the w-w horns of the echoing bank Dying Swan 39 

waving. 

Wan angry hand as who should say Enid . 1293 

Perceived the w of his hands that blest Guinevere S78 
while he stood on deck IV, . . En. Arden . 243 

wax (s.) 
will melt this marble into w . . Pri?icess, iii, 57 

wax (verb.) 
Speak, as it w'es, of a love that wanes? Elaine 1 392 
Thou shalt w and he shall dwindle Boddicea . 40 

waxed. 

Then w her anger stronger. . . Tlie Goose . 30 
And watch'd them, w in every limb. In Mem. cii. 30 
So w in pride, that I believed myself Enid . 1683 

waxing. 

The full-juiced apple, iv over mellow Lotos-E's. . 78 
tho' his eyes are w dim . . D of the O. Year 21 

way. 
Winning its iv with extreme gentleness Isabel . 23 
A weary, weary w I go . . Oriana 89 

one silvery cloud Had lost his w . CEnone . 91 
This w and that, in many a wild festoon m . 98 

The blessed music went that iu May Queen, iii. 42 
winds and tides the self-same iv, . D. o/F. Wont. 38 
goose flew this iv and flew that . TJie Goose . 35 
God fulfils himself in many id's . M. d' Arthur 241 
going a long w With those thou seest 11 . 256 

all the livelong iv With solemn gibe Gardener sD. 163 
and his w's were harsh ; . . Dora . . 33 
went her w Across the wheat it . .69 

these unreal iv's Seem but the theme Ed. Morris 47 
witness, if I could have found a iv StS. Stylites 54 
thisw was left, And by this iv I 'scaped ir . 175 

down the w you use to come, — . Talking O. . 115 
Met me walking on yonder w f . Ed Gray . 2 
summer suns By many pleasant w's, Will Water. 34 
To meet and greet her on her iv ; Beggar Maid 6 
All the windy w's of men . Vision of Sin 132,168 
That's your light iv; . . Princess, Pro. 150 

She once had past that w ; . . u i. 183 

And thus (what other iv was left) , t> ii. 199 

she errs, But in her own grand w : v ui. 92 

I forced a iv Thro' solid opposition 11 .no 

when we sent the Prince your iv . ir iv. 379 

thing one oughtWhen falPn in darker iv's. *u v. 65 

I will take her up and go my w . u . 99 

or was it chance, She past my w. \% vi. 82 

These were the rough w's of the world •• vii. 241 
save in gracious household ws, . n . 299 

And ever met him on his iv . . In Mem. vi. 22 
we with singing cheer'd the w, . ir xxii. 5 

Still onward winds the dreary iv; u xxvi. 1 
look thy look, and go thy iv, . 11 xlviii. 9 

Moving about the household w's . u lix. 11 

darken' d w's Shall ring with music 11 Ixxvi, 13 
Whatever iv my days decline, . ir lxxxiv. 41 
will not yield each other 10. . . m ci. 20 

They wept and wailed, but led the w u cii. 18 

r.nd let the world have its w : . Maud, I. iv. 21 
Who knows the w s of the world . n -44 

in the quiet woodland w's ir - 49 

I know the iv she went ... 11 xii. 21 

That I dare to look her iv ; . . u xvi. n 

I chatter over stony w's, . . The Brook . 39 
path ofduty was the ?£/ to glory (rep.) Ode on Well. 202 
Of L^ri Maxume, all the w, . . The Daisy . 76 



POEM. LINE. 

after went her it, across the bridge, Enid . . 383 
have let men be, and have their w ; n . . 466 
and rough the iv s and wild : ir 75c 

Ever a good it on before , . .it . . 864 
will not fight my w with gilded arms 11 . . 87c 
keep them in the wild w's of the wood.u . 1036 

forward by a w which, beaten broad n . 1285 

left him lying in the public w ; 11 . 1 327 

answering not one word, she led the iv. 11 . 3344 

and she wept beside ihe iu. . u . 3368 

long w smoke beneath himin his fear; if . 1381 

the wild w's of the lawless tribe . u . 3456 

then she followed Merlin all the iv Vivien . 52 

Then her false voice made iv . v . 706 

first at him, then her, and went his w. Elaine . 96 
often lost in fancy, lost his w ; . n . 164 

cast him as a worm upon the iv ; . Gttinevere . 36 
then they rode to the divided w, . 11 .123 

did not shun to smite me in worse w, ir . 432 

and the w's Were filled with rapine, 11 . 454 

waved his hand, and wenthis w. . En. Arden . 237 
wherefore did he go this weary w, 11 . 295 

yet she went about her household w's ir . 450 

glades high up like w's to Heaven, ir . 574 

but led the iv To where the rivulets r, . 642 

A childly if with children, . . Aylmers F. 181 
won mysterious iv Thro' the seal'd ear n 695 

our own child on the narrow w, , 11 . 743 

as a footsore ox in crowded w's . n . 819 

like a man, too, would have his w: Grandmother 70 
Nor wander'd into other w's . ' My life isfull,' etc. 3 
and the woods and w's Are pleasant On a Mourner 1 3 
all thy life one iv incline . ir . 19 

dead men lay all over the w, . The Victim 21 

wayward. 
I have been wild and w, . . MayQueen,\\. 33 

weak. 
heroic hearts. Made w by time and fate, Ulysses 69 
cry for strength, remaining w . Two Voices .95 
1 go, iu from suffering here ; . 11 . 238 

This fellow would make weakness w, In Mem.xxi. 7 
being w in body said no more ; . Elaine . 835 

weakening. 
gentle sickness, gradually W the man, En. Arden 826 

weaker. 

Words iv than your grief . . To J. S. . 65 

ever w grows thro' acted crime . Will . .12 

till he saw Which were the w ; . Elaine . 461 

weakling. 
Poor w ev'n as they are . . Princess, vi. 291 

weakly. 
This pretty, puny, w, little one . En. Arden . 195 

weakness. 
Prevailing in w, the coronach stole Dying Swan 26 
the tasks of might To w ''Love thou thy land,' etc. \^ 
Regard the to of thy peers: v . 24 

W to be wroth with w ! . . Locksley H. 149 
So she strove against her w, . L. of Burleigh 69 

Our w somehow shapes the shadow Princess, iii. 313 
hatred of her w, blent with shame. u vii. 15 

close to death For w : . . . 11 . 105 

This fellow would make w weak, . InMetn.xxi. 7 
hath not swerved To works of w, . 11 lxxxiv. 50 
Forgot his w in thy sight . . it cix. 4 

That was your hour of w . . En. Arden . 446 
Enoch bore his iv cheerfully . ir . 828 

to spy The to of a people . . Aylmers F. 570 

uveal. 
he for the common w, The fading . Princess, ii. 265 
A Hdless watcher of the public w, n iv. 306 

So far, so near in woe and w . In Mem.cxxvin.2 
moulded by your wishes for her w Enid . . 799 

weald. 
by glimmering waste and w, . Guinevere . 127 

heard the Spirits of the waste and w 11 . 12G 



TEiViVYSOX'S WORK'S. 



453 



■wealth. poem. line. 

gleaned VI into my open breast . Ode to Mem. 23 
choicest w of all the earth, . . Eleiinore . 19 
In glowing health, with boundless™ £.C. V.de Verebt 
iu no more shall rest in mounded heaps Golden Year 32 
have wasted here health, to, and time Princess,iv. 333 
O more than poor men w . . " . 439 

Abide: thy to isgather'd in, . In Mem. li. 15 

And so my w resembles thine . ir lx.vviii. 17 
the to Of words and wit . . 11 Con. 102 

Your father has to well-gotten . Maud, \. hi. 18 
all the w and all the woe ? . . Guinevere . 342 
The sole succeeder to their w, . Ayimer's F. 294 
w, Their to, their heiress ! . . 11 . 368 

7</ enough was theirs For twenty matches ir . 369 

beat a pathway out to iu and fame it . 439 

Whatever eldest-born of rank or to 11 .484 

wealthier. 
' You will be all the to,' cried the Enid 1070-1261 
and himself lie wealthy still, ay to Ayimer's F. 373 

wealthy. 
and himself Be to still, ay wealthier Aylmer'sF. 373 

weapon. 
With thine own 10 art thou slain, • Two Voices 311 
wearing neither hunting-dress Nor to Enid . 166 

wear (s. ) 
keeps the w and polish of the wave Enid . . 682 

wear (verb.) 
W's all day a fainter tone. . . The Owl, ii. 7 
King-like, TO'sthe crown: 'Ofoldsat Freedom,'clc. 16 
imefo >d,And?{/warmclothes,<SViS , .>S , $'/f&£io7 
w an undress'd goatskin on my back : 11 .114 
111 Alternate leaf and and acorn-ball Talking O. 2S6 
This mortal armour that 1 to, . Sir Galahad 70 
those that w the Poet's crown :' You might have won' 10 
should not w our rusty gowns, . Princess, Pro. us 
than w Those lilies, better blush 11 iii. 51 

so she w's her error like a crown . it -95 

sleeps or w's the mask of sleep, In Mem. xviii. 20 
first she w's her orange-llower ! . 11 xxxix. 4 
w's his manhood hale and green : 11 hi. 4 

The fool that w's a crown of thorns: 11 Ixviii. 12 
Come, w the form by which I know 11 xc. 5 

l!ut ill for him that w's a crown, . " exxvi. 9 
And Maud will iu her jewels . Maud, I. xx. 27 

And that he w's a truer crown . Ode on Well. 276 
fair child shall w your costly gift Enid . . 819 
fit to w your slipper for a glove . ir . 1471 

to as fair a jewel as is on earth, . Elaine . 240 

III her favour at the tilt. 11 , 357 
10 My favour at this tourney ?' . 11 . 360 
Well, I will w it : fetch it out tc me : 11 . 370 

IV black and white, and be a nun Guinevere . 669 
w out in almsdecd and in prayer . 11 . 679 
spears That soon should w the garland -Aylmer'sF. 112 
deeper than to w it as his ring— . 11 . 122 

wearied. 
Is to of the rolling hours. . L.C.V de Vere 60 
to out made for the couch and slept, Vivien . 586 
Wounded and w needs must he be near. Elaine . 537 
with his diamond, w of the quest, .1 . 613 

seek him, and was to of the search. 11 . 628 

iv of the quest Leapt on his horse it . 699 

he said ' your ride has w you . 11 . 827 

wearieth. 
Gaiety without eclipse IV me . Lilian . 20 

weariness. 
nil things else have rest from to . /.otos-Es. . 59 
all but empty heart and w . . Enid . 1500 

Settles, till one could yield for w : Vivien , 222 

wearing. 
JV the rose of womanhood . . Two Voices 417 
iu all that weight Of learning lightly InMem.Con. 39 
/Klhe white (lower of a blameless life /Jed. of Idyllsi\ 

w neither hunting-dress Nor weapon Enid . 165 

in in mine Nei I ll I": lesser . Elaine . 365 

/Kihe tight yoke of that Lord of love Ayimer's F. 708 
IV his wisdom lightly . . . A Dedication 12 



weary adj.; POEM. LINE, 

and the to are at rest . May Queen, iii. to 

w seem'd the sea, to the oar, IV 

the wandering fields . . . Lotos-E's. . 41 
it may be my lord is to, . . Locksley If. 53 

She is w of dance and play. . Maud'l. xxii. 22 

However iu, a spark of will . . it II. ii. 56 
When ill and to, alone and cold . The Daisy . 96 
My lord is iu with the fight before, Enid . . 982 
to-night : I am to to the death.' . " . 1207 

I am iu of her.' .... Vivien . 687 

to of my service and devoir, . Elaine . 119 

That it makes one to to hear.' . The Islet . 29 

•weary (verb.) 
to with a finger's touch ' Clear-lieaded friend,' etc. 22 
Nor could I to heart or limb, . JuMcm.xxv. 9 

till the ear Wearies to hear it, . Elaine . 894 

weasel*. 
nail me like aaiona grange . Princess, ii. iE3 

the thin to there Follows the mouse Ayimer's F. £52 

weather. 

All in the blue unclouded to L. ofShalott,'m. 19 

And it was windy w : . . . The Goose 4,40 

There must be stormy w; . . Will Water. 54 

His brothers of the to stood Stock-still 11 • '33 

bring fair to yet to all of as) . . En. A r den . 191 

Passing with the to The Windoiu 67 

wea ther-bea ten . 
Denying not these to-i^ limbs . St S. Stylites 19 

large gray eyes and w-b face . En. Arden . 70 

weathercock' d. 
Whose blazing wyvern w the spire, Ayimer's F. 17 

weather'd. 
many a rough sea had he to in her ! En. Arden, 135 

weave. 

There she w's by night and day L. ofShalolt,\\. 1 
To w the mirror's magic sights . 11 -29 

With trembling fingers did we to InMem.xxx. 1 

And to their petty cells and die. . 11 xlix. 12 

Again at Christmas did we w . 11 lxxvii. 1 

She meant to to me a snare . . Maud, I. vi. 25 

any wreath that man can to him. . Ode on Well. 277 

weavclh. 
And so she to steadily . 

web, 
A magic to with colours gay 

in her to she still delights . . 11 .28 

She left the to, she left the loom . 11 iii. 37 

Out flew the w and floated wide . 11 .42 

takes the flood With swarthy w's. M d' Arthur 269 

A to is wov'n across the sky . . In Mem. iii. 6 

in a great old tyrant spider's w, . Vivien . 108 
wove coarse w's to snare her purity, Aylmer'sF. 780 

wed. 
young spirit presentWhen first she is w,OdetoMem. , ]\ 
Came two young lovers lately w . E.o/Shalott,\\.-$$ 
And I was young — too young to w : Miller's I). 141 
nor iu Raw Haste . * Ecme thou thy land' etc. 95 
he woo'd and 711 A labourer's daughter ; Dora . 37 
take it— earnest w with sport, . Day-Dm. . 279 
They two will iu the morrow morn : Lady Clare 7 
To-morrow he w's with me : . 11 . 16 

We two will iu to-morrow morn, . it . 87 

That she wore when she was iu.' . L. of Burleigh 96 
In the dress that she was to in, . " . 99 

It is long before you w. . . Vision of Sin 70 

Wwhom thou wilt, but I am sick 'Come not, when' 9 
days drew nigh that I should w . Princess, i. 40 
certain, would not w. 11 . 49 

purposed with ourself Never to to 11 ii. 47 

I iu with thee I / bound by precontract 11 iv. 530 
the woman w is not as we, . . » y. 452 

must to him for her own good name : 11 vii. 59 
lit leapt out to to with Thought /».!/<■/«. xxiii. 15 
lives to w an equal mind : 11 1 x i . d 

And talk of otheis that are to. . 11 



. L. ofShalotlM.y 
L. of ' Shalott ',ii. 



454 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

live to iv with her whom first you love : Enid . 227 

ere you iv with any, bring your bride ir . . 228 

when it iv $ with manhood, makes a n . 1716 

* Had I chos'n to iv, I had been wedded Elai?ie . 930 
these were iv, and merrily rang the En. Arden 80, 507 

-(/ the man so dear to all of them . ir . 481 

' There is no reason why we should not Ty.'n . 504 

So you will w me, let it be at once. 11 . 506 

day that follow'd the day she was w The Islet . 4 

wedded. 

my vigour, w to thy blood, . CEnone . 158 

Wherever Thought hath7e Fact'Loi'e thou thy land 52 
iv her to sixty thousand pounds . Ed. Morris 126 
nv with a nobleman from thence : . Princess, i. 76 
(God help her) she was w to a fool ; it iii. 67 

there be iv with all ceremony . Enid . 608, 839 

Seeing that you are w to a man . 11 . 1274 

Sir Valence w with an outland dame Vivie?i . 564 
chos'n to wed, I had been iv earlier, Elaine . 931 
not be content Save that I iv her, ir 1305 

specially were he, she w, poor . n 1311 

all this throve until I iv thee ! . Guinevere . 480 
So Willy and I \vere7y: . , Grandmother 57 

Lucilia, iv to Lucretius . . Lticretius . 1 

wedlock. 
in one love Than pairs of w ; . Princess, vi. 237 

weed (s.) 
creeping mosses and clambering 7vs Dying Swan 36 
Crouch'd fawning in the w . . CEnone . 197 

gardenfullofflowermgTc/.r To .With Pal. of Art \ 

At least, not rotting like a iv, . Two Voices 142 
Better to me the meanest iv . Aviphion . 93 

Athwart the smoke of burning ids Princess, vii. 337 
In words, like w's, I'll wrap me o'er In Mem. v. 9 
stagnates in the w's of sloth ; . m xxvii. n 
Is dim, or will be dim, with w's . v lxxii. 
this beggar-woman's w: . . Enid . 

once was looking for a magic w 3 . Vivien 
The people said, a w. . . . The Flower 4 
the people Call it but aw.. 11 . 24 

weed (verb.) 

twins may w her of her folly . Princess, v. 453 

As I will w this land before I go. . Enid . 1755 

iv the white horse on the Berkshire hills t r . 1784 

weeded. 
IV and worn the ancient thatch . Mariana . 7 

weeding. 
Edyrn has done it, w all his heart Enid . *754 

week. 
vs and months, and early and late The Sisters 10 



1523 



They lost their w's ; . . . Princess, Pro. 161 
fresh arrivals of the w before . ir ii. 82 

nursed me there from w to w: . u vii. 224 

IV after iv : the days go by : . In Mem. xvii. 7 

He bears the burthen of the ids . ir lxxix. n 
stay for a year who has gone for aiv: Maud, I. xvi. 6 
w Before I parted with poor Edmund; The Brook 77 
to live or die, for many a?y . . Elaine , 520 
days will grow to w's, thaw's to months Guinevere 617 
Enoch would hold possession for a 70: En. Arden 27 
yet were many w's before she sail'd, 11 . 124 

same w when Annie buried it, . n . 270 

'A w hence, a w hence.* . . The Window 170 

weefi. 

Prythee w t May Lilian ! (rep.) 

Nay, nay, you must not w . 

the long-leaved flowers w, . . Lotos-Es, 

I will not tell you not to iv . . To J. S. 

* W, weeping dulls the inward pain >r 

her will Be done — to w or not to iv. 



to the tears that thou wilt w. 
Who'll w for thy deficiency ? 
canst not think, but thou wilt w.' 
Wiser to w a true occasion lost 
' She must w or she will die' 
kiss her ; take her hand, she w's ; 



, Lilian , 19 

. May Queen, ii. 35 

55 

40 

44 
82 

39 

■ 5i 

iv. 50 

v. 535 
vi. 208 



Locksley PI 
Two Voices 

Princess, iv. 



POEM. LINE. 

Which w a loss for ever new, . In Mem. xiii 5 

w the comrade of my choice . ir • 9 

come, whatever loves to iv, . ir xviii. 11 

w the fullness from the mind : . 11 xx. 6 

At night she w's, ' How vain am I ! tr lix. 15 

So rnay'st thou watch me where I w, ti Ixii. 9 

He loves her yet, she will not w, . u xcvi. iS 

not as one that w's 1 come . . ir cxviii. 2 
Shall I w if a Poland fall ? . . Maud, I. iv. 46 
w for a time so sordid and mean . m v. 17 

the white rose w's, ' She is late ;' . 1? xxii. 64 

to w and w and w My whole soul 11 II. iv. 97 
now I could even iv to think of it ; tr v. £6 

light shall darken, and many shall w 11 III. vi. 43 
strong passion in her made her w . Enid . . no 
to his own heart, 'she w's forme' 11 . *435-3 
it makes me mad to see you w. . u . 3464. 

I dead who is it would w for me ?. it „ 1466 

she did not w But o'er her meek eyes ir . 1616 

If the wolf spare me w my life away Vivien . 734 

burst away To w and wail in secret, Elaine 1238 

unbind my heart that I may iv.' . Guinevere . 164 
pray you, noble lady, w no more ; 11 . 182 

they cannot w behind a cloud : u . 205 

w for her, who drew him to his doom.' ti . 346 

little wife would w for company . En. Arden . 34 
Yes, as the dead we w for testify . Ay liner's F. 747 
cannot w for Willy, nor can I w for Grandmotherig^j 
could not w — my own time seem'd so near n 7 2 

But how can I w for Willy, . n 102 

vapours w their burthen to the ground, Tithonus 2 
Won: beyond his object Love can last Coquette, iii. 5 
more cause to w have I it .6 



Wan sculptor - 



iveepest. 

■> thou to take the cast Coquette, iii. 



weeping, 
w then she made her moan . Mariana in the S. 



93 
239 

40 

30 
6,34 
£89 



phantasms iv tears of blood . . Pal. of Art 

'Weep, w dulls the inward pain . To J. S. 
w, ' I have loved thee long.' . . Locksley H. 

Bitterly iv I turn'daway; . . Ed. Gray 
W, iv late and early, . . . L. ofBurleig 

Had come on Psyche w: . . Princess, v. 48 
And linger w on the marge, . . InMem.xn. 12 

To hear her iv by his grave ? . 11 xxxi. 4 

a nation w, and breaking on my rest Odeon Well. 82 
W for some gay knight . . Enid . . 118 

A woman w for her murder'd mate tr . 1371 

To bitter w like a beaten child . Vivien ' . 704 
A long, long w, not consolablc. tr - . 705 

in the holy house at Almesbury W, Guinevere . 3 
There kiss'd, and parted w : . tr . 124 

look'd and saw The novice, w, . it . 656 

the holy nuns All round her, w ; . tr . 659 

and departed w for him ; . . En. Arden . 245 
Annie w answer'd 'I am bound.' . n . 448 

weigh. 
lightly w's With thee unto the love Ode to Mem. 90 
JKheavy on my eyelids : let me die CEno7ie . 240 
flash the lightnings, w the Sun — Locksley H. i£6 
w your sorrows with our lord the King ' s,Guinevere iZq 

weigh'd. 
Why are we w upon with hea^ "mess, Lotos-E's. 57 
mist of tears, that w Upon my brain, Love and Duty '43 
But a trouble iv upon her, . . L.of Burleigh 77 

why, the causes 7t>, Fatherly fears — Princess, v. 206 
while I w thy heart with one . Guinevere . 536 

weighest. 
Thou w heavy on the heart within CEnone . 239 

weighing. 
And w find them less ; . . . Guinevere . 190 

weight. 
O happy earth, how canst thou bear my w? CEnone 233 
broad thy shoulders to receive my w, M.d' Arthur 164 
will have w\.o drag thee down. . Locksley IT. 43 
This w and size, this heart and eyes, Sir Galahad '7 ^ 
Is it the w of that half-crown . Will Water. 155 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



455 



POEM. LINR. 

w of all the hope 4 ; ofhalf the world. Princess, iv. jC6 



In Mem. xii. 
•r XXV. 

liv. 



3» 

(hnaite . 127 
Talking 0. 212 
Love and Kutytb 
Ulysses . 4 7 



Caryatids, lifted up A w of emblem 

their heavy hands The w of destiny 

'When the man wants 70, The woman 

This nightmare w of gratitude, 

Then us they lilted up, dead ws . 

A w of nerves without a mind 

I loved the w I had to hear, 

falling with my 70 of cares 

Can hang no w upon my heart . 11 lxii. 

wearing all that iv < )f learning lightly 11 Con. 

by a dead 71/ trail'd . . . Maud, I. i. 

The lighter by the loss of his w; . 11 xvi. 

By the loss of that dead w, . . " xix. 

Once the iv and fateof V.uiopchung.Ode 011 Welt. 240 

w is added only grain by grain . Enid . . 526 

Appraised his w and fondled . En Arden . 154 

dead w of the dead leaf bore it down 11 

welcome {adj. and s ) 
sweet shall yout -v be . . . Sea-Fairies 
Should come most w, seeing men 
A w raix'd with sighs . 
Farewell, like endless w, lived 
with a frolic iv took The thunder 
We give you w: not without redound l'rtncess,n. 28 
glowing full-faced w, ... 11 1 i 

Less Iv find among us, if you came 11 . 333 

II', farewell, and w for the year . 11 Con. 95 

Received and gave him '.v there : In AfrmAxxxiv. 24 
An iron -i' when they rise . . 11 lxxxix. 8 
you will be ;t>— O, come in ! ' . The Brook . 228 

give him iv, this is he . . Ode oh Well. 02 
one lay-hearth would give you w ToF. D. Maurice 1 1 
means of goodly ;". flesh and wine Enid . . 387 
Embiaced her with all ~.v as a friend H . . 834 
In the mid-warmth of w and graspt 11 . 1129 

1 bid the stranger w. . . . Vivien . ng 
To greet his hearty w heartily : . En. Arden . 347 

't the Hall, . . Aylmers F. 114 

all of us Danes in our 71/ of thee . IV. to Alexan. 4 
should speak tonic not without .iiii/icudccasillabtcsii 
■Hangers at my hearth Not w, . Lucretius . 159 

welcome !verb. ) 
all the gentle court will w me 
IV her, thunders of fort (rep.) 
as the sea when he w's the land, 
w her, w the land's desire 

welcomed. 
Not beat him back, but w him 

welded. 

Two women faster w in one love 



. Elaine 10s" \ 

]V. to Alexan. ' 6 

. 24 



Enid . . 74S 
Princess, vi. 336 



wel/ar 



How much their w is a passion to us /V/«c«.r,iii.264 
llayQitecn, iii. 19 



welled}.) 
Nor would I now be w, mother 



7<w7(s.) 

As a Naiad in a to, Looking, . Adeline . 16 

tthedin Paphian w's . . CEuoue . 171 

I the buckets from the v> , StS.Stylites 63 

from the w's where he did he Two Voices 

llymg while you sat beside the jut Princess, it. 252 

lial flush her babbling iu's . •< v. 324 

Than if with thee the roaring w's In Mem x. 17 

dive below the w's of Death ? . " cvu. 8 

when we halted at that other w, . Vivien . 129 

Until they vanish'd by the fairy w 11 . 27S 

and cry 'Laugh, little w ' >■ . 281 

!. or silent w . Guinevere . 397 

Fairer than Rachel by the palmy w Aylmer 1 

. verb.) 
w thro' all my fancy yet . . Lockslry , 

well-attemf>.-r'd 

A man of Tf-a frame . . . Ode on Well. 74 

well-iel 

We leave the w-b plate . . In Mem. ci. 1 



well-content. POEM. LIKE. 
Philip rested with her avf; . . En. Arden 

well-contented. 
Voices of the vk doves. . . Cara'ener's D. £3 

well-heads. 
old w-h of haunted rills . . Eleunore . 16 

well-loved. 
IV-lof me, discerning to fulfil . Ulysses . 35 

well-moulded. 
A quick brunette, w-m, falcon-eyed Princess, ii. 91 

well-oiled. 
I was courteous, every phrase w-o. Princess, iii. 117 

well-pleased. 

pass, //'-/». from room to room. . Pal cf Art 56 
and home w-p we went . . Princess,' 

well-practised. 
An eye w-p in nature . . , Maud, I. iv. 38 

well-to-do. 
Annie— for I am rich and w-t-d . En. Arden . 310 
1 am w-t-d— no kin, no care, . ,, .415 

well-worn. 
a w-w pathway courted us . . Cardeuei'sD.ioS 

wending. 
thither w there that night they bode. Elaine .411 

went. 
Ever the weary wind w on, . . DyintrSivan 9 
took the reed-tops as it w. . . » . jo 

The bitter arrow w aside (rep.) . Onana . 37 
lights Vnd music, w to Caimelot L.ofShalott\\. 32 
That w and came a thousand limes. Miller's D 72 
down 1 W to fetch my bride: . 11 . 145 

When, arm in arm, we w along, . 11 ,163 

my swift blood that w and came . I'atima . 16 
all my heart II' forth to embrace him LEnone . t _• 
She died : she 7c to burning flame The Sisters 7 
For pasture, ere you 7.' to town. I.. C. V. de I ere 4 
w along From Mizpeh's towered gate D.o/F.h 
I iv mourning, 'No fair Hebrew boy 11 . 213 

One w, who never hath return'd. I'oJ.S. . so 
w Sir Bedivere the second time . M.aArthti 
lightly w the other to the King . 11 . 147 

1 and Eustace from the city w . Gardener's I>. 2 
up we rose, and on the spur we w •■ . 32 

Love with knit brows a< by, . •• . 240 

days 7c on, and there was born a boy Dora . 46 
Then Dor. 1 w to .Mary. . . n .54 

Dora took the child, and w her way 11 
Then Dora w to Mary's house, . 11 . 108 

how The races id Audley Ct. *a 

sick of home w overseas for change // 'all:, to the M. 18 
I w and came: Her voice lied . Ed, Moms 66 
She w— and in one month 1 hey wedded • • . 125 

brewer's soul IV by me, like a stork : Talking , 
on the roof she w, ... 11 

ivied casement, ere I w to rest, . Locluley II. 7 

forth into the fields I w, . 4-4'' 

I w thro' many wayward moods . Day- Km. 
far across the hills they to . <• 

down the middle buzz I she w . Amphion 
Co, therefore, thou I thy betters w Will Water. 1&5 
'Who was this that it; from thee?' Lady Clare 11 
She w by dale, and she w by down, " . , 

waves of shadow it/ over ih<- « heat, Poet's A 
sport W hand in hand with Science; Princess, I 

a Voice W with it, ' Follow, follow 11 1 

thro the laud at eve we :-' . . 11 

mother w revolving on the word , ti iii. 38 
Up vi the hush'd amaze of hand and eye 11 

tritni ml to !!■'■ ] 1 irch we 7*-. i, . 16a 

Tins 7" by As il 1 one 11 iv. 545 

Wuh me defiani e, ."'-. 

to up a great cry The Prince is Jain. " 
w The cnamoiir'd air sighing, . 11 

v. nig iii a pan I 1 

So I and some w out to these : 



456 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Princess, Con. 106 

_ . 118 

In Mem xiv. 3 

xxii. 7 

lxx. 4 

XC1V. Q 



But we w back to the Abbey 
and home well-pleased we zi> 
And I zv down unto the quay 
From April on to April zv, 
In which we z/'thro* summer France 
bats zv round in fragrant skies, 
in the house light after light IV ont, 
On that last night before we 7V . 11 cii. t 

Up the side I w. And fell in silence 11 . 43 

they zv and came, Remade the blood n Con. 10 

I know the way she w . . . Maud. I. xn. 21 
so that he find what he zv to seek . i» xvi. 3 

the soul of the rose zv into my blood ir xxii. 33 

in I zv, and call'd old Philip out . The Brook . 120 
wheat-suburb, babbling as he zv . n . 123 

after w her way across the bridge Enid . . 383 
lords and ladies of the high court zu 11 . . 662 
Yniol with that hard message zv ; 11 763 

she zv back some paces of return . t, , gig 

kind lord, 1 said the glad youth, and zv, 11 . logo 

told them of a chamber, and they -c; " « 1110 

IV slipping down horrible precipices, 11 . 1228 

IV Enid with her sullen follower on i> . 3289 

'Enough,' he said, T follow," and they zv . 1664 

iv apart with Edyrn, whom he held " . 1729 

King w forth and cast his eyes . 1? . 1780 

Fixt in her will, and so the seasons to Vivien . 44 

IV back to his old wild 11 . 4gg 

two fair babes, and 70 todistant lands, n . 557 

Sir Lancelot zv ambassador, at first w . 624 

IV faltering sideways downward . 11 . 6gg 

eyes and neck glittering 71/ and came - it , 8og 

at him, then her, and zv his way. . Elaine . g6 

2/ I zv and if I fought and won it . " .216 

in wrath he got to horse and zv; . 11 . 562 

zv down before his spear at a touch, 11 . 577 

zv sore wounded from the field . it . 598 

and zv To all the winds ?' ir . 654 

carolling as he zv A true-love ballad ir . 700 

who coldly w nor bad me one . m 1051 

Steer'd by the dumb 10 upward . ir 1148 

slowly zv The marshall'd order .11 1321 

he zv, And at the inrunning . . u 1378 

smote his knees, and smiled, and zv: Guinevere . 48 
grim faces came and zv Before her, 11 . 70 

IV slipping back upon the golden days 11 . 377 

IV on in passionate utterance . n . 605 

great and small, IV nutting to the En Arden . 64 
"waved his hand, and zv his way. . n . 237 

therefore zv, Past thro' the solitary room » . 275 

was not Annie with them? and they zv 11 . 368 

yet she zv about her household ways i- . 450 

sunny and rainy seasons came and zv u . 624 

to the pool and narrow wharf he zv 11 . 691 

down the long and narrow street he zv •• . 796 

and like a storm he zv. . . . Aylmer's F. 216 
W Leolin : then, his passions all in flood 11 . 339 

So Leolin zv ; and as we task ourselves if . 432 

zv Hating his own lean heart. . >r . 525 

passionately restless came and zv . 11 , 546 

Averill zjv and gazed upon his death. 11 . 599 

if he zv hence with shame? . . ir . 718 

childless mother zv to seek her child; n . 829 

woke, and 7d the next, The Sabbath Sea Dreams 18 
IV further, fool ! and trusted him m . 76 

and with God-bless-you zv. it . 156 

That altogether zv to music? . 11 . igg 

IV both to make your dream : . 11 . 246 

I wonder he zv so young. . Grandmother 14 

made me a mocking courtsey and zv n . 46 

For Harry zv at sixty, ... 11 .86 

and fro they 7t' Thro' niy garden-bower The Fiozver 5 
stately, lightly, zv she Norward . The Captain 35 
Crashing zv the boom, ... it .44 

in the waltzing-circle as we w, . Coquette, ii. 5 
The Priest 7t' out by heath and hili The Victim 30 

zvefit. 
One willow over the river 7t', . Dying Swan 14 
Crocodiles zv tears for thee , . A Dirge , 22 

Love zv and spread his sheeny vans Love and Death 8 



POEM. LINE. 

and took the King, and zv . . M.d' Arthur 206 
She bow'd down And zv in secret ; Dora . . 106 
I believe she zv ... Talking O. 164 

I zv 'Tho' I should die, I know, . Two Voices 58 
To perish, zv for, honour'd, known, ir . 149 

In her still place the morning w . 11 . 275 

To-day I sat for an hour and zv . Ed. Gray . 1 1 
Bitterly zv I over the stone : . 11 -33 

you zt. That was fawn's blood, 

not brother's, yet you zv . . Princess, ii. 256 
'My fault' she zv 'my fault ! . n 111. 14. 

zjv her true eyes blind foi such a one, 11 iv. 116 

yet she neither moved nor zv. . n v. 543 

thro' her limbs a drooping languor zv . : 11 yi. 251 

Thou comest, much zv for : . InMetn.xm. 1 

silence follovv'd, and we zv. . . i» xxx. 20 

They zv and wad'd, but led tke way ■■ cii. 18 

W over her, carved in stone Ji/aud, l.vih. 4 

while she zv, and I strove to be cool 11 II. 1. 15 
'was it for him she 7y In Devon?' Enid . 1246 

and she zv beside the way. ti 1368 

remember'd her, and how she w ; n . 1460 

and uncoil'd itself, she w afresh, . Vivien . 738 
for her fault she zv Of petulancy . " . 801 

IV, looking often from his face . Elaine 1277 

first she came, zv the sad Queen. . Guinevere . 180 
heart was loos'd Within her, and she zv n . 660 

her own toward the wall and zv. . En. Arden . 282 
Annie could have zv for pity of him . it . 464 

but presently IV like a storm : . Aylmer's F. 403 
While thus he spoke, his hearers zv ; 11 . 722 

I could have zv with the best Grandmother 20-100 
I had not zv, little Anne, not since 11 . 63 

But I zv like a child that day . ;< 64,68 

'A ship of fools' he sneer'd and zv The Voyage 78 
that o'er her wounded hunter w . Lucretius . 89 

zvest 

Four courts I made. East, IV . Pal of Art 21 

linger'd low adown In the red JV Lotos-E's. 20 

Acioss a hazy glimmer of the zv . Gardeuer'sD. 214 

Orion sloping slowly to the IV . Lochsley H. 8 

stunted squaws of W or East ; . Princess, ii. 64 

silver sails all out of the zv . 11 . 469 

half Far-shadowing from the zv, . 11 Con. 42 

And topples round the dreary «•, In Mem xv. 19 

By that broad water of the zv, . 11 lxvi. 3 

And East and IV, without a breath n xciv. 62 

I Rosy is the IV, Rosy is the South, Maud, I xvii. 5 

Blush it thro' the IV (rep ) 11 _. 16 

I Orion's grave low down in the IV 11 III. vi. 8 

j Fired from the zv, far on a hill . Elaine . 168 

I flower of all the zv and all the world, 11 . 249 

' knights of utmost North and IV, it . 525 

into the rich heart of the zv: . Guinevere . .242 

down to that great battle in the zv, it . 567 

blaze upon the waters to the 7<i; . En. Arden ■ 597 

Here mthe woman -markets of the zv, Aylmer's F. 348 

all the sails were darken'd in the zv, Sea Dreams 39 

Flown to the ea^t or the zv . . The Window 41 

westward-winding. 
From the zv-zv flood . . . Margaret . 9 

wet. 
Eyes with idle tears are zv . . Miller's D. 211 
I am Ttt With drenching dews . StS. Stylites 112 
crofts and pastures zv with dew . Tzvo Voices 14 
Who sweep the crossings, zv or dry, Will Water. 47 
my Sire, his rough cheek zv with tears Priucess,v. 22 
The leaves were zv with women's tears : 11 yi. 23 
often I caught her with eyes all zv, Maud, I. xix. 23 
forester of Dean, IV from the woods Enid . . 149 
either eyelid zv with tears. . Vivien . 229 

IF with the mists and smitten by the Guinevere . 591 
Made zv the crafty crowsfoot . Sea Dreams 183 

eyes all zv, in the sweet moonshine: Grandmother 49 
I stood on a tower in the zv . . 1865-1866 . 1 
wind and the zv, the wind and the zv The Window 118 
Woods where we hid from the w, 11 . 183 

wether. 
some black w of St Satan's fold, . Vivien . 600 



TUXXYSO.VS WORKS, 



457 



Wtt-sllOt. IOEM I INF. 

Came w-s alder from the wave, . Amphion . 41 

iiharf. 

Out upon the w's they came L ofShalett^\\.\7 

red roofs about a narrow w . . Lit Arden . 3 

Down to the pool and narrow j<, . 11 . 691 

11 hat's my thought, 
w in 1 and xvhen and where and how Princess, Pro. 1E8 

wheat 
little dues of 7(, and wine and oil . Lotos-El's. . 167 

in my uncle's eye Among the w ; . Dora . . 66 

went her way Across the 70 . .11 . . 70 

waves of shadow went over the w Poet's Song. 4 
belts of hop and breadths of w ; . Princess, Con. 45 

Upon the thousand waves of w, . In Mem. xc. 1 1 

By summer belts of iv and vine . 11 xevn. 4 

wheat-suburb. 
sweet-smelling lanes Of his w-s . The Brook . 123 

•wheedle. 
An^ -.j a world that loves him not Maud, II. v. 39 

•wheedling, 

W and siding with them ! . . Princess, v. 151 

wheel (%.) 

The dark round of the dripping w Miller's D. 102 
ws of Time Spun round in station, Love and Duty] a, 

in the flying of a 10 Cry down . Codiva . 6 

turn This w within my head, . Will Water. 84 

common hate with the revolving w Princess, vi. 157 

I see the sailor at the iv. . . In Mem. x. 4 

And all the w's of Being slow . 11 Jclix. 4 

And every kiss of toothed w's, . ■■ cxvi. 11 
The last w echoes away. . . Maud, I. xxii. 26 

And the roaring of the w's . . " II. iv. 22 

And the w's go over my head, " v 4 

I stay'd the w's at Cogolctto, . The Daisy . 23 

was one Of Fortune and her w, . Enid . . 346 

Turn, Fortune, turn thy w frep.) " 347 
Thy to and thee we neither love nor ti . 349-58 

With that wild w we go not up it 351 

Thy w and thou are shadows 357 

sleepy land where under the same w Aylmer's F. 33 

ihee returning on thy silver w's . Tithonus . 76 

stays the rolling I xionian w, . Lucretius . 257 

it heel (verb.) 
And w's the circled dance . . In Mem. xcvii.30 

-.<. heel'd. 
strongly w and threw it. . . M d' Arthur 136 
Earth follows join her ellipse . Golden Year 24 
Sometimes the sparhawk, w along, Sir I.. andQ G. 12 
w Thro' a great arc 1m seven slow Princess, iv. 195 
bats w t ana owls whoop'd • . n Con. no 
;</ or lit the filmy shapes . . In Mem. xciv. 10 
to on Europe-shadowing wings, . OdeonWeil. 120 
!<- and broke Flying, (rep.) . . Gnuiezere . 255 

wheeling; 

with bolh hands I flung linn, 7t-him ;M.d Arthur 157 
to round The central wish, . . Gardener sD. 219 
W Willi precipitate paces . . I'lsiono/Sin 37 
suns, that w cast The planets . Princess, ii. 103 

whelm, 

w all this beneath as vast a mound Vtiien . 506 

w All of them in one massacre . Lucretius . 203 

whelm d. 
some were 70 with missiles of the wall, Print esi. Pro. 45 
a sea haze and w the world in gray , En. A rdeu . 673 

11 help. 
bones for his o'crgrown w to crack Maud, II. v. 55 

when and where and hnw. 
what's my thought and w aw a h, Princess, Pro. 188 

wherewithal. 

having7i', And in the fallow leisure Audley Ct . 75 
to To give bis babes . . En. Ardtn , iji 

Whig. 
La W and Tory stir their blood . Will Water. 53 



while. 
we might make it worth his to 
hardly worth my w to choose 



POEM USE. 

. Prvteess, i 

In Mem. xxxiv. 10 



whm. 

hurt to death, For your wild w : . Princess, si. 22S 

whine. 
colt like w hinny and with hoggish wStS. Stylites 1 74 

whined. 
w in lobbies, tapt at doors, . Walk to the M. - j 

•whinny. 
colt-like w and with hoggi-h whine StS. Stylites 174 
her T<> shnlK From tile to scullery, Princess, v. 44a 
With a low to toward the pair . Enid . 

whinnying. 
her palfrey to lifted heel, . . Enid . 1 _ 

whip. 
Struck at her with his ?<>, . . Enid 201-7,413 

7<./;,>/(s.) 
Ran into its giddiest to of sound, Vision o/Sin 2 j 

whirl (verb.) 
There the river eddy w's, . L.efShalottfi. 13 

I to like leaves iii roaring wind. . Fatima . 7 
while Saturn w's, his stedfast shade Pal. 0/ Art 15 
w the ungarner'd sheaf afar, In Mem lxxi. 23 

W j her to me : but will she fling herself L ucretiussgg 

wlurl'd. 
No sword Of wiath her right arm w The Poet . 54 
heavy -plunging foam, Why the wind, I). 01 1'. II', 11:. 11 , 
round and round, and 7t'iu an arch M d'A rthur 133 
There to her while robe . . Princess, iv 161 
She w them on to me ... 1. . 377 

The last red leaf is 70 away, . In Mem. xv. 3 

to About empyreal heights . . ti xciv. 37 
is to into folly and vice . . Maud, I. iv. ?; 

like the smoke in a hurricane w . Boidicea . 1) 

whirligig; 

As on this to of Time We circle . Will Water. 63 

whirlwind. 

loud the Norland w's blow . . Oriana . 6 

And a w clear'd the larder : . . I'lte Goose . 52 

And bring her in a w. . . . Princess, i. 64 

Across the w's heart of peace, . The Voyage 1 7 

Like the leaf in a roaring to . . Boidicea . 59 

ii hisker. 

his watery smile And educated w. Ed. Morris 12) 

whisper (s ) 
She has heard a to say, . . L .o/Shalott.u. 3 

In w's, like the w's of the leaves . Gardener 'sD.246 
And her w's throng 'd my pulses . Locksley If. 36 
Far along the world-wide w . t. . 125 

A little w silver-clear, . . . Two Voices 423 
Such seem'd the w at my side : . •) ■ 439 

honeying at the w of a lord ; . Princess, Pro 115 

the songs, the w's, and the shrieks, 11 i. 07 

o'er the imperial tent W's of war >• v. to 

What w's from thy lying lip? . In Mem. in. 4 
Was as the w of an air . . n xvii. 3 

And shape the w of the throne ; . 11 lxni. 12 
In to* of the beauteous world. . n Ixxvtii. 1a 
This haunting w makes me faint, n Ixxx. 7 
lightly does the to fall " lx.\.\:. 

world's wide w breaking into storm, Enid. 

and the spiteful W died : 1806 

in wolds pari heard, in w's part, . Vivien . 688 

A murmuring re thro' the nunnery ran, Gvwevere 4 .7 
a w on her ear. She knew nut what ; I.n. Arden 51 1 
The moving 71* of huge Irees >• , 586 

Again in deeper inward to** 'lost! 1 i» . 717 

A 71' half re* eal'd her to herself . Aylmer's P. 144 

whisper verb.) 
Listening, w's "Tis the fairy 
those full chesnuts .' by. . . Miller's 1). 168 
The trees began to 7.'. . . . M ,iy Queen .in. vy 
between Joy and woe, and to each. Margaret . 64 
Not to, any inuiinur of complaint StS, Styii:. 



453 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

iv to your glass, and say . . Day-Din. . 271 
iu lovely words, and use . . Will Water, n 

1 n her ear he 7y' j gaily. . . L. of Burleigh 1 
' The stars/ she zu's, ' blindly run ; In Mem. iii. 5 
And hear thy laurel iu sweet . 11 xxxvii. 7 
A hundred spirits w ' Peace.' . ir Ixxxv. 16 
One iu's, here thy boyhood sung . 11 ci. 9 
w's to the worlds of space . . n cxxv. 11 
We iv, and hint, and chuckle . Maud, I. iv. 29 
And the lily w's, ' 1 wait . . u xxii. 66 
Heard the good mother softly iu . Aylmer's F. 187 
W in odorous heights of even . Milton . 16 

whisper* d. 
She w, with a stifled moan . JSIarianain theS. 57 
some, 'tis iv — downinhell . . Eotos-Es. . 168 
Tho' what he iu, under Heaven . Talking O . . 21 
' Never, never,' why the phantom years LocksteyH.%% 
Cyril iv : 'Take me with you too* Princess, i. 80 
the dame That iv 'Asses' ears' . 11 ii. 98 

' Come ' he iv to her 'Lift up your head, 11 v. 60 

The fault was mine,' he iv, 'fly!' Maud, II. i. 30 
I never iv a private affair . . 11 v. 47 

Or w in the corner ? do you know it ? Vivien . 622 

whisperer. 
and the swarm Of female ivs : . Princess, vi. 336 

•whispering. 
JV to each other half in fear . Sea-Fairies 5 

Two lovers iv by an orchard wall ; Circumstance 4 
or, w, play'd A chequer-work . InMemAxxi. 14 
W I knew not what of wild . . Tithonus . 61 

whistle (s.) 

Scarce answer to my w ; . . Amphion . 6S 

bustling w of the youth . .Enid . . 257 

the great plover's human w . .11 . . S98 

'whistle (verb.) 
W back the parrot's call, . . Locksley H. 171 

whistled, 
w stiff and dry about the marge. . M.d* Arthur 64 
The redcap iv ; and the nightingale GardeiiersD. 94 
low and sweet I w thrice ; . . Ed. Morris 113 
Sometimes the throstle iv strong : Sir L. andQ. G. 11 
tall mill that iv on the waste . En. Arden . 340 

And w to the morning star. . . Sailor Boy . 4 
while he w long and loud . . 11 .5 

whistling. 
W a. random bar of Bonny Doon . The Brook . 82 
Half w and half singing a coarse song, Enid 1377 

ivhit. 
Not a w of thy tuwhoo, . . The Oivl, ii. 10 

white, 
w against the cold-white sky, . Dying Swan 12 
Lying, robed in snowy w . E. qf~Shalott,iv. 19 
The lanes, you know, were w with may Miller s D.T30 
a ghost, mother, for I was all inw, Jllay Queen,i. 17 
all his face was w And colourless . M. a" Arthur 212 
One arm aloft — Gown'd in pure w, Gardener's D. 124 
As clean and iv as privet when it Walk, to the M. 48 
charts us all in its coarse blacks or ids, 11 . 97 
With folded feet, in stoles of w . Sir Galahad 43 
No pint oiw or red . . . Will Water. 82 
$ix hundred maidens clad in purest iv Princess, \\. 448 
lines of green that streak the w . 11 v. 1S8 

sleeps the crimson petal, now the w if vii. 161 
the seas ; A red sail, or a w; . . \t Con. 47 

blasts that blow the poplar iu, . InMemAxx'x. 3 
A broad-blown comeliness, redand w Maud,l.x\\\. 9 
as iv As ocean-foam in the moon, . n xiv. 17 
sweets hours that past in bridal iv, 11 xviii. 65 
AVe loved that hall, tho' iv and cold, The Daisy 37 
W from the mason's hand, a fortress Enid 244, 408 
the cressy islets w in flower ; . 11 . 1324 

watch the curl'd w of the coming wave Vivien . 141 
clean as blood of babes, as w as milk : u . 194 
A maid so smooth, so w, so wonderful " . 416 
IV was her cheek : sharp breaths . . 607 

she herself in w All but her face, . Elaine 1152 



POEM. LINE. 

the maiden rose, 7F"as her veil, . Guinevere . 361 
Wear black and iv, and be a nun . if . 669 

Ruddy and iv, and strong on his legs Grandmother 2 
stream that flashest w, . . . V. q/Cauteretz 1 

luh ite-o reasted. 
iv-b like a star Fronting the dawn CEnone . 56 

•white-eyed. 

iv-e phantasms weeping tears of blood Pal. of Art 239 

white-faced. 
The TC^halls, the glancing rills, . In Mem. Con. 113 

wh lie-favour d. 
those ivfYiOT$>e% wait . . . In Mem. Con. 90 

w/i ite-floiuer'd. 
saw The7c-/elder-thicket from the field Godiva 63 

white-haired. 
A iv-h shadow roaming like a dream Tithonus . 8 

white-hooved. 
a jet-black goat, white-horned, iv-h CEnone . 50 

wh ite-horned. 
a jet-black goat iv-h, white-hooved CEnone . 50 

while-listed. 
ti - ee that shone iu-1 thro' the gloom. Vivien . 7S8 

whiten. 

Willows w, aspens quiver, . . L. of 'Shalott, i. 10 

whiten 'd. 
lake iv and the pinewood roar'd, . Vivien . 487 

w all the rolling flood ; . . . The Victim 20 

whiter. 
The flocks are iv down the vale, . In Mem. cxiv. 10 
iv even than her pretty hand : . Aylmer's F. 363 

White Rose, 
WR, Bellerophon, the Jilt, . The Brook . 161 

Whitsiuitide. 
Arthur on the W before . . Enid . . 145 
this was on the last year's W. 11 840 

whole. 

So healthy, sound, and clear and w, Miller's D. 15 

All various, each a perfect w . Pal. of Art 5S 
Is bodied forth the seconds. ' Love thou thy land' 66 

iu, and clean, and meet for Heaven. StS.Stylites 210 

W m ourselves and owed to none. Princess, iv. 130 

half Without you ; with you, w ; . 11 . 441 

looks as iu as some serene Creation ir v. 185 

slips in sensual mire, But iv and one 11 . 192 

sound and w from head to foot . if vi. 194 

that soon He rose up w, . . 11 vii. 50 

twin brothers, risen again and w ; ir . 74 

keeps our Britain, iv within herself m Con. 52 

And love will last as pure and iv . InMem.xYii. 13 

That each, who seems a separate iu, n xlvi. 1 

The wish, that of the living w . 11 liv. 1 

That so my pleasure may be iu ; , n Ixx. 8 

Win himself, a common good. . Ode on Well, 26 

keep our noble England iv 11 . 261 

W, like a crag that tumbles . . Enid , . 318 

Save her dear lordly from any wound. 11 . . 894 
when Geraint was iu again ir *793 

mine ancient wound is hardly w, . Elaine . 94 

to learn this knight were iv, . . n . 768 

Whereof he should be quickly w, . 11 . 849 

Sir Lancelot's deadly hurt was iv, m . 900 

our pride Looks only for a moment iv Aylmers F, 2 

whoop. 
Call to each other and w and cry . The Merman 26 

whooped. 
bats wheel'd, and owls w, . . Princess,Con.no 

whooping. 
I drown'd the-ztAyofthe owl with sound StS.Stylites^ 

whorl. 
With delicate spire and iu . . Mend, II. :L 6 



T£XXVSOX'S WORA'S. 



459 



wicked. POEM. LINE. 

And the to cease from troubling . MayQueenjta 60 
Ye know me then, that to one . Guinevere . 661 

wickedness. 

if you think this w in me, . . Vivien . 18S 

-and not so much from w, 11 . 370 

I wish to veil her w, . . Guinevere . 209, 

who hath forgiven my to to him, . 11 . 628 

wicket (gate.) 
one green w in a privet hedge; . GardeneVsD.ic/) 

wicket 'cricket slump. I 
clamour bowl'd And stump'd the w ; Princess, Pro. 82 

wicket-gate. 
reacli'd The w-g, and found her . Gardener 1 'sD. 208 

wide. 
IV, wild and open to the air . . Dying Swan 2 
So royal-rich and w.' . . Pal. of Art 20, 191 
Look up thro' night : the world is w Two Voices 24 
the waste «< Of that abyss, . . n . 119 

711 in soul and bold of tongue, . " . 124 

stalls are void, the doors are to, . Sir Galahad 31 
the suns arc many, the world is -*• Maud, I. iv. 45 

wide-dispread. 
locks not w-d, .... Isabel . . 5 

wide-mouthed. 
The little w-m heads upon the spout Godiva . 56 

widened. 
And the thoughts of men are to . Locksley H. 133 

widening. 
ever to slowly silence all. . . Vivien . 242 

wider. 

The bounds of freedom to yet . To the Queen 32 

widow, 

but there were 7u's here, Two w's Princess, i. 126 
his w, Miriam I.ane, With daily- 
dwindling profits . . . En. Arden . 696 
smile That makes the w lean . Sea Dreams 152 

widowed. 
to of the power in his eye . . M.d' Arthur 122 
My heart, tho' TO, may not rest InMem. lxxxiv. 1 1 3 

widower. 

Tears of the w, when he sees . In j'fem. xiii. 1 

widowhood. 
Cod, that help'd her in her to. . Dora . .111 

width. 
Apart by all the chamber's w, .Enid . 11 14 

ee man and wife ) 
In her as Mother, IV, and Queen ; To the Queen 28 
The queen of marriage, a most perfect w. / J( 
Pray, Alice, pray, my darling w . Miller's D. 23 
True w. Round my true heart . 11 . 215 

fairest and most loving 70 in Greece QZnone . 183 
why fairest w? am I not fair? . >r . 192 

The grand old gardener and his wL.C.V.de Vere 51 
cannot tell — I might have been his to; MayQueru.Ui.47 
dream of Father-land Of child and to Lotos- i. 
the last embraces of our wives . 11 .115 

I knew an old to lean and poor, . Tlie Goose . 1 
It stirr'd the old 7u's mettle ; . " . 16 

take her for your to ; . . . Dora . . i3 
a word with her he calls his 7U . 11 . .42 
I had been a patient to: . ■• . . 144 

his to upon the tilt, . . Walk, to the M. 33 
He left his to behind : . 11 .39 

Sit with their 7uives by fires, . S/S.Stylites 106 

Match'd with an aged to . . Ulysset . 3 
As the husband is, the :"i>: . Locksley II. 47 

more than ever to was loved . •• .64 

■ 1, to to that grim Earl. . Godiva . 12 

Who 1 rcar'd his race, Two Voices 328 

One walkVI between his to and child, n . 412 
break it. In the name of to, . Day-Dm. . 265 
Little can I give my to . . L.y Burleigh 14 

Leering at his neighbour's TO . Vision 0/ Sin 1x8 



LINE. 

flock'dat noon His tenants, ifand child, /'r:«r«j,/ 'ro 4 
We fell out, my 10 and I, •■ i. 248 

a good mother, a good 70, Worth winning 11 
had been wedded w, 1 knew mankind, 11 
My bride, My to, my life. . . .1 viL 339 

I Thou bringest the ^lor to his w, In .Mem 
jal mistress, huta 70 . . 11 Ivi 
They would but find in child and to 11 lxxxix. 7 
And of my spirit as of a w. . . 1, 1 
must be made a to ere noon . . tl Con. 
Now waiting to be made a to . .< 
rings to the yell of the trampled to Maud. I. i. 
you are all unmeet for a to . 1. iv. 

A horror on him, lest his gentle to Enid . 
if ever yet was to True to her lord, 11 
I fear that I am no true to.' . 1. 

will make her truly my true 70.' . 11 
charge you, on your duty as a to, ti 
nor told his gentle to What ail'd him .. 
say, that you were no true 7u: . 11 
kinsman left him watcher o'er his 1 
had kept him sunder'd from his w : •» 
she said, ' your love — to be your to Elaine 
there never will be to of mine.* . 11 
no,' she cried, ' I care not to be to 



3 
« 

5 7 

. 46 

108,114 

1352 
1590 

. 556 

• 9*9 

• 932 



as the village 70 who cries ' I shudder, Guinevere 56 

Mine is the shame, for I was to, . >■ 

lets the to Whom he knows false . m 

my house, and this my little 7u.' . En. Arden 

little to would weep for company, 11 

say she would be little to to both. . 11 

his to Bore him another son, . 11 

yet the to— When he was gone — . n 

all that seamen needed or their wipes " 

Pray'd for a blessing on his to and babesn 

Cast his strong arms about his droo] 

1 wish you f<>r my to. ... 11 

I believe, if you were fast my 70, . " 

beheld Mis to, his to no more, . >• 

'This miller's to' He said to Miriam n 

fiat somewhat soothed himself and 10 Aylmer's /■'. 26 

His to a faded beauty of the Baths " . 27 

To ailing to or wailing infancy . " -177 

the to, who watched his face, Paled ■■ . 731 

in the narrow gloom By to and child : 11 . 84 1 

His 70, an unknown artist's orphan Sea Dreams 2 

The gentle-hearted to Sat shuddering " , -9 

silenced by that silence lay the to, 11 . 46 

Not fearful : fair,' Said the good to <t 

said the kindly to to comfort him, " . 136 

And Willy's to has written : . Grandmother 3,105 

Never the 70 for Willy. . 11 .4 

not since I had been a re ; . . 11 

The sweet little 70 of the singer said, The Islet . 



118 

510 
28 
34 
36 

10S 



«31 

227 
4°7 
411 
760 
80? 



/'/':<■ / 'ictim 



Me the w of rich Prasulagus 

King is happy In child and w 

O answer) Or I, the 70. 

O to, what use to answer now ? 

Suddenly from him brake the to. 

We give them the to.' ' 

Take my love and be my w. 

to/A 
perfect to and pure lowhhead 

wife-hunting. 
W-k, as the rumour ran . . Aylmer's F. 212 

wifeless, 

now a lonely man //'and heirless Elaine 



■ 
3 

4 

!■-■ 
•> 
75 

. 'The Window 129 
.' . . 12 



7rifelike. 
W, her hand in one of his 



Aylmer's F. 808 



wild (adj.) 

wide and to the waste enormous marsh Ode to Mem. 101 
The plain was grassy, to and bare Dying Swim 1 
I have been TO and wayward . May Quel 

nor let your grief be s" 1 . . •• 

And in the chase grew to . . Tali 

but I kno7v my words are to : i - 1- 1 

aught of fairy lore , . /',/• 
But it is to aiid barrel Arm/hum 



460 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE, | 

Lilfa, w with sport, . . Princess, Pro. 100 i 
All iv to found an University . n 1. 149 I 

Deep as first love, and w with all regret 11 iv. 39 ! 
on nb and cheek They made him w if v. 3321 

/;/ Mem., lxxi. 17 I 



"57 
1 1 60 1 

709 
1014 1 
3°3 j 
558 | 
61 



As wan, as chill, as iv as now 
loss of whom has turn'd me w — . Enid 
I call mine own self iv, tr 

There was nothing w or strange, . Vivien 
in a fiery dawning iv with wind . Elaine 
know his babes were running iv . En. Arden 
helpless life so it that it was tame. n 

Whispering I knew not what of iv Tithouus 

wild fs.) 
flight from out your bookless ivs . Princess, ii. 42 
you young savage of the Northern tv / 11 iii. 230 

across the iv That no man knows. 11 vii. 341 

Till from the garden and the iv . In Mem. c. 17 
My yet young life in the w'sof Time Maud, I, xvi. 21 
then he cried again, * To the ivs V Enid . . S77 
meadow gemlike chased In the brown 70,11 . 1048 

"lived alone in a great iv on grass , Vivien . 471 

Went back to his old iv, " . 499 

The King was hunting in the iv ; . The Victim 31 
King returned from out the iv n -43 

ivildbeast. 
felt the blind iv of force , . Princess, v. 256 

wild-bird. 
From thegroveswithinThe-zv-^'sdin. Poet's Mind 21 

wilderness. 

vines, and blowing bosks of iv . Princess, i. no 

w, full of wolves, where he used to lie Maud, II. v. 54 

In brambly iv'es ; .... The Brook . 179 

I will ride forth into the w ; . . Enid . . 127 

And iv'es, perilous paths, they rode ti . 881 
Here in the heart of waste and w 



Aylmer's F. 437 

tr . 649 

. Boaditea . 15 

. Coquette, i. 12 

. Lucretius . 201 

. Princess, v. 431 



That w of single instances, . 
The iv shall blossom as the rose, 
wolf and wolfkin, from the iv 
And Fancy watches in the iv 
hide them, milhon-myrtled iv, 

wildfire. 
Be dazzled by the w Love . 

wild-flower. 

Plucking the harmless w-fon the hill? Maud, II. i. 3 j 

iv 1 Idly -sculptu red. 
past beneath the iv-s gates . . Elaine . 840 

ivildness. \ 

His w, and the chances of the dark Princess, iv. 225 

ivild-swan. 
made the w-s pause in her cloud, . Poefs Song . 7 
The leader w in among the stars . Princess, iv. 414 

ivildweed -flower. 
The zo/that simply blows ? . . Day-Dm. . 202 

Wild Will. 
IV W, Black Bess, Tantivy, . The Brook . 160 

wile. 

iu the length from languorous hours, Princess, vii. 48 

wilful. 
To make her thrice as iv as before.' Elaine 
you call me iv and the fault Is yours ff 
being so very w you must go.' . 11 
' being so very w you must die . if 

wiliest 
of her court The w and the worst ; Guinevere . 

will fs. ) 
Broad-based upon her people's iv, To the Queen 35 
The marvel of the everlasting iv, . The Poet . 7 
Chasing itself at its own wild iv, 
full-grown w, Circled thro' all 
and yet His iv be done ! 
that I could not bend One w 
I subdued me to my father's iv ; 
Let her w Be done — to weep 



. 206 
. 746 
773-7 
• 779 

30 



. Dying Swan 17 
. CEnone 162 

. MayQueen,'ni 10 
. D.o/F.Wom. 138 
. 234 
. ToJ.S. . 43 



POEM. LINE. 

power in his eye That bow'd the iv M. d 'Arthur 123 
Dora felt her uncle's iv in all, . Dora . . 5 
homeisnoneofyours. MyTt'islaw.' if . . 43 
more from ignorance than w Walk.iothe M. 10c 
needs for life is possible to iv~ Love and Duty 83 
strong in w To strive, to seek, . Ulysses K . 69 
his eyes, before they had their w, Godiva . 69 
Sick art thou— a divided iv . Two Voices 106 

A virgin heart in work and w. . Sir Galahad 24 
Against her father's and mother's iv: Ed Gray . 10 
Used all her fiery iv, and smote . Will Water, in 
laidaboutthem at their w's and died Princess, Pro. 31 
But then she had arc; . . . if i. 47 

O that iron iv, That axelike edge 11 ii. 185 

babes To be dandled, no, but living w's tf iv. 129 

'sdeath ! against my fathers iv' . n v. 288 

her it Bred iv in me to overcome it 11 . 340 

since my w Seal'd not the bond — m . 3S8 

Her iron w was broken in her mind; if vi. 102 

you the Victor of your iv. if . 151 

Purpose in purpose, iv in iv . . n vii. 287 

Our ivs are ours [ rep. ) . InMem.Pro. 15 

My iv is bondsman to the dark ; . u iv. 2 

With morning wakes the w, and cries,u . 15 

That I could wing my iv with might m xl. 10 

To riper growth the mind and w : it xli. 8 

pangs of nature, sins of iv, . . 11 llii. 3 

Till all at once beyond the w . u Ixix. 13 

The sense of human w demands . n Ixxxiv. 39 
desire That spurs an imitative w . 11 cix. 20 

living w that shalt endure . n exxx. 1 
Whose gentler has changed my fate Maud, I.xviii.23 
For shall not Maud have her iv ? . 11 xix. 84 
(If I read her sweet aright) . it xxi. 10 
Void of the little livings . . 11 II. ii. 14 
However weary, a spark of w 11 -5*5 
Make and break, and work their iv; Odeo?i Well. 261 
well for him whose w is strong ? . Will . . 1 
the strength of heaven-descended W,u . .11 

1 compel all creatures to my iv. . Enid . 1477, 1521 
and the wine will change your iv. if . 1511 . 
grace and iv to pick the vicious quitchn . 1751 
Fixt in her w, and so the seasons went Vivien . 44 
Without the iv to lift their eyes . if . . 685 
fault Is yours who let me have my w, Elaine . 747 
that I make My iv of yours, . if . 912 
I said ' Now shall I have myw ;' n 1041 
mine now to work my w — . . n 1225 
Annie fought against his w: . . En. Arden . 158 
grieving held his iv, and bore it thro' 11 . 167 
her sad w no less to chime with his, n . 247 
from a living source within the w, fi . 802 
But I wish'd it had been God's iv, Grand?nother 73 
strong Hours indignant work'd their iv 's, Tiiho7ius 18 
Thither at their iv they haled . Boadicea . 55 
With one wide iv that closes thine On a Mourner 20 
vast and filthy hands upon my w, Lucretius . 217 
Dash them anew together at her w 11 . 243 

will (verb. ) 
A man may speak the thing he 11; ' You ask me, why 8 
yet mv father w's not war : . . Princess, v. 267 
and what I w I can :' . . . Elaine . 913 

not without She w's it : . . if 1412 

will be. 
was, and is, and w h, are but is ; . Princess, iii. 307 

will'd. 
words had issue other than she w. Vivien . 655 

would I, if she iv it? nay. Who knows? Elaine 1412 
set his hand To do the thing he w, En. Arden . 294 
might not Averill, had he iv it so . Aylmer's E. 46 

William. 
W and Dora. W was his son . Dora 

yearn'd towards W ; but the youth 11 

But W answer'd short ; . . if 

Consider, W : take a month . i» . 27 

W answer'd madly ; bit his lips, . 11 . .31 

there was born a boy To W ; . » . . 47 

at last a fever seized On W, • » . • S3 



T£XJVYSO.\"S WORKS. 



A I 



POEM. LINE. 

evil came on IV at the first. . . Dora . . 59 

answer'd softly 'This is IVs child !' 11 .88 

work for IVs child, until he grows -i . . 124 

for myself. Or IV, or this child ; »• 139 

when IK died, he died at peace . " . , 141 

sobb'd o'er IVs child, Thinking of IV 11 . . 163 

„ willing. 

Thou, iv me to stay, . . . Madeline . 37 

Nor iv men should come among us Princess, ill. 301 

iv she should keep Court-favour . " vii, 42 

Wroth at himself: not iv to be known, Elaine . 160 

ivtiltngly. 
' Yea, iv,' replied the youth ; . Enid . 1056 

IVlllolV. 

One ii< over the river wept . , Dying Swan 14 

W s whiten, aspens quiver, . E.o/Shalott,i. 10 

Beneath a w left afloat . . 11 iv. 7 
Shrank one sick iv sere and small Mariana in theS.53 

There by the humpback'd iv; Walk. to the M. 23 

The shock-head iv's two and two . Amphion . 39 

racing oars Among the iv's : InMeiu ]xxx\i. 11 

ivilloiv-brauches. 

the to-/' hoar and dank . . . Dying Sivan 37 

Willows. 

dailins Katie IV, his one child 1 The Brook . 67 
James IV, of one name and heart with her " . 76 
what surname?' 'IV.' ' No ! ' . 11 . 212 

willcnu-veiled. 
Ey the margin, w-v, . . . L.o/Shalotl,\ 19 

ivilloiv-iveed. 
set With iv-iv and mallow . . The Crock . tfi 

Willy. 

And W, my eldest-born, is gone Grandmother, 1,9,87 
And IVs wife has written : . . " 3, 105 

Never the wife for IV . . . 11 .4 

and IV, you say, is gone. . . " .8 

foi IV stood like a rock ; n .10 

J cannot weep lor IV, ... » ly, 67 

And IV had not been down to the farm " . 33 

IV,— he didn't see me, — . . 11 . 4 2 

IV stood up like a man . . " .45 

' Marry you, Wl' said I " • 33 

So IV and 1 were wedded : . . " -57 

So W has gone, my beauty " . 101 

But how can 1 weep for IV . . " . 102 

ivttt thou. 
'if /'answer 'd,andagain'l he ivt'a±\C<\lnMe»i.Co>i.ss, 

wimple. 
From beneath her gathcr'd iu . Lilian . 14 

iv in. 
Woo me, and iv me, and marry mc The Mermaid 46 
To rv his love I lay in wait: . . The Sisters . 11 
Of mc you shall not iv renown : L. C. V.de I'ere 2 
The warmth it thence shall iv . Talking O. . 234 
Which did io my heart from mc ! ' L. oj Burleigh £4 
and he you The Prince to iv her ! J'riucess,J'io. 220 
' Follow, lollow, thou shalt iv{v. 461) 11 i. 99 

partly that I hoped to iv you back " iv 285 

w's, tho* dash'd with death . . " v. 157 
we fail, And if we iv, wc fail : . " . 313 

IV you the hearts of women ; . 11 vi. 155 

verily I think tow.' ..." . 309 

That out of words a comfort iv ; . In Mem. xx 10 
past will always w A glory . . 11 XXIV. 1 r 

could not iv An answer from my lips >i cii, 49 

And the titmouse hope to iv her . Maud, I. xx. 29 
r, Ottoman, which shall 11/; ToF.D Maurice^j 
seems my spurs arc yet to iv . . Enid . .1 
nor will you iv him back, u 1181 

Vivien had not done to w his trust Vivien . 712 
IV I by this kiss you will : . . Elaine . is2 

iv and return.' 11 . 158 

for it, and w, and bring it . •• . 204 

W shall I not, but do my beat to w l » . 221 

And yOU shall :v this diamond . .i , 227 

1 u w hil honour and to make his namc/i 1353 



where two fight The strongest iv's A) liner's . 
iv all eyes with all accomplishment Coquette, li. 4 
roughly men may woo thee, so they wEucretu.. 
That she but meant to iv him back 11 

it line. 
You should have seen him iv Walk, to the M. t j 

Hand (s.) 
Cold iv's woke the gray-eyed morn Mariana . 31 
the shrill iv's were up and away . m . =0 

wild iv's bound within their cell, . .1 . =4 

to the wooing iv aloof ... n 

unwoo'd of summer iv:. . . Arabian .V 
The dew-impearled iv's of dawn . Ode to Mem. 14 
in the rudest iv Never grow sere . 11 . 94 

From brawling storms. From weary iv 11 . hi 

Lovest thou the doleful iv . . Adeline . j, 
iir"i Blew his own praises in his eyes A Character 21 
the iv's which bore Them earthwaid The Pott 17 

Bright as light, and clear as iv . Pott's Mind 7 
Ever the weary iv went on, . . Dying Sican 9 
shook the wave as the iv did sigh ; u . 1 3 

Above in the iv was the swallow, . 11 . 16 

IV's were blowing, waters flowing, Oriana . 14 
Norland iv's pipe down the sea, ... .91 

amorous, odorous iv breathes low Elcanore . 123 
iii the pauses of the iv, . . . Miller's D. 122 
whirl like leaves in roaring iv. . Fat una . j 
The iv sounds like a silver wire, . <■ . 2} 

foam-bow brightens When the :v blows LT.none . (1 
a iv arose And overhead . 11 , 90 

The iv is blowing in turret and ticc. The Sisters 3 
And hoary to the iv . . . Pal. if Art Eo 
and the ;v began to roll . . May Queeii,\\\.iy 

a swell of music on the iv . . " <2-G 

With iv's upon the branch, . . Lotm-E's. . 7/ 
re and wave and oar 1 n . 172 

Bluster the iv's and tides . . D.oJ F.IVom. 18 
Whirl'd by the iv, had roll'd mc deep n . 1 1 1 

winter w's are wearily sighing D.oJtheO. t'ear 2 
lhe iv, that beats the mountain, blows Jo J. S. 1 
Death is blown in every st;' . u . 46 

from the har bour-mcuth, Wild iv< 'Youasktne,ivhy' 26 
Came rolling on the a/. ' OJ oUtiai Freedom,' etc. 8 
knowledgccirclewith the iv's ; 'Loiethou thy land'n 
>oul Of Discoid race the using w; >• . (3 

A iv to pufl your idol-liies, . . " . 6q 

wild w rang {torn park and plain, The Goose . 45 
like a iv, that shrills All night . M.d' Arthur 201 
Nor ever iv blows loudly; . . •• . 261 

a broad and equal-blowing it; . Gardener'sD. 76 
one long stream ot sighing iv, . 11 

she was sharper than an eastern iv, Audley Ct. 52 
soft iv blowing over meadowy holms Ed. mm 
Rain, if, frost, heat, hail . . StS.Stylll 
Till that wild iv made work . . Talking O. 5t 
I swear, by leaf, and iv, and rain, •• . 8t 

A light iv chased her on the wing >• . 125 

light as any -.v that b'ows ■• . 129 

and the iv's are laid with sound . Locksley 11. 104 
For the mighty w arises, •■ - 194 

As iv's from all the compass shift Grdi-.a . 35 
low iv hardly breath'd for tear . m 
I ho' thou wert scatter'd to the w, Two Voices 32 
He sows himself on every w . •■ . 294 

many a merry w was borne . . Day-Pin. . 178 
I iappy w's upon her play'd, Str L.anetQ.G. 38 
There let the iv sweep ' Cometui, ivhen, etc. s 
light iv blew from the gates of the sun, Feet's Seng 3 
Like linnets 111 the pauses of the Wl Frwiesi,Fro.3$ 
therewithal an answer vague as wl n i. 44 

i ii KM 1 1 1 ■ 1 o i!.' S uih, m . 96 

like a wrinkling to On glassy water " . 114 

She rose upon aw of prophecy . •• 
W of the western sea, . . ■ m • ■; 7 

fretful as the W Pent in a crevice. t. iii 

Upon the level in little puRs of n>, " . 
blowzed with health, and "'■. and rain, n . 260 

when a light w wakes A lisping . n 
hate to hear me like a fo . . 11 
langc above lllc legion of the iv, . 11 Con. 11.1 



462 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM, LINE. 

A flower beat with rain and w, . In Mem.v'm 15 
Sleep, gentle w's, as he sleeps now 11 ix. 15 

To-night the w's begin to rise, . 11 xv. 1 

Kach voice four changes on the w. 11 xxviii. g 
the w's were in the beech : . .11 xxx. 9 

blame not thou the w's that make it xlviii. 10 
No wing of to the region swept, . 11 lxxvii. 6 
All to's that roam the twilight came m lxxviii. 11 
every pulse ot tv and wave . . 11 lxxxiv. 73 
L hear a tv Of memory murmuring k xci. 7 

the tv began to sweep A music . it cii. 53 

Nor feed with sighs a passing w : 11 cvii. 4 

the tu like a broken worldling wail'd, Maud, Li. 11 
in a wintry w by a ghastly glimmer 11 hi. 13 
shake its threaded tears in the tu w Ill.vi. 28 

and the war roll down like a w 11 • 54 

four-square to all the w's that blew ! Ode on Well. 39 
scatter'd all they had to all the w's • Enid . . 635 
A storm was coming, but the zv's were still Vivien z 
Drave with a sudden ze across the deeps it . 50 
Thro' the dim land against a rushing tv, t» . 275 
gust of w PufT'd out his torch 11 . 580 

plumes driven backward by the w they Elaine . 479 
and went To all the tv's ? , ir 655 

and the moanings of the w. . 11 097 

in a fiery dawning wild with w . " 1014 

sharp w that ruffles all day long . Guinevere . 51 
in the cold tv that foreruns the morn, tr . 131 

in a w, ready to break and fly ir . 363 

follow'd calms, and then tv's variable En Arden 54.1 
blown bv baffling w's Like the Good Fortune, ir . 629 
fancy fled before the lazy tv . it 658 

the tu blew ; The rain of heaven . Aylmer's F. 427 
o'er those lazy limits down the tv 11 . 495 

Yell'd as when the w's of winter . Bnddicea 77 

the tvs from offthe nlain Roll'd the rich Spec of Iliad j 
when all the w's are laid . n . 12 

And the tv did blow : The Captain 34 

w's were roaring and blowing ; . i8^q-i8fi6 . 3 
creeps a cloud, or moves a tv . Lucretius . 10?. 
the tv's are up in the morning 'reD ) The Window 5 I 
tvs and liehts and shadows that cannot 11 , 7 

wet west tv and the world will goon !rep l»i in 

The w and the wet. the w and the wel ! m .118 

Wet west tv how vou blow, vou blow! ii . 119 

W's are loud and vou are dumb , " . 124. 

W's are loud and tv's will pass ! . u . 127 

wind (verb.) 

W's all the vale in rosy folds . Miller's D. 242 
More close and close his footsteps w: Day-Din. . T25 j 
w And double in and out the boles, Princess, iv. 242 
Still onward w's the drearv wav ; In Mem xxvi. 1 
w's their curls about his hand : , u lxv. 12 

It liehtlv tv's and steals . . Maud, IT. iv. 18 

I tv about, and in and out . . The Brook . 55 

Where yon dark vallevs tv forlorn On a Mourner 22 

wind-kover. 
as long As the w-k hangs in balance Ayhner's F. 321 

winding. 
From the river w clearly, . . . E.ofShalott, i. 31 
JFdown to Camelot ... 11 it. 14 

a full-fed river w slow . , . Pal. of Art 73 
paused About the 71/ .s of the marge Ed Morris 94 
Low voluptuous music w trembled Vision of Sin 17 
glided tv under ranks Of iris . In Mem cii. 23 

tv under woodbine bowers, . . The Brook . 88 

window. 
The fourscore l&s all alight . . Arabia?iN's.t22 
Leaving doors and tv's wide : . Deserted H. 3 
In the tv's is no light ; ... 11 .6 

Or thro* the ids we shall see . " .10 

the deep-set tv's, stain'd and traced, Pal of Art 49 
formsthatpass'dat Tu'-rand on roofs D ofF. Worn. 23 
Reveal'd their shining w's: . . Gardener 1 'sD. 215 
door shut, and tv barr'd. . . Godiva . 41 
so To the open w moved . . Princess, iv 471 
were laid On the hasp of the w. . Maud, I. xiv. 19 
The giant tvs' blazon'd fires . The Daisy . 58 

Sawfromhis w's nothing save his own Ayhner's F. 21 



POEM. LINE. 

Clasp her w, trail and twine, . The Window 22 

Blaze upon her tv, sun, 11 . 176 

window-Bars. 

it came, and close beside the vj-b . Mr.yQueen,m. 39 

window-fane. 

the brook, or a pool, or her w-p . The Window 4 

down to the w-p of my dear . . 11 . 17 

And never 3 glimpse of her w~p . n . 108 

wind-scatter' d. 

w-s over sails and masts, . . D.ofF.Wom. 31 

wine. 
Across the walnuts and the tv — . Miller's D. 32 
little dues of wheat, and w and oil; Lotos-E's. . 167 
think not they are glazed with w . Locksley H. 51 
and as water unto tv — 11 . 152 

beaker brimm'd with noble tv. . Day-Din . 56 
dips Her laurel in the tv . . Will Water. 18 
Sipt tv from silver, praising God . » . 127 

By heaps of gourds, and skins of w, Vision of Sin 13 
Bring me spices, bring me tv; . 11 . 76 

W is good for shnvell'd lips . . n -79 

Let me loose thy tongue with w: 11 . 88 

At tv, in clubs, of art, of politics . Princess, Pro. 160 
plied him with his richest to's, . 11 i. 172 

lay at w with Lar and Lucumo ; . tr ii. 113 

Fruit, blossom, viand, amber w t . 11 iv. 17 

not a death's-head at the it'.' . tf . 6q 

had our tv and chess beneath the planes •* vi. 229 

dear to me as sacred tv . . In Mem. xxxvii. 19 
well, indeed, when warm with tv . u lxxxix. 9 
fetch the tv, Arrange the board . 11 cvi. 15 

yes ! — but a company forges the w. Maud, L i. 36 
I fear, the new strong w of love . n vi. 82 

Betroth'd us over their w, " xix. 39 

he left his w and horses and play if . 74 

In babble and revel and w. . . it xxii. 28 
vassals of w and anger and lust . 11 II. i. 4.3 
B-jthonest talk and wholesome w, ToF.D.MauricetZ 
to the town and buv us flesh and w; Enid . . 372 
means of goodly welcome flesh and w. t? . . 387 
now the w made summer in his veins, 11 . . 398 
wholly given to brawls and tv, if 441 

cried Geraint for w and goodly cheer v . 11 32 

And tv and food were brought, . 11 . 1138 

tv and free companions kindled him ti . 1142 

vanish friendships only made in w. n . 1328 

for flesh and 7x- to feed his spears . if . 1449 

fill'd a horn with tv and held it to her) 11 . 1507" 

and the w will change your will. . if . 151 1 

I will not look at tv until I die. . 11 . 1515 

touch d fierce w, nor tasted flesh, . Vivien . 477 
with knife in meat and w in horn n . 544 

once in life was rluster'd with new w ?i . 606 

straddling on the butts While the w ran. Guinevere26j 
Charier of sleep, and tv, and exercise A ylmers F. 448 
Warm d with his to's or taking pride 11 . 554 

Sat at his table : drank his costly to's ; Sea Dreams 74 
and honey hearted w And bread . Spec: of Iliad 5 

wine-flask. 
The 7t/-/lying couch'd in moss /»^>/«.lxxxviii 44 

wine-heated. 

Moist as they were, w-h from the feast , Enid 1200 

wing (s } 
What they say betwixt their w's? Adeline . 29 
Droops both his tvs, regarding thee, Eleanore . 119 
fold our w's, And cease from wanderings, Lotos-E's 64 
That claps his w's at dawn . . D.ofF.Wom, 1S0 

wild hearts and feeble w's 'Love thou thy land,' etc 11 
a summer home of murmurous w's Gardener's D. 47 
stole with folded w's. Distilling odours n . 182 

While the prime swallow dips his w , Ed Morris 145 
dull chrysalis Cracks into shining ws,St S. Stylitesi 54 
A light wind chased her on the w, Talking O . 125 
He dried his w's ; like gauze they grew Two Voices 13 
Heie sits he shaping w's to fly. . 11 . 289 

On sleeping w's they sail . . Sir Galahad 44 
W's flutter, voices hover clear : . if .78 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



4»j 



POEM. LINE. 

Thu' fortune clip my w's, . . Will Water. 50 
He rode a horse with w's, . . Vision of Sin 3 
a woman-statue rose with iv's . Princess, i. 207 
Spread thy full vis, and waft him o'er, hi Mem ix. 4 
'Ih-: wild pulsation of her ui 's ; . 11 xii. 4 

My fancies time to rise on to, . 11 xiii. 17 

that dip Their vfs in tears. . . 11 xlvii. 16 

Self-balanced on a lightsome to: . 11 Ixiv. S 

Take to\ of fancy, and ascend t. lxxv. 1 

Take w's of foresight ; lighten thro' 
Is > vr of wind the region swept, . 
Of eagle's to, or insect's eye 
The love that rose on stronger w's 



LINE. 
OUe tj Mem. 1 j 



wiutertide. 
in to shall star The black eartii 

wire. 
The wind sounds like a silver w, . Fathna . -•) 
;rot in his gdded -us. . Day-Dm. '. 36 
A man with knobs and it's and vials Princess, /' 
Lp thro' gilt to'i a crafty lovi 1 , 1J0 

wirer. 

The nightly to of their innocent hare Aylnter'sF.^jo 

wisdom 

I raiment's hem was traced in llame W, Tlie Poet 46 

I wisdom-bred And throned of w . (Enone 123 

1 \\ ere to in the scorn of consequence .. 

wheel'd on Europe-shadowing w's OdeonWelL^ j Sw^^.w H^^' '/Artzi, 

■.ed in her ivy, . . .Enid. . <x& ■ t. f °' a t ? ousan . d 5 «rs OJ old sat Fre 
a lothly plume fall'n from the to . Vivien 
w's of brooding s' 

en, 
Till the little uis are stronger 
With one waft of the w, 
you have gotten the -us of love. 



crept st long on a broken to 



11 Ixxvii. 
11 exxiiu 
11 exxvii. 
Maud,\\\. vi. 



i ne •a/ 01 a tnousand years " OJ old sat Freedom' 18 
Iromthcw . ..nowledge changed to fruit Of to. LaveandDuty ,, 

oding sheltero'er herr^JjW** .30 ™"? H L g ,f T^r" ."' " UngBri ^^ " ■ M«-3 
that the folly taking SS ' '„ . \f. 8"*"^*.* fmd *, out ■ ■ %», £**» ** 

ttle to', are stronger . Sea. Dreams 286 £>£ JSSjSS.'ttC?!?/ '■ ' •" " * '74 



77/^ Captain 72 
7'/<f Window 1 53 



w/«^ (verb.) 
Far as the wild swan w's, . Pal. 0/ Art 

1'hal 1 could to my will with might In Mem. xl. 



wingd. 

headed And to with flame . . 77/<- /W . 12 
» Her transit to the throne, . . Princess, \ v 35 3 „ 

from Ins walls and to his entry-gates Aylmer's F. .8 , K heavenly of the soul. 
winging, \ Jet me think Silence is to: 



with a gossamer, Were w to it 
I training of a child Is woman's VI. 
; in thy w make me wise 
I //'dealt with mortal powers, 
~ t 1 There must be to with great Death : 
IO Whatever to sleep with thee 
Nor let thy w make me wise 
High to holds my w less 
how much to sleeps with thee 
moving side by side With to 



What time I watch'd the swallow to Princess, iv. 71 

wink fs.) 
in a v> the false love turns to hate Vivien .701 

wink (verb.) 
ere a star can w, beheld her there Gardener's D.121 

lift behind a slowly dying fire. . Lecktley 11. 136 

W at our advent : help my prince Princess, iii. 144 

w's the gold fin in the porphyry font: " vii. io^ 

w no more in slothful overtrusL. . Ode on Well. 17c 

man at all, who knows and it's ? . Vivien . 630 

fair bride is and does, and vj's t . 11 . 631 

A lad may w, and a girl may hint, The Ringlet 17 

winked. 
last light, that lonj Had to . M d' Arthur, Ep. 2 
which for bribe had vt at wrong, . Enid . 1787 

winking 

The landscape to thro' the heat : In Mem. Ixxxviii. 16 
W his eyes, and twisted all his face Elaine 1123 

winning. 

W its way with extreme gentleness Isalel . . 23 
To all the people, to reverence. . fil.d 'Arthur 108 
If such be worth the iu now, ' You might havewon 2 
to easy grace, No doubt, for slight Princess, iv. 311 
a good wife. Worth to ; . . 1. v. 160 

winter 

A hundred TO'rsnow'd upon his breast. Pal of Art 139 

moving isles of to shock . , M.d Arthur 140 

Three to',, that my soul might grow SIS. Stylites 70 

kill Tune by the lire in to.' . . Princess, Pro.201 

Why not a summer's as a w's tale ? 11 . 204 

<""'r of abeyance all worn out, " iv. 420 

1 ill growing iv's lay me low . Ju Mem. xxxix. 30 

And every to change to spring. n hii is 

As in the v's left behind . . 1, Ixxvii. q 

eighty ids freeze with one rebuke Ode on Well. 186 

resence will be sun in w. ToF. 1). Maurice •> 

11k the blast of to, stand ; . 11 .22 

Ycll'd as when the winds of iu . Bo&dicea 

vinter-cla t. 
Tattoo'd or woaded, iv-c in skins, 

. winter-field. 

The tented icy was broken up 

Winter' 1 Tale 



lo, I clothe myself with to. 
let his iu to For ease of heart 
for all your to well know I . 
Wearing his to lightly, . 

loisdomdred. 
iv-i And throned of wisdom 



J 'rincess, v. 


44 


In Mem. Pr. 


ii XXXVI. 


s 


: 11 1. 


11 


11 cvn. 


16 


II 


-■S 


II CXI. 


1 


II CXII. 


2 


11 CX1U. 




'■ 


22 


1 


I - 


» 


i ; 


II 


741 


En. Arden . 


.1 1 


A Dedu . ■ . 



CEnone 



O silent faces of the Great and W, Pal. of Art 195 
No one can be more to than destiny. D 
Orcat Nature is more to than I : . ToJ.S. . \ 
N t yet the TOof heart would 'Lme thou thy land' ii 
' IJcto: not easily f irgiven Are those Gardener" sD .14* 
w.'cv worth The experience of the to. Ed. Sfon 
■ ..ulness, hated by the to, . Loveandi 
read his spirit blindly to, . . Two I 'oicet 287 
Therefore comes it we are w. . Vision of Sin too 
call her to, who made me w> . Princess, ii. 374 
Lady Psyche, younger, not so to, ii 

in thy wisdom make mc to. . . In Mem.t'ro. 44 
If thou wilt have me to and good. 11 Kiii. 8 

With all the circle of the w Ix! 3 

Thy likeness to the to bclnw, . „ lxxiii. 7 
She darkly feels him great and iv, ■■ .-.,_% i 74 
They sang of what is to and fj.jod 11 cii. 10 

'I is held that sorrow makes us :/■ c.-di.i. ■• 1 
Nor let thy wisdom make me to. . 11 cviii. 24 
that blind clamour made me to; . m exxiii. 18 
Were it not to if I lied from the place Maud. I 
Among the to and the bold. . . Ode on Well. 



modest, kindly, nil-accomplished, to. l>ed of U 
whether very w Or very foolish ; . /. 
'do it : be not too 1 



77 



Princess, ii. 105 
Aylmers F no 



469 

i"7.1 

06 

101 

'37 

207 
104 



are w in love Love most say least ' / r.ien 
Yet you are w who say it . . ,, 

surely you are w. But such a silence 

is more w than kind.' 11 

However to, you hardly know mc yet.' n 
' I ncvei was !■ r .v. . <• 

w t you were not 1 nee - 1 w, J .'line 
• h, you are In. \rdi • 

wholly to To lei thai handsome fellow - 1 rlmet 
Attain the 7u indifference of the :,■. .-I Dedication 8 
Yearn'd after by the wisest of the to. Lucntiut 

we are to than our sires. ' l.er.ethouth: . 
to live No .'■ than their mothers, . 



have him back \\ ho told the ' W t Princess,!' ro. 2 ji Surely 1 sliall be to in a j cor ; , En. Ard*H . 430 



464 



CONCORDANCE TO 



•Wisest. POEM. LINE. 

Yearn'd after by the w of the wise Lucretius . 263 

wish (s.) 
wheeling round The central w t . Gardener sD. 220 
let me have an answer to my w ; , Dora . . 28 
let him speak his iv. . . . StS.Styliles 142 
Old w's, ghosts of broken plans, . Will Water. 29 
wild king to force her to his w, . Princess, Pro. 37 
to close with Cyril's random w . 11 iii. 85 

led by golden, w'es, and a hope . it iv. 400 

met him on his way With w'es, . In Mem. vi. 23 
The 7t', that of the living whole . 11 liv. 1 

cries against my w for thee. . . tr lxxxix. 24 
The w too strong for words to name ; 1 1 xcii. 14 
Albeit I give no reason but my iv, Enid . . 761 
moulded by your w'es for her weal u . . 799 
I know Your w and would obey . n . 1268 

Beholding how you butt against my 7u.n . 1525 

Flatter his own w in age for love . Vivien . 41 

grant my re-reiterated w, . . n . 203 

Nor own'd a sensual iv, tr . 478 

The iv to prove him wholly hers.' 11 . 714 

Love-loyal to the least iv of the Queen Elaine . 90 
the iv most near to your true heart ; n . 910 

Lancelot saw that she withheld her W, ir . 916 

* Delay no longer, speak your iv, . if . 920 

there I woke, but still the w remain' d 11 1042 

sent him to the Queen Bearing his iv, it 1163 

Love-loyal to the least w of the Queen Guhievere 125 
the noble iv To save all earnings . En. Arden . 85 
a iv renew'd, When two years after ir . 88 

his had been, or yours : that was his iv. ir . 299 

denied his heart his dearest iv, . it . 333 

laugh'd, and yielded readily to their iv t n . 367 

silent, tho' he often look'd his iv ; . n . 479 

phantom of a iv that once could move Coquette, ii. 10 
Tell my iv to her merry blue eye . The Window 101 

wish (verb.) 
they iv to charm Pallas and Juno A Character 14 
iv that somewhere in the ruin'd folds CEnone . 217 

only iv to live till the snowdrops come May Queen ,11. 14 
I w the snow would melt . 11 . 15 

Yet something I did w to say : . To J. S. . 60 
iv to see My grandchild on my knees Dora . . 10 
Is it well to iv thee happy? — . Locksley H. 43 
I iv I were Some mighty poetess, Princess,Pro.j^i 



I w That I were some great Princess 
I could not help it, did not iv : . 1 

w'es at a dance to change The music — 
I w it Gentle as freedom ' — . . 1 

I w she had not yielded ! ' 
iv they were a whole Atlantic broad 



Con. 



*33 
3" 
566 
188 
5 
71 



To talk them o'er, to w them here In Mem. lxxxix. 11 
We w them store of happy days . 11 Con 84 

I w I could hear again . . . Maud, I. x. 53 
And iv es me to approve him . n xix. 71 

She did not w to blame him — ■ , tr xx. 5 

fill'n so low as some would w. . Enid . . J29 
for I iv the two To love each other tr . . 791 
*Didl7t> Your warning or your silence?n , . 925 
Whether you iv me victory or defeat, ir . . 929 
said Geraint, ' I iv no better fare . n . 1081 

iv still more to learn this charm . Vivien . 178 

I well could iv a cobweb for the gnat tr . 220 

Pure, as you ever w your knights to be Elaine 1366 
might I w to veil her wickedness, Guinevere . 209 



I cannot help you as I w to do 

I w you for my wife. . 

do I w~ What?— that the bush 



. En. Arden 404 
. Lucretius 



407 
202 

wish'd. 
She w me happy, but she thought Miller's D. 139 
I have w this marriage, night and day, Dora . 19 
I w myself the fair young beech . Talking O. 141 
I iv for Leonard there, . . Golden Year 4 

They iv to marry : they could rule Princess, ii. 441 
lh.it I knew him— could have w— tr iii. 190 

Because he might have iv it — . it vi. 258 

hated banter, iv for something real, if Con. 18 
I almost iv no more to wake, , In Mem. xxv'm.i^ 

how it was the thing his daughter w The Brook 140 



POEM. LINE. 

w The Prince had found her in her Enid . . 643 
I iv to give them greater minds ; . Vivien . 346 

W it had been my mother . . Elaine . 671 

to speak to you of what he iv, . En. Arden . 290 
eyes upon her Repeating all he iv 11 . 905 

I w my voice A rushing tempest . Aylmer's F. 756 
But I w it had been God's will . Graiidmotlier 73 

wishing-. 
And, tho' in silence, w joy. . . In Mem. Con. 88 

wisp. 
gilded ball Danced like aw: . Princess, Pro. 64 

w that nickers where no foot can tread, u iv. 339 
the w that gleams on Lethe . InMem.xcvn. 7 

wit, 
shrilling shafts of subtle w. ' Clear-headed friend* 13 
Alone and warming his five w's, . The Owl, i. 6-13 
The fruitful iv Cleaving, took root. The Poet . 20 
With thy shallow w : . . Poefs Mind 2 

the dalliance and the w, . . D.o/F. Worn. 147 

1 grow in worth, and w, and sense, Will Water. 41 
The tavern-hours of mighty w's . 11 _. 191 
might a man not wander from his w's Princess,\i. 417 
the wealth Of words and w, . InMem.Con.102, 
these unwitty wandering w's of mine Vivien . 196 
added, ofher?c/, A border fantasy Elaine . 10 
listen to me, If I must find you w : if . 148 
sallying w, free flashes from a height it . 644 
will you let me lose my w's ? ' . n . 748 
not lose your w's for dear Lavalne : n . 751 
put my iv s to some rough use, . n ' 1298 
Thro' which a few, by w or fortune led, Aylmer's -^.438 
him that fluster'd his poor parish w's n . 521 

witch. 

sought and found 2i.w. . . Lucretius . 15 

witch-elm. 
W-e's that counterchange the floor In Mem Ixxxvili. 1 

withdraw. 

To pass, when Life her light w's, . Two Voices 145 
Else I w favour and countenance Aylmer's F. 307 

withdrawing. 
Why the counter door to that 

withdrawn. 
Half shown, are broken and w. , 
Deep in the garden lake w . 
every morning, far iv . 
on the glimmering limit far iv 

withdrew. 
she w into the golden cloud . 
w from summer heats and state, 
IF" themselves from me and night, InMem.xziv. 18 

wither. 
W beneath the palate, . 
lest I w by despair 
And the individual w's, 
Now for me the woods may iv 
Thine own shall w in the vast 
I iv slowly in thine arms, 

'wither d. 
parch'd and w, deaf and blind, 
My suit had iv, nipt to death by him Ed. Morris 101 
Are w in the thorny close, . . Day- Dm. . in 

withheld. 
Lancelot saw that she w her wish, Elaine . 916 

withhold. 
a prudence too/ . . . . Isabel . . 15 

withholding: 
Apart from place, w time . . Arabian N*s. 75 

withstand. 
caught By that you swore to iv? . Maud, I. vi. 80 
Frail, but of force to w, . . ir II. ii. 24 

witness (s. ) 
Bear w, if I could have found a way St S. Stylites 54 
(thou wilt bear w here) . 11 127 



Aylmer's F. 282 

Two Voices 306 

Day-Dm. . 32 

, Vision of Sin 48 

11 . 223 

, CEnone . 187 
Princess, vi. 228 



D.ofF.Wom. 2S7 
Locksley H. 98 
n . 142 

if . 190 

In Mem.lxxv. 11 
Tit /tonus . 6 

Fatima 



7-SNN YSOX 'S WORK'S. 



465 



■witness (verb.) poem. line. 
Yes, as your meanings w, . . Aylmer's F. 749 

wizard. 

Some figure like a w's pentagram The Brook . 103 

The people call'd him IV '; . . Vivien . 26 

find a w who might teach the King 11 . 433 

but did they find A w f 11 . 463 

The gentle w cast a shielding arm. 11 . 757 

pale blood of the to at her touch . 11 . 798 

woaded. 

Tattoo'd or to, winter-clad in skins Princess, ii. 105 

woe. 
My heart is wasted with my w . Oriana . 1 
flow Beside me in my utter w, .11 .87 

The home of w without a tear Mariana in t/teS. 20 
heart may wander from us deeper w CEnone . 43 
hearing would not hear me, w is me I i. . 167 

still sheets of water, divers w's, . D. of F. Worn. 34 
That makes my only iu . „ i'-,q 

you sit between Joy and w . . Margaret '. 64 
Even with a verse your holy w. . To j. S. . 8 
A little hint to solace w, . . Two Voices 433 
To bear thro' Heaven a tale of w, In Mem. xii. 2 
standing, muffled round with w, . 11 xiv. 5 
The wild unrest that live:, in w . ,, xv. 15 

Peace : come away : the song of to 11 hi. 1 

Likewise the imaginative w, . ,, lxxxiv. 53 

And I— my harp would prelude w— 11 lxxxvii. 9 
Or, crown d with attnbutcs of w . 11 cxvii. iS 
So far, so near in w and weal ; . n cxxviii. 2 
for some dark undercurrent w Maud, I. xviii. 83 
for his house an irredeemable w; 11 II. i. 22 

As fits an universal ?r, . . . Ode on Weil. 14 
all the wealth and all the w > . Guinevere .' 342 
Proclaiming Enoch Arden and his w's En. Arden 869 
it cost me a world of a; . . Grandmot/urr 23 

woke. 
cold winds w the gray-eyed morn Mariana . 31 
She7w: thebabbleofthestrcamjV<7r;rt«rt/M//w.S\ 51 
iv, and found him settled down . Tlie Epic . 17 
with the sound I w and heard M.d Arthur, Ep. 30 
' O happy kiss, that w thy sleep ! ' Day-Dm. . 183 
Liliait/ with sudden-shrilling mirth Princess,Pro.2\q 
w Desire in me to infuse my talc . 11 v 229 

eie I w it was the point of noon, . 11 . 471 

Last I w sane, but well-nigh . 11 vii. 104 

Deep in the night I w: „ . , 5 8 

early w to feed her little ones, . n .236 

This year I slept and w with pain, InMem.xrvm. 13 
songs that w The darkness of our planet » lxxv. 9 
Enid -(. and sat beside the couch . Enkl . , je 
W and bethought her of her promise it . . 602 
//' u here he slept in the high hall m . [755 
Kc.it, till she w the sleepers, . 11 . J253 

IV the sick knight, and while he roll'd Elaine .815 
but iu with dawn, and past . . 11 . 842 

there I to, but still the wish remain'd. 11 1042 

Far cities burnt and with a cry she w Guinevere 83 
to, \\ ith his fir,t babe's first cry, . En. Arden . 84 
Here she w. Resolved, sent for him 11 .502 

He w, he rose, he spread his arms 11 .911 

a despot dream The father panting w. Aylmer'sF. 528 
till the comrade of his chambers w, u , 583 

slept, w, and went the next . . Sea Dreams iS 
wail d and w The mother, . 1, .57 

I to, I heard the clash so clearly . „ \ t \, 

mix'd with little Margaret's, and I w, 11 \ 238 

w her with a lay from fairy land . Coquette, i. ' 8 
After a tempest to upon a morn . Lttcretius -4 
scorch'd me that I w. . . . „ ,66 

wold. 
wattled folds. Upon the ridged w's Ode to Mem. Cy 
Jong dun w's arc ribb'd with snow, Oriana 
clothe the w and meet the sky ; . /.. o/Skalat't i 3 
oft in ramblings on the to, . . Miller's D. 105 
From off the w I came, and lay . ,. , , , 

yon old mill across the w's . \ ,, 

from the dry .lark w the summer airs May Queen, \\ 27 
Wore softly round the open w, . To J. S. . 2 



r- 1 j j . ' ! ■'•' UWB. 

Lalm and deep peace on this high w, IuMem vi. 5 
Or sheepwaJk up the windy w ; . ,, xcix. 8 

wolf. 
an/within thefold ! Apackof wolves! Princess.u. 173 
I hen came these wolves : . . „ } v -^i 

A .gray old w and a lean. . '. Maud.Ixiu. 28 
>> ot that gray old 7c, . . „ II. v. 53 

From the wilderness, full of wolves 11 '. s* 

three dead wolves of woman born Enid . '941 
and drew from those dead wolves ,, . '10'j 
waiting to be treated like a w . „ . tl< X 

find that it had been the w's indeed : .. \ 1712 
If the to spare me, weep my life away Vivien 734 
that darken with the gathering w, Aylmer's . 
Kite and kestrel, w and wolfkin, BoSdkea . 15 



wol/kin. 
Kite and kestrel, wolf and w. 



Boadicea 



■5 



wolfskin. 
mighty hands Lay naked on the w, Elaine . 809 

wolf's-milk. 
half the w-m curdled in their veins, Princess, vii. 115 

woman. 
my ancient love With the Greek w (Enone . 256 
This w was the cause . . . /; e fF. Worn 104 
the greatest gift A w's heart, . Gardener'sD.^s 

your sake, the w that he chose . Dora . . Ci 
betwixt you and the w there. ,11 . .' 9 ■ 
who would love? I woo'd a w once Audley Ct 
A w likea butt, and harsh as era! .1/ 4 i 

God made the w for the man Ed. Morris 43 50 91 
w's pleasure, w's pain— . . Locksley //. 149 
/(■ is the lesser man, . . . „ .151 

I will take some savage to, . . ,. 

The w of a thousand summers back, Godtva '. u 
a serving-man As any, born of w. Will II \iter. 1 52 
Shaped her heart with w's meekness L.of Burleigh 71 
' O miracle of women ' . . . Princess, i 
Half child half to as she was . n . :oi 

'lives there such a w now?' . . „ ° , ; 6 

' There arc thousands now Such women 11 .128 

the rest follow'd : and the women sang " . 236 

to live alone Among her women ; 11 i. 4 g 

w were an equal to the man. . .. . 10 

lose the child, assume The to: . 1, 17 

these the women sang ,, , 1 , a 

for miles about Was tiil'd Uy women; .. .1.0 

w's state in each, How far from just 11 ii. 115 

respect, however sli-ht. was paid To to m . 121 

that which made JFand man. . .. . 1.5 

liut w ripen'd earlier „ ' ,j| 

Plato, Vcrulam ; even so With to .. . 145 

be that for ever which I seem IV . .. . 240 

These women were too barbarous, 11 .2-8 

Feasted the to wisest then, . . .. 

when did w ever yet invent? . 11 . 3(9 

Men hated learned women . . •• . 442 

with that 7i' closeted for hours I' . 11 iij. 40 

sees herself in every w else, . . 11 .94 

well might harm The w's cause . " .lag 

lift the 7c'j fall'n divinity . . •. . 207 

what every w counts her due . 11 . 228 

women, up till this Cramp'd . 11 

mould The w to the fuller day.' . 11 . 315 

Disorderly the women ■• i 

men blowzcd with health n 

hold the w is the better man : u 

all women kick against their Lords u 

Many a famous man and w . . » 
look well too in your n/j dre^s : . n 

' S.it.in take The old women . .. v. 33 

Wc left her by the to, ... •. , , 

Man is the hunter ; w is his game : 11 . 147 

and leaps in Am men u . 1 fi 

yet I hold her. king. True w: 
The n/i garment hid the -o's heart." .• 
iron-crani|>\l tl ,, 

bawl for civil ri i.amcd: n . 378 

the w's Angel guards y u u .. . 400 

2 G 



4&6 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

man wants weight, the w takes it up Princess, v. 434 



Man for the field and-ry for the hearth : 

Man with the head and w with the heart; 

Man to command and iv to obey ; 

the iv wed is not as we, 

training of a child Is w's wisdom.' 

leaves were wet with women's tears ; 

progress falter to the w's goal 

Win you the hearts otwome?i 

One pulse that beats true w t 

the w is so hard Upon the w. 

Two iuo7Jie?i faster welded in one love 

W, whom we thought w even now, 

They glared upon the women 

aghast The wo~men stared at these 

arose The wojnen up in wild revolt 

left her iv. lovelier in her mood . 

that know The w's cause is man's : 

iv is not undevelopt man, 

man be more of w, she of man : 

what iu taught you this ? 

I loved the w: he, that doth not, . 11 

iv thro' the crust of iron moods : n 

So pray'd the men, the women : . u Con. 

The women — and perhaps they felt if 

over with a shriek Like an old w, n 

knows whether ■zt'or man be the worse Maud. I, i. 

Rich in the grace all women desire it x. 

The w cannot be believed. . . The Letters 

(And women's slander is the worst) u 

loveliest of all women upon earth . Enid 

the women who attired her head 

never yet had w such a pair . 

while the women thus rejoiced 

A splendour dear to women . 

the three dead wolves of iu born 

Call for the w of the house. . 

such craft as women use, 

A 10 weeping for her murder'd mate 1 

A tribe ofzo^w^dress'dinmany huesi 

women they, Women or what had beeni 

all the men and women in the hall 1 

men and wome?i staring and aghast 1 

ruin'd man Thro' w the first hour, . Vivie?t 

As high as w in her selfless mood m 

of Fame while w wakes to love . 11 

A sudden spurt of ws jealousy, — 11 

A w and not trusted ... 11 

as to iu 's jealousy, O why not? . 11 

All fighting for a w on the sea . n 

Were I not w, I could tell a tale. . ti 

all men true and leal, all women pure : ir 

women, worst and best, as Heaven and 11 

w's love, Save one, he not regarded-is/d:/?/* 

nevei iu yet, since man's first fall " 

man and w when they love their best u 

a love beyond all love In women 11 

' this is all w's grief That she is iv Guinevere 

A win her womanhood as great . 11 

must I leave thee, w, to thy shame. 11 

beauty such as never iv wore . ir 

could the w when he came upon her, En. Arde?i 

they say that women are so quick 11 

c W, I have a secret — only swear . 11 

c Dead, clamour'd the good iv . 11 

At which the w gave A half-incredulous u 

As the w heard, Fast flow'd the current 11 

W, disturb me not now at the last 11 

the shame The w should have borne, Aylmer's F. 

fell The w shrieking at his feet, 

Against the scarlet w and her creed :Sea Dreams 

near the light a giant w sat, 

that the zv walked upon the brink 

the w honest Work ; 

That which I ask'd the w 

men and women in dark clusters . 

The w half turn'd round from him 

But stay with the old w now : 



• 437 

• 439 

• 44o 
. 452 

• 456 

■ 23 
. in 

• 155 
. 164 

• 205 
. 236 
. 256 

■ 34i 

• 342 
. 108 
- i47 

• 2 43 

• 259 
. 264 
. 291 
. 294 

321 
7 
13 
63 
75 
13 



62 
439 

754 
808 

943 
1112 
1 201 

*37* 
1446 
1483 

1579 
1652 

213 

293 
310 

374 
380 
387 
412 
546 
643 
664 
836 
855 
865 
1286 
216 
297 
S07 
545 
342 
405 



Phantom wail of women and children Boadicea 
when the w heard his foot Return Lucretius 



And wome?is love and men's 



108 
133 
143 

219 

274 

Grand mo then o 8 

26 

5 



Tlie Window 79 



Two Voices 417 
PrincesSyPro. 48 

If v. 58 

11 vii. 258 

Maud, I. vi. 64 
Enid . .176 

Vivien . 635 

Elaine . 951 

Guinevere . 297 

Princess, ii. 192 

ti y. 277 

tr vi. 290 

n vii. 309 

Maud, I. iii. 5 



woman-built. poem. line. 
As of a new-world Babel, w-b, . Princess, iv. 466 

wo ma n -conquered, 
w-c there The bearded Victor . Princess, iii. 333 

woman-conqueror. 
many a florid maiden-cheek, The w-c; Princess^n.^-^ 

woman-grown. 
more and more, the maiden w-g, . Aylmer's F. 108 

woman-guard. 

Princess with her monstrous w-g, . Princess^ iv. 540 

womanhood. 
Wearing the rose of w. . 

miracle of noble iv !' . 
A charr'd and wrinkled piece of w, 
All that not harms distinctive w . 
Came out of her pitying w . 
with all grace Of w and queenhood 
Could call him (were it not for w) 
Beyond mine old belief in w, 
A woman in her w as great . 

womankind. 
All for the commo?i good of \v. 

1 take her for the flower of w, 
The soft and milky rabble of w, 
faith in w Beats with his blood, 

womanlike. 
W, taking revenge too deep . 

woman-markets. 
Here in the w-m of the west . Aylmer's E. 348 

woman-post. 
A w-£ in flying raiment . . Princess, iv. 357 

woman 's-heart. 
Break not, O w-h, but still endure ; Ded. of Idylls 43 

woman-slough. 

what was left of faded w-s . . Princess, v. 38 

woman-statue. 
a w-s rose with wings . . . Princess, i. 207 

woman-vested, 
w-v as I was Plunged ; . . . Princess, iv. 163 

■womb. 
To spirits folded in the w. . . Day-Dm. . 28 
Let her, that is the w and tomb of all Lucretius . 240 

won. 
A motion from the river w . . Arabian N's. 34 
w his praises night and morn? ' Mariana in the S. 34 
I w his love, I brought him home. The Sisters 14 
you have iv A tearful grace, , . Margaret . 11 
mighthave ■zt'the Poet's name, 'You might have won 1 
when your sister came she w the heart Princess, iii. 71 
Imaginations might at all be iv. ' . 11 . 257 

thus I w Your mother, a good mother 11 v. 158 

iv it with a day Blanch'd in our annals it vi. 46 

be liberal, since our rights are w . tr . 52 

Who have w her favour 1 . . Maud, I. xii. 18 
Clashed with his fiery few and iv ; Ode on Well. 100 
has w His path upward, and prevail'd, n . 213 

ever w it for the lady with him . Enid , . 490 
these two years have w it for thee, it . . 554 
noble prince who w our earldom back, tt . . 619 
tho* you w the prize of fairest fair tf . . 719 
Lancelot w the diamond of the year Elaine . 69 
them to the Queen When all were w; n . 71 

if\ went and if I fought and w it 11 . 216 

W by the mellow voice it . 243 

our knight thro' whom we iv the day. ir . 528 

with you ? iv he not your prize V 11 . 572 

knight with the red sleeve?' 'Hew.'ii . 618 

hardly w with bruise and blow, . it 1159 

what I had not w except for you . ir U75 

years of noble deeds. Until they iv her Guinevere 473 
w mysterious way Thro' the seal'd ear Aylmer's F. 695 
Priest was happy His victim w . The Victim 66 
Faint heart never w — • . . The Window 142 



TENXYSO.VIS WORKS. 



4C7 



wonder (s.) poem. line. 

when he saw the w of the hilt, . Md' Arthur 85 

* This 7t keeps the house.' . . Gardener 1 sD. 118 
?'% dead, become Mere highway LoveandDuly 10 
The w of the eagle were the less, . Golden Year 39 
all the w that would be — . Locksley H. 16, 120 
there are greater w's there.' . . Day-Dm. . 192 
' What -c, if he thinks me fair?' . 11 . 272 
"What iv I was all unwise. 11 . 273 

* It is no w.' said the lords, , . Beggar Maid 7 
and tent The w of the loom . . Princess, i. 61 
The ttfs that have come to thee, . In Mem. xl. 22 
Rapt iu the fear and in the w of it. Enid . . 529 
My daily 7t> is, I love at all. . . Vivien . 386 
What w, being jealous, that he sent " . 430 
in dry stubble a nine days' a/flared: Elaine . 731 
Becomes a w and we know not why, 11 1023 
With signs, and miracles and w's, Guinevere . 220 
Or what of signs and w's, ..h . 227 
lu's ere the coming of the Queen . 11 . 231 
wise father with his signs And w's 11 . 273 

•wonder (verb ) 
riving the spirit of man, Making earth w, The Poet 52 
while now she w's blindly, . . L.of Burleigh 53 
Will w why they came : . . Princess, ii. 410 
You w when my fancies play . InMem. lxv. 2 
there the fine Gawain will 10 at me, Elaine 1048 



I w he went so young. 



Grandmother 14 



wonder d. 
I w at the bounteous hours, 
I iv, while I paced along 
tales did men tell men, She w 
All the world iu. . 

such blows, that all the crowd IV, Enid ". 
came the line Gawain and iu at her, Elaine 



. Two Voices 451 

11 . 454 

Princess, Pro. 194 

Lt Brigade 31,52 

565 
1260 



1 71/ at her strength, and ask'd her Sea Dreams 109 

wonderful. 
in white samite, mystic, w . M.oV Arthur 31,144-59 
work of his is great and w. . . Enid . 1746 

A thousand-fold more great and w 11 . 1762 

work was neither great nor w . 11 1769 

A maid so smooth, so white, so w, Vivien . 416 

IV, Prince of peace, the Mighty God, Aylnier's F. 669 

wondering, 
w, ask'd her 'Are you from the farm The Brook 209 



wonder-stricken. 



En. Arden . 228 

Elaine . 541 
Aylnier's F. 506 



kiss'd his w-s little ones ; 

wondrous. 
His prowess was too w. 
yet her cheek Kept colour : w ! 

wont, 
iu to bind my throbbing brow, . Princess, ii. 232 
'tis her iu from night to night . 11 iii. 16 

the small king moved beyond his w 11 vi. 248 
In which we two were w to meet . InMem. viii. 10 
one wreath more for Use and IV, » xxix. 11 

When I was w to meet her . Maud, II. iv. 5 

w to hear His voice in battle, . Enid . 1023 

71/ to glance and sparkle like a gem 11 . 1143 

my w, as those, who know me, know.' Elaine 364, 474 
II wore, against his TV, upon his helm .r . 601 

Lancelot sad beyond his w, . . n 1321 

Had been, their w, a-maying . Guinevere . 24 
hildly tu and ancient use . Lucretius . 206 

wonted. 

The sound not w in a place so still Elaine . 814 

woo. 

Thee to ju to thy tuwhit (rep.) . The Owl, ii. 11 

With what voice the violet w's . Adeline . 31 
, and w me, and flatter me, The Mermaid 43 

IV me, and win me, and marry me, ir . 46 

once again to 71/ thee mine— . Miller's D. 30 

I 7c thee not with gifts . . . CEnont . 150 

many a bolder lad 'II 71/ me . . MayQueen, i 23 

Fly to her, and pipe and w her, . Princess, iv. 07 

ime to 7(/ Your Highness— 11 vi. 308 
I w your love : 1 count it crime InMcm.Xw .. 



POEM. LINE. 

One is come to w her. . . . Maud, I. xii. 28 
gold and beauty, wooing him to w Aylnier's F. 487 
I w thee roughly .... Lucretius . 268 
carest not How roughly men may w 11 . 269 

wood (forest, etc.) 
the w's that belt the gray hill-side Ode to Mem. 55 
The pale yellow w's were waning, L.cfShalott.W. a 
When after roving in the w's . Miller's D. 58 
cloisters, branch'd like mighty w's Pal. 0/ Art 26 
Lo ! in the middle of the w, . Loios-E's . 7, 

had wander'd far In an old w: . D.o/F. Wont. 54 
' Passfreely thro': the7«isall thine own, 11 . 83 

no men to govern in this w: . . h . 135 

the sombre boskage of the w, . 11 . 243 

From the evening-lighted w, . Margaret 10 

From the w's Came voices of the . Gardener's D. 87 
Like an oaken stock in winter w's Golden J V 
Now for me the w's may wither . Locksley II. 190 
The w's were fill'd so full with song, Two Voices 455 
A summer crisp with shining w's. Day-Dm. . 8 
At distance like a little w; . . 1, .62 

Summer vis, about them blowing, L. of Burleigh 19 
rose and past Thro' the wild w's . Princess, i. 90 
shrieks Of the wild w's together : " . 98 

shook the w's. And danced the colour 11 iii. 275 
when all the w's are green? . . 11 1. 

flying from the golden w's, . . 11 . 96 

Across the zt/j, and less from Indian craft 11 . 180 

With Ida, Ida, Ida, rang the w's- 11 .413 

mused on that wild morning in the w's, 11 
strikes On a w, and takes, and breaks, 11 -516 

half-open'd bell of the vis I . . 1, vi. 176 

Thatneverknew the summcrw';: JnMem.xwW. 4 
bask'd and batten'd iu the w's . 11 XXXV. 24 
I found a w with thorny boughs : n lxviii. 6 
hill and w and field did print . 11 Ixxviii. 7 
That gather in the waning w's, . ,, Ixxxiv. 72 
Thro' all the dewy-tassell'd w . 11 lxxxv. 6 
With banquet in the distant w's; 11 lxxxviii. 32 
Of rising worlds by yonder w. . 11 civ. 25 

the w which grides and clangs . 11 cvi. 1 1 

To range the w's, to roam the park 11 Con. 96 
hollow behind the little w, . . Maud, I. i. 1 
And the whole little iu where I sit ir iv. 24 

the budded peaks of the iu are bow'd " \ i. 4 

Here half-hid in the gleaming w, ■■ . ( > 

Where was Maud? in our J*; . i> xii. 5 

Iiirds in our w sang -9 

Running down to my own dark w ; 11 xiv. 30 

to the meadow and on to the w, (rep.) 11 xxii. 37 

the red-ribb'd hollow behind the w 11 II. i. 25 
Then glided out of the joyous w . 11 . 31 

all the iu stands in a mist of green The Brook . 14 
a forester of Dean, Wet from the vis, Enid . .149 

forded Usk, and gain'd the w; [61 

issued from the world of to, . 11 . 238 

first shallow shade of a deep 71', 11 , 

lurk three villains yonder in the 71', 11 . . 991 
if there were an hundred in the it; 11 . . 996 
and she drove them thro' the iu. . 11 . 1034 

keep them in the wild ways of the VI << . 1036 

thro'thegreengloomoftlietftheypastti . 1044 
sees the trapper coming thro' the iu «i . 1572 

in the wild w's of l'.roccliandc, . Vivien a, 53 

meant to cat her up in that wild w 11 . 109 

and all thro' this wild w . , i> 
current then In these wild lu's, . u 
thro' following you to this wild iu, 11 . 200 

dark w grew darker toward the storm " . 739 

dwelt among the ids By the great river l.laine 277 
happy as when we dwelt among the w's 11 1030 
while he past the dim-lit w's, . Guinevere . 249 
w here thcpnonc edge of thettf began En. Arden 67,370 
into the hollows ofthe w; . 11 .76 

To go with others, nutting to the w, 11 . 360 

c.illniL*. here anil there, ak.ut the . 380 

one dark hour Here ill this :t; 11 . 383 

merry they ire down yonder in the w. 11 . 380 

his voice beneath him thru' (he :u 11 '441 

mock sunshine of the faded w's . Aylnier's F. Cto 



468 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

The w's decay, the w's decay and fall, Tithonus i 
hills and scarlet-mingled ws , The Voyage 47 

a worm is there in the lonely iv, . The Islet . 34 
and the w's and ways Are pleasant, OnaMourner 13 
And cattle died, and deer in w, . The Victim 18 
And w's are sere .... The Window 45 
The w's are all the searer, . ti .56 

O the w's and the meadows . ti . 182 

W's where we hid from the wet, ir . 183 

wood (substance.) 

Hard w I am, and wrinkled rind, Talking O. . 171 

* Ye are green iv, see ye warp not. Princess, ii. 61 

carved himself a knightly shield of w Vivien . 323 

darted spikes and splinters of the w ir . 786 

riot underneath Strikes thro' the w Lucretius . 186 

wood. 
leaf is w from out the bud . . Lotos-E's. . 71 
he w and wed A labourer's daughter Dora . 37 
who would love? I iv a woman once, Audley Ct 51 
Drunk even when he w ; . . Enid . . 442 

'woodbine. 

iv and eglatere Drip sweeter dews A Dirge . 23 
as sweet As w s fragile hold, . Talking O . 146 

Thorns, ivies, iv, mistletoes, . Day-Din. . 63 

The iv wreaths that bind her, . Amphion . 34 
There in due time the w blows, . In Mem. civ. 7 

•wooded. 
The mountain w to the peak, 



. En. Arden . 573 



Ode to Mem. 


6, 


Miller's D 


42 


Docks ley H. 


162 


A mphion 


8 


To E. L. , 


1 


Vision of Sin 


81 


Princess, vii. 


■nb 


In Mem. xcviii. 8 


It CX IV. 


S 


Maud, I. i. 


12 


Vivien 


812 


Ayhner's F. 


847 


A Dedication 


13 


Boadicea 


38 


it 


71 


Lucretius . 


46 



•wood/and. 
The filter'd tribute of the rough w, 
In firry w's making moan ; . 
Slides the bird o'er lustrous w, 
That grows within the iv 
I lly rian ws, echoing falls Of water, 
"When the rotten iv drips, 
as the golden Autumn w reels 
And w's holy to the dead ; . 
Now rings the w loud and long, . 
the flying gold of the ruin'd w's 
left the ravaged w yet once more . 
broad w parcell'd into farms , 
in our winter w looks a flower. 
' Fear not isle of blowing w . 
Made the noise of frosty w's 
His function of the w: . 

uuoodlouse. 
The blue w and the plump dormouse The Window 51 

woodman. 
see the w lift His axe to slay - Talking O. . 235 
came, The woodmen with their axes Princess, vi. 28 

wood-nymph. 
a foot-fall, ere he saw The w-n, . Pal. of Art in 

woodpecker. 
An echo like a ghostly w, . . Princess, Pro. 211 

wood-walk. 
dark w-w's drench'd in dew, . D. o/F. Worn. 75 

woodwork. 
Fled ever thro* the iv, . . . Elaine . 439 

wooest. 

W not, nor vainly wranglest ; . Madeline . 

woof. 

Hues of the silken sheeny iv . Madeline . 22 

thro' warp and w From skirt to skirt Princess, i. 61 

wooing. 
his long iv her, Her slow consent, En. Arden . 
gold and beauty, w him to woo. Ayhner's F. 487 
All my w is done .... The Window 181 

wool. 

Like footsteps upon w . . . CEnone . 246 
needs it we should cram our ears with w Princess, xv.tf 

woost (worst.) 
And i* the w 0* toimes . . . N. Farmer 16 



word. POEM. LINE, 

and thro' with cunnings'.?. ' Clear-headed friend 7 17 
Her w's did gather thunder . . The Poet . 49 
So was their meaning to her w's tt -53 

with his w She shook the world. tt -55 

kiss sweet kisses, and speak sweet itfs Sea-Fairies 34 
Wild w's wander here and there : A Dirge . 43 
How may measur'd w's adore . Eleanore . 45 
if I waste w's now, in truth . . Miller s D. 191 
blessings which no w's can find. . it . 238 

Indeed I heard one bitter w . . L.C.V deVere-yj 
Tho' I cannot speak a iu, I shall . May Queen, 11. 39 
the clergyman, has told me 7v's of peace. 11 iii. 12 
And say to Robin a kind w . it -45 

little meaning tho' the w's are strong; Lotos-E's. . 164 
Her slow full w's sank thro' the silence/?. o/F. Worn. 121 
My w's leapt forth : ' Heaven heads 11 . 201 

all w's, tho' cull'd with choicest art tt . 285 

to flow In these w's toward you, . To f. S. . 6 
Ws weaker than your grief would tt . 65 

gentle w's are always gain: 'Love thou thy land' 23 
serve his kind in deed and w, . tt . 86 

He utterM w's of scorning . . The Goose . 42 
and lightly bring me w' (rep.) . M. d 'Arthur 38 
would have spoken, but he found not w's it . 172 
(My w's were half in earnest . Gardener'sD. 23 

w could bring the colour to my cheek ; n . 192 
m the compass of three little w's, . n . 227 

Here, then, my w's have end. . «r . 245 

Had once hard w's, and parted, . Dora . , 16 
in my time a fathers w was law, tt . .25 
a w with her he calls his wife, . ir . .42 
You knew my w was law . .11 . .96 
set the w's, and added names I knew A udley Ct 60 
in flagrante — what's the Latin w? Walk, to the M. 26 
And well his w's became him; . Ed. Morris 25 
Were not his w's delicious, . v . 71 

the w's That make a man feel strong Love and Duty^ 
measured w's, my work of yestermorn Golden Year 21 
but I know my w's are wild, . Locksley H. 173 

( These w's,' I said, ' are like the rest Two Voices 334 
The thesis which thy w's intend — it . 338 

ordered w's asunder fly. . . Day-Din. . 20 

With w's of promise in his walk, . v . 123 

The barons swore, with many w's, ir . 155 

In courteous w's return'd reply : . ti . 162 

Cruel, cruel the w's I said! . . Ed. Gray . 17 
whisper lovely w's, and use . . Will Water, n 
when the Poet's w's and looks . n . 193 

I am yours in w and in deed. . Lady Clare 74 
She was more fair than w's can say : Beggar Maid 2 
' Doubt my w again ! ' he said Princess, Pro. 174 
At those high w's, we conscious of ti ii. 53 

at these w's the snake, My secret n iii. 27 

mother went revolving on the iu) . 11 .38 

came these dreadful w's out one by one, 11 . 41 

truth at once, but with no w from me ; tt . 45 

such warbling fury thro' the w's; tt iv. 563 

(our royal iv upon it, He comes back safe)tt v. 215 

Arac's w is thrice As ours with Ida: tt . 217 

in the saddle, then burst out in w's. tt . 265 

shall have her answer by the w.' . tt . 317 

and rolling w's Oration-like. . 11 . 362 

at the happy word ' he lives' . 11 vi. 112 

one soft w and let me part forgiven.' ti . 202 

Not one w ? Not one ? . . ti . 214 

Not one w ; No ! tho' your father sues tt „ 222 

A w, but one, one little kindly w, . h . 241 

charm'd Her wounded soul with w's: 11 . 326 

Perfect music unto noble w's ; . it vii. 270 

love to cheat yourself with w's .* . tt . 314 

The w's are mostly mine : ■.» Con. 3 

Who spoke few w's and pithy * m -94- 

To put in 7v's the grief I feel , . In Mem. v. 2 
w's, like Nature, half reveal u .3 

In w's, like weeds, I'll wrap me o'er, ir . 9 

What w's&xq these have fall'n from me ?>t xvi. 1 
The w's that are not heard again. tt xviii. 20 

That out of w's a comfort win ; . tt xx. 10 

truth in closest w's shall fail, . tt xxxvi. 6 

And so the W had breath, and wrought 11 . 9 

hence, indeed, she sports withw'j, ir xlvii. 9 



TENNYSON'S WORKS. 



469 



POEM. LINE. 

My w's are only w's, and moved . Princess, h. 3 
In those sad ids I took farewell : . 11 lvii. 1 

The w's were hard to understand . n l.wiii. 20 

In fitting aptest w's to things, . 11 Ixxiv. 6 

true in to, and tried in deed, . n lxxxiv. 5 
Your w's have virtue such as draws 11 . 13 
in dear w's of human speech . 11 . 83 
The wish too strong foi w's to name ; 11 xcii. 14 
broke The silent-speaking w' s, . i> xciv. 26 
So w by to, and line by line, . " -33 
Vague w's .' but ah, how hard to frame it . 45 
if the w's were sweet and strong . 11 cxxiv. 11 
To change the bearing of a w, . 11 cxxvii. 16 
the most living w's of life . . 11 Con. 52 
the wealth Of w's and wit 11 . 103 
faith in a tradesman's ware or his w? Maud, I. i. 26 
Dare I bid her abide by her w ? . 11 xvi. 25 
given her utoa thing so low ? 11 -27 
break her w were it even for me ? . 11 . 29 
sweet soul, had hardly spoken a w, n II. i. 11 
of all his lavish waste of w's . . The Brook . 191 
in my w's were seeds of fire. . The Letters 28 
but fragments of her later w* s, . Enid . .113 
refrained From ev'n a TO, . . 11 . . 214 
None spake w except the hoary Earl u . . 369 
lift an eye nor speak a to, .11 . . 528 
w's whose echo lasts, they were so u . . 782 
that at a w (No reason given her) 11 . . 806 
not to speak to me, No not a to/' 11 . . 867 
loosed in w's of sudden fire the wrath 11 . . 955 
took the w and play'd upon it, . 11 . 1140 
speak the w : my followers ring him 11 . 1185 
speak but the w: Or speak it not ; 11 . 1191 
Low-spoken, and of so few w's . 11 . 1244 
Because she kept the letter of his w 11 . 1304 
answering not one to, she led the wayu . *344 
without a w, from his horse fell . 11 . 1357 
nonespakew, butall satdownatonce.u . 1452 
Enid could not say one tender iv, 11 . 1594 
pale, yet happy, ask'd her not a w, 11 . 1728 
in that wild wood Without one w. Vivien . 1 10 
nor gave me one poor w; . . 11 . 126 
answer'd Merlin careless of her w's. 11 . 550 
rose without a to and parted from her : n . 592 
have you no one w of loyal praise 11 . 627 
Her w's had issue other than she will'd 11 . 65s 
in ids part heard, in whispers part, 11 . 688 
with a to worse than a life of blows ! 11 . 719 
half her realm, had never spoken to. Elaine . 73 
never spake to of reproach to me, 11 . 125 
hear my w'i : go to the jousts . 11 . 137 
a king who honours his own to, . 11 . 144 

Not dften loyal to his to . 558 

without a to, Lingcr'd that other u . 716 

father's latest to humm'd in her ear, 11 . 776 

must die for want of one bold iv.' ti . 923 

when we dwell upon a w we know 11 1021 

w we know so well Becomes a wonder n 1022 

as she devised A letter, to for w ; 11 1098 

these are w's: Your beauty is your 11 1179 

grant my worship of it iV's, . 11 1182 

such sin w's. Perchance, we both 11 1182 

let my w's, the w's of one so small, Guinevere . 183 
teach high thought, and amiable ids 11 . 477 

on a broken w to thank him with En. Arden . 344 
for she did not speak a to . . 11 . 387 

1 v'n ;is she dwelt upon his latest w's » . 451 

1 spoke no iv to anyone, . 11 . 668 

Enoch hung A moment on her w's, 11 . 874 

were ic'i As meted by hismeasure Aylmer's F. 315 
Never one kindly smile, one kindly to » . 564 

how the ids Have twisted hack . 11 . 754 

his one w was ' desolate : ' i» . 836 

not a w; she shook her head. . Sen Dreams 112 
the W by which himself had thriven. 1 » 193 

D Iropt — no w was spoken— TluCaptain%\ 

Heliconian honey in living ids . Lucretiu ■ 

wore. 
many weeks about my loins I in . SIS. Sty! 
That she to when she was wed.' . L.o/Uu/. 



POEM. LINE. 

A gown of giass-green silk she w, SirL. andQ.G. 24 
avenged by sen^e that to with time.' / 'mm of Sin 214 
still 1 to her picture by my heart. Princess, i. 37 
Never morning w To evening, . In Mem. vi. 7 
I to them like a civic crown : . 11 l.wiii. 8 
In which of old I to the gown , . 11 Ixxxvi. 2 
She to the colours I approved . The Letters 16 
gay suits of armour which they w, Enid . . 944 
his the prize, who to the sleeve . Elaine . 500 
He iv, against his wont, upon his helm 11 . 6ci 

heTOyoursleeve: Would he break faith 11 . 681 

on the maid, Whose sleeve he to ; 11 . 707 

beauty such as never woman to, . Guinevere . 545 
iv A close-set robe of jasmine . Aylmer's E. 157 
I to a lilac gown ; . . . . Grandmother 57 
It to a crown of light . . . Tlie Flower 10 

work (labour, etc.) 
At his to you may hear him sob 'A spirit haurits,'elc. 5 
Now is done thy long day's to ; . A Diree . 1 
Grave mother of majestic ids, ' O/oldsat Freedom' 1 3 
And w, a joint of state, ' Love thou thy land,' etc. 47 
loved the man, and prized his to ; M.d A rthnr,Ep. 8 
"Tis not your iv, but Love's . Gardener 's JJ . 24 

Till that wild wind made iv . . TalkingO. . 54 
To that man My to shall answer. Love and Duty 29 
measured words, my 7wof yestermorn. Golden Year 21 
He works his to, I mine. . . Ulysses . 43 
Some to of noble note may yet be done, 11 -52 

A virgin heart in iv and will. . Sir Galahad 24 

Thou shalt not be saved by w's : . Vision o/Sin 91 
set our hand To this great to, . Princess, ii. 46 
Your own w marr'd : ... 11 . 212 

silver litanies, The to of Ida . 11 . 454 

how vast a w To assail this gray . u iii. 217 

That we might see our own iv out, 11 . 253 

workman and his w, That practice betters? - !! . 281 

touches on the workman and his to. tr . 305 

and known at last [my iv) . . 11 iv. 328 

understanding all the foolish to Of Fancy •< vi. 100 
Man, her last iv, whoseem'd so fair, ItiMem. Iv. 9 
I shall pass ; my iv will fail. . 11 lvi. 8 

hath not swerved To w's of weakness, 11 lxxxiv. 50 
Let her to prevaiL ... 11 cxiii. 4 

O days and hours, your iv is this, 11 cxvi. 1 

Contemplate all this to of Time, . 11 cxvii. 1 
If so he type this w of time . 11 .16 

the world's great iv is heard . . 11 cxx. 10 
the ids of the men of mind, . . Maud, I. i. 25 
Awe-stricken breaths at a to divine 11 x. 17 

Frail, but a w divine ... 11 II. ii. 4,23 
There is none that does Msto, not one:n v. 26 

The treble vfs t the vast designs . OdeonWell. 104 
Whose life was to, whose language rife 11 . 183 

Such was he : his iv is done, . 11 . 218 

There must be other nobler iv to do 11 . 256 

back turn'd, and bow'd above his to Enid . 267 

scantly time for half the w, . 1* . 288 

the w To both appearM so costly, " . . 637 
This w of his is great and wonderful 11 
w of Edyni wrought upon himself 11 . 1760 
to was neither great nor wonderful, «• 
Yet needs must work my iv . . Vivien . ^55 

They prove to him his jv: . . Flame . 158 
with all ease, so tender was the vi: " . 441 

Her own poor w, her empty labour, •• . 985 

This evil w of Lancelot and the Queen! Gnineverey>s 
Nor of what race, the to; . . Aylmtr's 

Small were his gains, and hard his to; Sea Dreams 8 

; . . '» 

break the n/j of the statuary 

appear the w of mighty Cods. J 1 
if 1 go my to is I. 11 I mini h'd . 11 . 103 

ivork literary production.) 

Botanic Treatises, And W loni rardening AtttphtoHfl 

My golden to in which I told i trull, /.//. tetius 256 

worh 1 
time and 

win hues to dim I he 1 t, Gardtnrr 

hired himself to w within the fields Dora . , *6 



470 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Mary, let me live and tv with you : Dora . . 1 13 
iv for William's child, until he grows u . . 124 
Can I w miracles and not be saved? StS. S tyliies 148 
I will w in prose and rhyme, . Talking O. . 289 

w itself Thro' madness, hated by the Love and Duty6 
unto him who ws, and feels he zt/s, Golden Year 72 
He tvs his work, I mine. . . Ulysses . 43 
]ove in sequel w's with fate, . Day-Dm. , 103 

I must tv thro' months of toil, . Amphwn . 97 
All parties w together. . . . Will Water. 56 
Embrace our aims : 7*' out your freedom Pn?icess,u. 75 
nor would we w for fame ; . 11 iii. 244 

But in the shadow will we tv, . 11 . 314 

but w no more alone ! . «r vii. 250 

tvs Without a conscience or anaim. InMem. xxxiv. 7 
To one that with us w's, . . 11 cxxx. 8 

tvs in the very means of life. . Maud, I. i. 40 

Make and break, and w their will ; Ode on Well. 261 
would tv eye dim, and finger lame, Enid . . 628 
ruth began to tv Against his anger u . . 950 
Vivien ever sought to to the charm Vivien. . 64 
iv as vassal to the larger love, . u . 341 

Yet, needs must tv my work . if . 355 

To all the foulness that they tv. . 11 . 634 

but you tv against your own desire Elaine 1090 

hers or mine, mine now to tv my will " 1225 

needs would tv for Annie to the last En.Arden 180 
Scorning an alms, to iv whereby to live ir . 813 

labour for himself, W without hope, 11 . 821 

all things tv together for the good Sea Dreams 154 

worked. 

they say then that I tv miracles, . StS. S tyliies 79 
my full heart, that tv below, . Two Voices 44 

oft he tu among the rest . . En. Arden . 652 

Rose from the clay it tv in . . Aylmers F. 170 
Strong Hours indignant tv their wills Tithonus 18 

•worker. 
Men, my brothers, men the iv's, . Locksley H. 117 

working. 
Life, that, tv strongly, binds' Love thou thy land' 34 
A labour tv to an end. . . . Two Voices 297 
jest and earnest tv side by side . Princess, iv. 541 
Or been in narrowest w shut, JnMein.xxxv. 20 
His being w in mine own, . . 11 lxxxiv. 43 
Move upward, tv out the beast . 11 cxvii. 27 
{Sea was her wrath, yet w after storm) Elai?ie 1300 
she said, ' by w in the mines :' . Sea Dreams no 

workman. 
the w and his work . . Princess, iii. 281-305 
Workmen up at the Hall ! . . Maud, I. i. 65 

tv o tkmansh i_p. 
admire Joints of cunning tv. . Vision of Sin 1S6 

Look what a lovely piece oiwl . Aylmer>s F. 237 

world. 
Tt'hath not another (Tho* all her fairest Isabel . 38 
which possess'd The darkness of the wArabianN's.72. 
the tv Like one great garden show'd T/ie Poet . 33 
with his word She shook the tv. . ir . 56 

All the w o'er, (rep.) . . . Sea-Fairies 41 
Shadows of the w appear . . L.ofShalott,ii.j2 
Roof 'd the w with doubt and fear, Eleauore . 99 
full of dealings with the w ? . . Millers D. 8 
There's somewhat in this w amiss 11 . 19 

4 while the w runs round and round,' Pal. of Art 13 
the human tale Of this wide w . 11 . 147 

et the tv have peace or wars, . 11 . 182 

breaks thro' the stillness of this w; ii . 259 

and all the tv is still. . . , May Queen, ii. 24 
girdled with the gleaming w: . Lotos-E's. . 15S 
gently comes the w to those . To J. S. . 3 

decay of faith Right thro' the w, . The Epic . 19 
knights Whereof this tv holds record iJ/. d' Arthur 16 
hath come, since the making of the tv ii . 203 

was an image of the mighty tv ; . ir . 235 

one good custom should corrupt the w u . 242 

by prayer Than this w dreams of. " . 248 

Not wholly in the busy w, . . Gardener sD. 33 
Beauty such a mistress of the w. . 11 . 57 



POEM. LINE. 

from her tendance turn'd Into the tv Gardener sD. 144 
hold From thence thro' all the w's: n . 205 

That veil'd the w with jaundice Walk, to the M. 14 
these two parties still divide the tv n .69 

never sow was higher in this w — . 11 . 88 

mimic this raw fool the w, . . ir .96 

for the good and increase oftheTf E 'd.M 'orris 44,51, 92 
powers and princes of this 7c, . StS.Stylites 184 
thisTtAs curse, — beloved but hated — Love and Duty 47 
If all the zwwere falcons, what of that? Golden Year 38 
like the second tv to us that live . ir . 56 

arch where thro' Gleams that untravell'd w Ulysses 20 
not too late to seek a newer iv. ir . 57 

Saw the Vision of the tv, . Locksley H . 16, 120 
the Federation of the tv, ti . 128 

and the tv is more and more. . ri . 142 

Let the great w spin for ever . 11 . 182 

I said 'When first the tv began. . Two Voices 16 
Look up thro' night : the tv is wide. 11 . 24 

Is cancelled in the w of sense? 1 . n -42 

present The w with some development, u . 75 

Like hints and echoes of the w . Day-Dm. , 27 
In that new w which is the old : . 11 . 168 

Thro' all the w she follow* d him. . 11 . 196 

learn the tv, and sleep again ; . 11 . 220 

The prelude to some brighter tv . u . 252 

And all the w go by them. . . Will Water. 48 
Ah yet, tho' all the w forsake, . 11 -49 

And my mockeries of the tv. . Vision of Sin 202 

Ring'd with the azure tv, he stands The Eagle . 3 
he sings of what the w will be . Poet's Song 15 
move among aw of ghosts fiv. 539} Princess, i. 17 
One rose in all the Ti', your Highness n ii. 37 

This w was once a fluid haze of light 11 . 101 

Two in the tangled business of the w, ti -357 

thoughts enrich the blood of the tv.' ii . 164 

emancipation turns Of half this w, n . 270 

A blessing on her labours for the tv. ti . 455 

whence after-hands May move the tv } 11 iii. 247 
all the hopes of half the tv, . . 1? iv. 166 

against their Lords Thro' all the tv, 11 . 394 

burst and flood the w with foam : . 11 . 453 

all the gold That veins the w . u . 522 

The wrath I nursed against the w * 11 v. 427 

move the stony bases of the tv. . 11 vi. 42 

when a w Of traitorous friend . " . 177 

tarn by tarn Expunge the w: . n vii. 26 

blacken'd all her w in secret, . 11 . 27 

I believed that in the living w . it . 142 

notice of a change in the dark w . 11 . 234 

These were the rough ways of the tv » . 241 

the wrestling thews that throw the w ; n . 266 

Then reign the ws great bridals, . 11 . 278 

in rich foreshadowings of the w, . 11 . 293 

we will walk this w . " . 339 
down rolls the tv In mock heroics n Con. 63 
fine old tv of ours is but a child . 11 . 77 
all the silent spaces of the ws, . n . 114 
help thy vain ws to bear thy light hi Mem. Pro. 32 
sunbeam strikes along the tv: . 11 xv. 8 
her arms To feel from w to tv . ir xxi. 19 
Thou fail not in a tv of sin . . n xxxiii. 15 
The total w since life began : . tt xlii. 12 
Upon the great w's altar-stairs . 11 liv. 15 
breathes a novel w, the while . " lxi. 9 
The centre of a w's desire . . pi Ixiii. j6 
So many w's, so much to do, . u Ixxii. 1 
The w which credits what is done 11 lxxiv. 15 
In whispers of the beauteous w. . it lxxviii. 12 
The deep pulsations of the tv, . n xciv. 40 
rising ws by yonder wood . . )» civ. 25 

1 would the great w grew like thee, 11 cxiii. 25 
In that which made the tv so fair m cxv. 8 
the scAs great work is heard Beginning, n cxx. 10 
1 found Him not in w or sun, . tr cxxiii. 5 
whispers to the w's of space, . n exxv. j 1 
And mingles all the w with thee. . n cxxviii. 12 
and let the w have its way : . Maud, I. iv. 21 
is a to of plunder and prey. if .24 
Who knows the ways of the tv . ti . 44 
the suns are many, the w is wide n -45 



TEJWYSO.V'S WORKS. 



I have not made the to. 



From the long-neck'd geese of the to 
If I find the to so bitter . 

then the to were not so bitter . » 

a w in which I have hardly mixt . " 

than is or ever was In our low to, » 

A 71. of trouble within ! . . " 

makes us loud in the to of the dead ; n 
a iv that loves him not, For it is 

but a to of the dead " 

another stiller iv of the dead . n 

Fairer than aught in the to beside, n 

a hope for the w in the coming wars ir 
in a weary to my one thing bright 



POEM. LINE. 

Maui/, I iv. 43 



32 

vi. 33 
38,94 
• 76 



XVlll. 

xix. 
II. v. 



III. 



in a wcaiy iv my 01. v. *■""* ~.- — - , . 

whom the strong sons of the w despise; F/te brook 3 



Ode on Well. 



in our sad a/ s best bloom 

greatest sailor since our to began 

raw w for the march of mind . " 

cither babbling iv of high or low ; i> 

Tho" to on to in myriad myriads roll n 

nor moves the loud iv's random mock Will 

All the w wonder' d . . Lt. Brigade y. <-,* 

like eclipse Darkening the to . Ded. of Idylls 



27 

96 

238 

277 

420 

598 

i*54 

952 

[334 

1497 

1748 

1749 

76 

152 

215 



vis loud whisper breaking into storm Enid 
At caitiffs and at wrongers of the to " . 

they issued from the to of wood, . 11 . 

of your bourg The murmur of the w ! 11 . 
great wave that echoes round the iv; 11 . 
Made a low splendour in the to, . « ■ 

thro' the feeble twilight of this iv . 11 . 

being he loved best in all the w, . 11 . 

fray dawn stole o'er the dewy in,. 11 . 

lenceforth ill all the iv at anything, " . 

to will not believe a man repents . " • 

wise to of ours is mainly right . 11 • 

feet, that I have follow'd thro' the 1 

sweep me from my hold upon the to 11 

to learn themselves and all the to 11 

noble deeds, the flower of all the iv 11 

I well believe that all about this iv 11 

sunn'd The w to peace again : . « 

brute to how ling forced them into bondsn 

And touching other ids . . " 

which now Is this w's hugest . Elaine 

flower of all the west and all the to 11 

Hid from the wide w's rumour . 11 

this and that other to Another to 
for the sick man ; . _ • " 

and to follow you thro' the to.' .. » 
' Nay, the w, the iv, All ear and eye, .1 
Lancelot and the Queen and all the to,., 
might she follow me thro' the iu, 11 

hold thee with my lifeagainst the to. Gu, 
together well might change the w. 11 

disloyal friend in all the to.' . " 

What knowest thou of the to, . » 

To serve as model for the mighty to, " 

in that w where all arc pure- 
Let the to be ; that is but of the iv, 
might I not have made of thy fair to, 
not to see the to— For pleasure? . En, Ard 
slipt across the summer of the re, 11 • 5 2 7 

thro' the summer iv again 11 . 53° 

h ize and whclm'd the win gray; » .673 

beating up thro' all the bitter to, . " _ . 803 

half-allowing smiles for all the to, . Aylmer s F. 120 



LINE. 

one who feels the immeasurable iv A 1 

The lucid into Lucretius 

west wind and the wvnSi e ion rep,: The Window MX 

Over the to to the cud 01 i: " • 200 

world, 

the wind like a broken to wail d, . Maud, I. i. :i 

ivorldly-ivise. 
1V-1V begetters, plagued themselves Aylmer s F. 4S2 

world 's-ea rthq uake. 
In that iv-e, Waterloo ! . .OdeonW.. 

world I 
Who will embrace me in the iv-t-b: En. 

I! orld-victor. 
The great W-v's victor . 

world-worn. 
the to-to Dante grasp'd his song . Pal. of Art 

iv&rm. 
Nothing but the small cold to 
with a to I balk'd his fame. . 
As ruthless as a baby with a to, 
every to beneath the moon . . - 
men and horses pierced with iv s . it 209 

That not a to is cloven in vain ; . In Mem. liii. 9 
whole weak race of venomous to's Maud, II. i. 46 
many rings For he had many, poor a pi u. 69 

Wroth to be wroth at such a to, . Enid . .213 
as the iv draws in the wither'd leaf " ■ 1481 

cast him as a to upon the way : . Guinevere ■ 36 
Crown thyself, to, and worship thine Aylmer* F. 650 
a to is there in the lonely wood . The Islet . 34 
for the life of the to or the lly? . J? -7 

No will push me down to the to, . The \y mdow 115 

ivorm-eanh ■r'd. 
Distill'd from some iv< homily ; . To J. M. K. C 



Ode on . 



. A Dirge . 9 

"!. i:; 

Walk, to the 

. T'.v 



489 

- 594 
11 687 

• 77 

- 249 

■ 5-'i 

. 869 

• 935 

• 936 
1101 
1306 

114 
209 

• 338 

• 34' 
. 462 

■ 559 
. 622 
. 643 



irnrm-eateH. 



■JL|--S»prppt, w-e, ruinously old, 



En. elrden . (;4 



ivonmvood. 
where the meats became A 



Elaine 



74° 



the iv should ring of him 

fain had haled him cnit into the w . " 

Against the desolations of the iv . 11 

that were left to make a purer w— i> 

blow these sacrifices thro' the to— » 

our narrow to must canvass it : . " 

left their memories a iv's curse . 11 
shuddering at the ruin of a to ; . Sea Dreamt 

.' I thought, 'To live in I n 
think that in our often-ransack d to 



7 
»3' 



//; Mem. Ixvxiii. 33 
The J 

72 

705 
- < 
,47a 



. Cm nd mother 33 
it the quiet limit of the iu . Tithonus . 7 

that dark to where I was bom . 11 • 33 

lew the merry w was round, The Vofag* 7,s>S 

Wc luved the glories of the w. ,11 .83 



worn. 

Weeded and to the ancient thatch Mariana 

hearts w out by many wars . 

took it, and have to it, like a king : M. if Arthur 33 

of writers, and indeed If-' threadbare Ed. Morris 4'» 

Or while the patch was tu; . . Talking! ■ 

Till now the dark was to, . / oveand . 

winters of abeyance all iv out, . Fnncess, 1 

Till slowly to her earthly robe, 

died at Florence, quite to out, 

Which he has to so pure of blame, Ode 01: li ell. 

H^by the feet that now were silent, Enid . 

it never yet was w, 1 trow : . . • " 

unwillingly have w My faded suit 

on his cuirass to our Lady's Head El 

iv Favour of any lady in the lists— 11 

When these have to their tokens : 

-.r rn-out. 

while the vh> clerk Brow-beats his desk ToJ.M.K. 11 

■ ned. 
(Khis passive car with petty wrongs En. Arden 349 

ever w with growing time, . 
There is confusion w than death. 
ndlesstp 

1 fear I 

hi have been to 
cold reverence W than she were dead 

nee to than death, •• '■ 

would makeConfusi XalnMem a 

,, : ,n 1 e the w. Maud, I 1. :s 

■ ■• ■ " 

' ing my sin '. 

.. ould hint at w in either, 1 n.Arden 478 
if griefs Juke his have id or better, . • 7<* 

vitrsf-ron founded. 
Dabcl, woman-built, And VH : . Pht 



F.il of Art 270 
. 128 
27 
■' 

Prtaeeu, i- 



472 



CONCORDANCE TO 



•worship fs.) 
declc'd her out For w without end 
with sweet observances And w, . 
And I will pay you w; 
sole upon my pedestal Of w — 
my loyal iu is allow' d Of all men : 
grant my iu of it Words, 
It will be to your w, as my knightj 

worship (verb.) 
here come those that w me ? 
may w me without reproach ; 
He w's your ideal : * 
And beasts themselves would iv; 
iv her by years of noble deeds 
worm, and iv thine own lusts ! — . 
w a gluttonous emperor-idiot. 

luorsh ipfn lly. 
Sir Lavaine did well and iv ; 



POEM. 


LINE. 


; Princess, 


Vll 


■ IS4 


Enid . 




49 


Vivien 




77 
728 


Elaine 




in 


it 




11S1 
1317 


StS. Sty It 


'te. 


123 
190 


Princess, 


11. 


# 


Vivien 




425 


Guinevere 




472 


Aylmer's 


K 


6 <;o 


Boddicea 




19 



Elaine 



ivorshipper. 
outlast thy Deity? Deity? nay, thy iv s Lucretius 73 

tvors hip t. 
iv their own darkness as the Highest ? Aylmer'sF.642 

worst. 
never : here I brave the w :' . Ed. Morris 118 

His iv hekept, hisbesthegave l YoU7nighthavewon'i6 
women's slander is the w), . . The Letters 34 
of her court The wiliest and the iv ; Guinevere . 30 
I hold that man the w of public foes 11 . 508 

J^ofthesfwere that manhe that reigns ! ir . 519 

deeds yet live, the w is yet to come. SeaDreams 30T 

worth (adj. and s.) 
If aught of ancient w be there . To the Queen 12 
Old letters, breathing of her W, Mariana in t/ieS. 62 
Is w a hundred coats-of-arms. L. C. V. de Vere 16 
To make him trust his modest iv, 
dust I honour and his living w : 
Is three times w them all ; . 
draws the veil from hidden iv 
I grow in iv, and wit, and sense, 
most, of sterling w, is what . 
At half thy real w ? 

song that pleased us from \tsw;' You might have won 22 
He loves me for my own true iu, . Lady Clare n 
* O Lady Clare, you shame your w ! ii . 66 

And all his worldly w for this, Sir L. andQ. G. 43 
we might make it w his while . Princess, i. 182 
two dear things are one of double iv, it ii. 397 

we should find the land W seeing ; ir iii. 156 
all men grew to rate us at our iv, tr iv. 127 

beauty in detail Made them w knowing ; it . 429 

a good wife, JK winning . ?r v. 160 

is not Ida right ? They w it ? 11 . 181 

What seem'd my w since I began I?i Mem. Pro. 34 
w my while to choose Of things all mortal 11 xxxiv. 11 
I know transplanted human w . it lxxxi. n 

Whose life, whose thoughts were little iv,n Ixxxiv. 30 
defying change To test his w ; . n xciv. 28 

scarce have spent the iv of one ! * . Enid . 1260 

It is not iu the keeping : let it go : Vivien . 246 
gross heart Would reckon w the taking n . 766 

. Elaine 



. To J. S. '. 
. Talking 0. 


46 
3° 
72 


. Day-D?n. . 
. Will Water. 


104 

41 


i> 


I7S 


n 


204 



a boon IV half her realm, 
they had been thrice their w 
its w Was being Edith's. 
Warnt w nowt a haacre, 
aught that is w the knowing ? 

worthier, 
many a iv than I, would make him May Queen, Mi. 46 
I find him iv to be loved. . . hi Mem. Pro. 40 
' Forbear : there is a w' . . Enid . . 556 

worthiest. 
of those halves You w; 
follow up the iv till he die : . 

worthy, 
w of the golden prime . . Arabian N's. 98, 142 
IV a Roman spouse . . . D.ofF. Worn. 164 
a precious thing, one w note . M. d' Arthur 89 

it will be w of the two. . . Locksley H. 92 



• 73 

n 1206 

Aylmer's F. 378 

, iV. Farmer 39 

1865-1866 . 5, 9 



Princess, iv. 442 
11 . 446 



Call'd him w to be loved 

' I am not w ev'n to speak . 

And thou art w ; full of power 

We are not w to live. . 

JV of our gorgeous rites 

w to be laid by thee ; . 

not w ev'n to speak of him ; ' 

feeling that you felt me iu trust, 

quest Assign'd to her not w of it, 

Toward one more iv of her — 

if what is w love Could bind him, 

you loved, for he was w love. 

'wound (s. ) 
then, because his iu was deep, 
I fear My w hath taken cold 
I will heal me of my grievous w 
refather'd o'er my w's. . 



POEM. LINE. 

. Pri?icess, v. 537 
InMem. xxx vii. 1 1 

11 Con. 

. Maud, II. i. 
. Ode on Well. 



37 



Efiid . 
Vivien 
Elaine 



93 
94 
199 
183 
821 



11 1310 

11 1569 

Aylmer's F. 712 

M. d' Arthur 5 
.1 . 166 

ti . 264 

. Princess y vi. 113 
- 255 I 



1362 
. 667 
• 94 
. 5i9 
. 56S 
. 566 
. 581 



37 

321 
169 



Lifting his grim head from my w's 

save her dear lord whole from any iv, Enid 

till she had lighted on his iu, . n 

cloaks the w's of loss with lies ; . Vivien 

mine ancient w is hardly whole . Elaine 

There stanch'd his w: \\ 

who has come Despite the w he spoke of, n 

added iu to w And ridd'n away to die u 

made the pretext of a hindering w 11 

tho* he call'd his w a little hurt . 11 

Like flies that haunt a w, . Aylmer's F. 571 

wound (verb.) 
as the boat-head w along . L. ofShalott,\v. 24 
Past and Present, w in one, . Miller's D. 197 

that my arms Were w about thee (Enone . 199 
her hair Zf with white roses . Pal. of Art 99 

w Her looser hair in braid, . . Gardener sD. 154 
w A scarf of orange round . . Prtncess,Pro. 101 
we w About the cliffs, the copses 11 iii. 341 

into the lists they w Timorously ; 11 vi. 68 

And mine in his was w, . hi Mem. xciv. 

w Bare to the sun, . . . Enid . 

and w the gateway horn . . Elaine 

wounded. 
Of your great head — for he is iv too^ — Princess,vi. 294 
Whatever man lies w, friend or foe, tr . 316 

see my dear lord w in the strife, . Enid . . 103 
For those that might be w ; . . 11 . 1416 

were himself nigh w to the death/ 11 . 1767 

claw back, and w her own heart. . Vivien . 350 
gone sore iv, and hath left his prize Elaifie . 529 
IV and wearied needs must he be near, u . 537 

he went sore w from the field : . » . 598 

iu to the death that cannot die ; . Aylmer*s F. 662 
Till himself was deadly w . . The Captain 63 

wove. 
beneathhermarriage ring, Wand unwove it,Enidjiog 
iv coarse webs to snare her purity Aylmer's F. 780 

woven. 
has iu its wavy bowers, . . May Queen, i. 29 

music winding trembled. Win circles : Vision ofSimZ 
A web is w across the sky, , . In Mem iii. 6 
cobweb iv across the cannon's throat Maud,\W.\\. 27 

wraith. 

hollow iv of dying fame, . . InMemXx.x\\. 13 
The ghastly W of one that I know , Maud, II. i. 32 

wrangle. 
three gray linnets w for the seed : Guinevere . 253 

wra?igled. 
And still they strove and w ; 

ivranglest. 
Wooest not, nor vainly w ; . . Madeline . 38 

wrap. 
When a blanket w's the day . Vision of Sin 80 

In words, like weeds, I'll w me o'er In Mem. v. 9 

wrapt. 

1 iu his body in the sheet, . . The Sisters 34 
Win dense cloud from base to cope. Two Voices 1Z6 
These things are w in doubt and dread, 11 . 265 



Sea Dreams 222 



TENNYSON'S WORK'S. 



473 



POEM. LINE. 

Pitiful sight, to in a soldier's cloak, Princess, v. 53 
Thy roots are to about the bones. In Mem. ii. 4 
w thee formless in the fold, . . 11 xxii. 15 
W'm a cloak, as 1 saw him, . Maud, 1. 1. 59 

W in drifts of lurid smoke . n II. lv. 66 

brought a mantle down and w her in it Enid . 824 
uor sought, IV in her grief, for housel Guinevere . 147 

•wrath. 
No sword Of to her right arm whirl'd The Poet . 54 
replied King Arthur, much in w: M.d Arthur 118 
like arisingmoon, Inflamed with to Princess, 1. 59 
chew'd The thrice-turn d cud of to 11 .65 

heated thro' and thro' with to and love, u iv. 145 

The to I nursed against the to : . n v. 427 

The to that garners in my heart : In Mem. lxxxi. 14 
like a man in w the heart . . 11 cxxiii. 15 
just to shall be wrcak'd on a giant liar- Maud. 1 1 1 vi. 45 
• And then we met in id and wrong, The Letters n 
loosed in words of sudden fire the to Enid . . 955 
Another, flying from the ft' of Doorm 11 . 1379 

Vivien answer'd smiling as in its. . Vivien . 376 
Vivien answer'd frowning yet in w ; 11 . 618 

all in to he got to horse and went ; Elaine . 562 
(Sea was her to, yet working afterstorm,n 1300 

The iv which forced my thoughts Guinevere . 533 
flooded with the helpless 7« of tears, En. Arden . 32 
would she glide between yout ids, Aylmer's F. 706 
A rushing tempest of the iv of God 11 . 757 

sun go down upon your id,' . . Sea Dreams 44 
Secret id like smother' d fuel . . TheCaptain 15 
Shame and id his heart confounded, 11 . 61 

Except his id were wreaked on wretched LucretiusizS 

wrathful. 

be not id with your maid ; . . Vivien . 230 

iv that a stranger knight Should do Elaine . 467 

She brook'd it not ; but to, petulant Lucretius . 14 

•wreak. 
I remain on whom to 11. your rage Princess, iv. 331 
I w The wrath that garners . . In Mem. lxxxi. 13 

•wrcak'd. 
WTath shall be id on a giant liar ; . Maud, 1 1 1, vi. 45 
wrath were iv on wretched man, . Lucretius . 128 

•wreath. 
thro' the id's of floating dark upcurl'd The Poet . 35 
Lit tight in vis and anadems . Pal. of Art 186 
made a little w of all the flowcis . Dora . . £0 
The iv of flowers fell At Dora's feet 11 . . 100 
In id about her hair . . . Talking O. 288 
The woodbine id's that bind her, . Amfihion . 34 
In her right a civic iv, . . . Vision of Sin 137 
lapt in id's of glowworm light . Princess, iv. 415 
'for this wild id of air ... 11 v. 308 

thousand 70s of dangling water-smoke ir vii 198 
one id more for Use and Wont, . In Mem. xxix. j 1 
head hath miss'd an earthly id: . ti lxxii. 6 
any w that man can weave him . Ode on Well. 277 
whenlhe7f of March has blossom'd7Vy i '/>./l/(i«r«'C43 
A 10 of airy dancers hand-in -hand Guinevere . 359 

lor eat he. 
The fancy's tendcrest eddy to . In Mem. xlviii. 6 

ivreathen. 
the sculptured ornament That to round it Vivien. 585 

loreck (s ) 
on some wild shore with ribs of id Princess, v. 141 
in that night of sudden ruin and id En. A rden . 565 
no gladlicr docs the stranded id . 11 . 829 

his voyage, His id, his lonely life, 11 . 863 

battle, bold adventure, dungeon, id, Aylmer's F. 98 
father suddenly ci m I' Sea /'reams 59 

My father raves of death and ft', . Sailor Boy . 19 

loreck (verb.) 
sought'st to7« my mortal ark . Two Voices 389 

<c itself without the pilot's guilt, . Aylmer's F. 716 

ivreck'd. 
IV on a reef of visionary gold.' . Sea Dreams \\$ 



wren. POEM. LINE, 

eagles not be eagles ? id's be id's t Golden i'ear 37 
Tits, :c' s, and all wing'd nothings . Enid . 275 

you my to with a crown of gold, . The IVindoio 80 
You my Queen of the id's . 11 81-2 

I'll be the King of the Queen of the to' J 11 . 84 

The fire-crown'd King of the id's . a . 151 

like the king of the to's with a crown 11 . 159 

■wrenching. 
IV it backward into his: . . Lucretius . 2i3 

wrestle. 
strive and id with thee till 1 die : . StS.Stylites 117 
ever seem'd to w with burlesque . Pnncess,Con. 16 

wrestled. 
IV with wandering Israel ' Clear-headed friend' 26 

wretched. 
May God make me more to . . Maud, I. xix. 94 

taring, 
take the goose, and id her throat, Tlie Goose . 31 

wrinkle. 
The busy id's round his eyes t . Miller's D 4 

A million w's carved his skin ; . Pat. of Art 138 
Whose w's gather'd on his face, . Two Voices 329 
Sown in a to of the monstrous hill, Will . . 19 

wrist. 
a touch Came round my id, . . Princess, vii. 123 
The to is parted from the hand that waved, Vivien 401 

■writ. 
Win a language that has long gone by. Vivien 524 
which being to And folded, . . Elaine 1103 

write. 
To make me w my random rhymes. Wilt Water. 13 
One to's, that ' Other friends remain In Mem. vi. 1 
Besought Lavainc to ft' as she devised Elaine 1097 
you shall w, and not to her, but me : Aylmcr'i . 
'W to me I They loved me, . n . 422 

Shall I w to her? shall I go? . The Window 90 

writer. 
Seem but the theme of w's . . Ed. Morris 48 
Old w's push'd the happy season back Golden i 'ear 65 

writhed. 

W toward him, slided up his knee Vivien . 88 

down his robe the dragon w in gold Elaine 4 34 

great King's couch, and to upon it, 11 . 6u7 

writhing, 

read Wa letter from his child, . Aylmer's F. 517 
w barbarous lineaments, . . Bo&dicea . 74 

written, 

to that my race Hcw'd Amnion, . D.ofF. Wont. 237 
And something ft', something thought In Mem. vi. 20 
'You have the hook : the charm is ft' in it : Vivien 502 
to as she found Or made occasion Aylmer's F. 477 
And Willy's wife has ft'. - . Grandmother 3,105 

ii'roife. 
Summun I reckons 'ull 'a to to . X. Farmer 57 

wrong (adj. and s.) 
lamentation and an ancient tale of ft' / 
sounds of insult, shame, and ft', . D.efF.Wom. ig 
was id to cross his father thus : . Dora . . 145 

His nerves were to. . . Walk, tot' 1 : 

; they should do me fv ; ' . Locktley H. ■> 

we. that prate Of rights and w's, . Gedcva , 8 
seem'd no room for sense of ft'. . Two Voices 456 
For am I right, or am I ft', . . I'ay-l'm. 241-5 

all the groves from fear of ft'.- Sir I. andQ.i 
What ! I arn not all as w . . I ': 
little sense of Tchad touch'd her f.n ■■■ PrtHCt ../'ro.itj 
on her p. dm- and folded u] 11 iv. 369 

c'.unc all in haste to hinder w . •» . 382 

yet human, whatsoe'er your w'm . <> . 405 

from the lintel— all the common ft' 11 

caught within the record oi her it's 11 . 137 

it talking of her to**; ■• . 375 

rights or id's like potherbs in the street " 
ourselves arc full Of social w ; . 11 Con, 75 



474 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

Nor human frailty do me w , In Alem. li. 8 

we do him iu To sing so wildly : . n Ivi. 3 

Drug down the blindfold sense of w tr lxx. 7 

Thou dost expectant nature iu , . tr Ixxxii. 3 
Bewail'd their lot : I did them iv : u cii. 46 

revenge too deep for a transient w Maud, I hi. 5 
would not do herself this great w, tr x. 57 

true life to fight with mortal w's. . ti xviii. 54 
Or to say ' forgive the iu,' . . tr IT. iv 86 
peace that was full of w's and shames, tr III. vi. 40 
' Would I — was it w V . . . The Brook . 111 
then we met in wrath and w, . The Letters n 
public iv be crumbled into dust . Ode 071 Well. 167 
He suffers, but he cannot suffer w Will . .3 
glory was ; redressing human w ; . Ded. of Idylls 8 
noble hearts who see but acts of w Enid . . 438 
each had suffer'd some exceeding iv. tr . . 885 
smoulder'dw that burnt him all within 11 . . 956 
that dead man ; Done you more w : 11 . 1584 

let foul iu stagnate and be, 11 *739 

which for bribe had wink'd at iu, n . 17S7 

Once for w done you by confusion, Vivien . 156 

yourself have own'd you did me w it . 165 

ride abroad redressinghuman iv's! v . 543 

many a year have done despite and w Elaine 1203 
prowess done redress'd a random iv Guinevere « 456 
ride abroad redressing human w's, tr , 468 

I was w. I am always bound to you En. A rdeti 446 
to chafe as at a personal iv. . tr . 471 

if he did that iu you charge him with Sea Dream 268 
He can do no more iu : . it . 299 

Doeth grievous iv. . The Captain 2 

fame in song has done him much w Spiteful Let. 3 
to struggle, to right the w — . Wages . 3 

wrong (verb.) 

you iv him more than I That struck Princess,iv. 226 

She w's herself, her sex, and me, it v. 113 

You w yourselves — thewomanis so hard m vi. 205 

I w the grave with fears untrue . In Mem. 1. 9 

you iv your beauty, believe it, . Maud, I. iv. 17 

he that w's his friend W's himself „ Sea Dreams 168 

ivrong'd 

iv and lied and thwarted us — . Princess, iv. 519 

j udge their cause from her That iv it tr vii. 221 

How had I w you? surely you are wise Vivien . 137 

he never w his bride. ... ti 579 

A virtuous gentlewoman deeply w t it . 760 

wronger. 
At caitiffs and at w's of the world. Enid . . 96 

wrote. 

round about the prow she w . L. ofShalott,iv.S 

W ' Mene, mene,' and divided quite Pal. of Art 227 
Dropt on the letters as I w . .ToJ.S. . 56 

I iu I know not what. ... tr -57 

have that song which Leonard w : Golden Year 1 
Then I took a pencil, and iu . Ed. Gray . 25 

then, Sir, awful odes she wrote . Princess, i. 137 
sat down and iu, In such a hand . ir . 232 

Then he iu The letter she devised ; Elaine 1102 

tho' Averill iv And bad him . . Aylmer*s F. 543 

first 7ysatire, with no pityin it . Sea Dreams 197 
take this and pray that he Who w it A Dedicatw7i 5 

wroth. 
Then the old man Was w t . . Dora , 
"Weakness to be w with weakness ! Lochsley H. 
perforce He yielded, w and red, . Princess., 
A third is w, 'Is this an hour . In Mem. xxi 
W to be w at such a worm . . Enid . 
my new mother, be not iv or grieved it 
be he iu even to slaying me, . ti 

iu the more That she couli speak ir 
damsel then Wat sl lover's loss ? Vivien 
W at himself: not willing to be known Elaine 
W that the king's command to sally forth ir 
Wbut all in awe, For twenty strokes ir 
Fret not yourself, dear brother, nor be 70, tr 
Sullen, defiant, pitying, w } . . Aylmer's P. 492 



Wrought. POEM. LINE. 

She 7U her people lasting good . To the Queen 24 
w Two spirits to one equal mind . Miller's D. . 235 
So w, they will not fail. . . Pal. of Art 148 

The airy hand confusion iu . m . 226 

by degrees to fullness w, ' Youash ?7ie, why,' etc. 14 
Why the lonely maiden of the Lake, M.d Arthur 104 
Nine years she iu it ... tr . 105 

iv by prayer Than this world dreams of 11 . 247 

napkin iv with horse and hound, . Audley Ct. . 20 
may be I have iu some miracles . StS.Stylites 134 
toil'd, and iu, and thought with me — Ulysses . 46 
So variously seem d all things iv, . Tivo Voices 457 
dream of that,' I ask'd ( ^\{\<^xw\x% Pri7icessj\\\. 281 
our device ; iu to the life ; ti . 286 

A tent of satin, elaborately iv . tr . 330 

with whom the bell-mouth'd glass had wu iv. 137 
kind of shame within me iu . tr . ij6 

wherein were w Two grand designs : tr vii. 106 
know no more than I who iv . In Mejn. vi. 17 

w With human hands the creed . tr xxxvi. 9 
out of painful phases iu . . tt lxiv. 6 

Cloud-towers by ghostly masons w, tr lxix. 5 
Is iv with tumult of acclaim . 11 lxxiv. 20 

The grief my loss in him had w t . tr lxxix. 6 
changes iv on form and face ; . t> Ixxxi. 2 
Her lavish mission richly w, . tr Ixxxiii. 34 

Whatever change the years have iu n Ixxxix. 22 
what was it else within me w . Maud y I. vi. 81 
JV, till he crept from a gutted mine tr x. 9 

W for his house an irredeemable woe tr II. i. 22 
Let the sound of those he iv for . Ode 071 Well. 10 
he with those deep voices w, . m . 67 

Themselves had iu on many an innocent Enid 1027 
schemed and w Until I overturn'd him it i§17 

iu too long with delegated hands, 11 I 74 I 

work of Edyrn iu upon himself . n 1760 

fain have w upon his cloudy mood Vivie7i . 12 

which if any w on any one ti -55 

man so w on ever seem'd to lie tr -57 

see but him who iv the charm .it .61 

those who wit first, The wrist is parted 11 . 400 

charm, which being w upon the Queen tr . 434 

save the King, who iv the charm, tr . 493 

of the horrid foulness that he w, . tr . 59S 

w upon his mood and hugg'd him ti . 797 

goldandazure !' which was w Thereafter Elai7ie 1335 
grace and power, W as a charm . Guinevere . 143 
Hath?y confusion in the Table Round tr . 218 

thro' flesh hath iu into my life . tr . 554 

iv the ruin of my lord the King.' . tt . 681 

w To make the boatmen fishing-nets E71. Arden . 815 
her counsel all had iu About them Ayh7ier > s P, 151 
w Such waste and havock . . 11 . 639 

wru7ig. 
Daintily she shriek'd And w it. . Princess, Pro. 174 
at his hand, and iv it passionately. E?i. Ardeti . 325 

Wye. 
And hushes half the babbling W, Di Mem. xix. 7 
The Wis hush'd nor moved along tr . 9 

ivytsern 
blazing w weathercock'd the spire, Ayb7ier , s F. 17 
Burst his own iv on the seal it . 516 

x 

XantJuts. 
between the ships and stream Of X Sjiec. qflUad 18 



yaale. 
Says that I moant 'a naw moorj': N. Farmer . 3 

Git ma my_y 11 4, 36, 68 

I've 'ed my point o' y ivry noight . tr . 7 

an' doesn bring ma the y ? . . 11 -65 

Yabbok. - 
Past Kbrook . . . ' Clear-headed friend' 27 

yard. 
and his hair A y behind. . . Godiva . 19 
Only a.y beneath the street . . Maud, II. v. 7 



TZ.YXYSO.Y'S WORK'S. 



475 



yardwand. poem. line. 

but with his cheating.y, home. — Maud, I. i. 52 

yawled. 
yelp'd the cur, and.y the cat ; . T/ie Goose . 33 

yawn. 

Heaven opens inward, chasms y, . Two Voices 304 
The black earth y's . . . Ode on H ell. 269 

yawned, 
y, and rubb'd his face, and spoke, Day-Din. . 151 

yawning: 
Hither came Cyril, and y, . . Princess, iii. 108 

ye ad (head. ) 
loike a buzzard-clock ower my y, . A". Farmer i3 

year (see Old Year, New Year.) 
Because they are the earliest of the>> Ode to Mem. 27 
flowing from The illimitable y's . n . 42 

haunts the y's last hours 'A spirit haunts,' etc. 1 
And the y's last rose ... 11 .20 

hangs before her all the y, . . LnfShalott/ii. it 
Many a chance the y's beget . Miller's D. 206 

Untouch'd with any shade ui y's . 11 . 219 

so three y* She prospcr'd : . . Pal. of Art 217 
when four y's were wholly finished » . 289 

of all the y the maddest merriest . MayQueen,\. 43 
The good old y, the dear old time 11 ii. 6 

I remember, rose the morning of the .y/ t, iii. 3 
what is mingled with past y's . D.ofF. Worn. 282 
A jollier .y we shall not see . D. oftheO. Year 20 
Two y's his chair is seen Empty . ToJ.S. . 22 
wisdom of a thousand y's 'Of oldsat Freedom,' etc. 18 
main-currents draw they*: 'Love tltou thy land' 21 
The Spirit of the y's to come . >> . 55 

days darken round me, and they*, M.cT Arthur zyi 
^at that time of y The lusty bird . 11 Ffi. 10 

Call'd to me from they* to come . Gardener' sD.iyd 
with each The> increased 11 . 195 

The daughters of the y. One after one, " . 195 

for these five y's So full [a harvest Dora . . 63 
as y's Went forward, .Mary took 11 165 

wild, fresh three quarters of a y. . Ed. Atom's 2 
That show the j/ is turn'd . Talking O. . 176 

thro' Love, and greater than thy y's Loveandfhi/y2i 
onward, leading up the golden y[ rep. ) Golden Year 26 
Th i s same grand .vis ever at the doors," i> . 73 
to such length of y's should come . Locksley II. 67 
never,' whisper'd by the phantom y's, 11 . 83 

excitement that the comingy* would 11 .111 

Better fifty y's of Europe . 11 . 184 

fatal byword of ally* to come, . Godiva . 67 
I said: 'Theyrwithchangeadvance; Two Yoices 52 
I said ' That all the y's invent ; . 11 , 73 

I found him when my y's were few ; 11 . 271 

is not our first .y forgot I 11 . 368 

Oft lose whole y's of darker mind . 11 . 372 

The varying.? with blade and sheaf Day-Dm. . 21 
all that else the y's will show . 11 . 225 

And y* of cultivation, . . . Amfihion . 98 
Or this first snowdrop 1 of the y St Agnes' Eve n 
So fares it since the y's began, . WulWai 
Then, in the boyhood of the y Sir P. and (J. (',. 1 g 
. reverting to the y's . . VisionofSin 159 
When the y's have died away.' . Poet's Song 16 
with a bootless calf At eighty* old; Princess, i. 34 
the y in which our olives fail'd . " . 124 

the child We lost in other y*. . ■> . 256 

May beat admission in a thousand y» » iii. 13$ 
giants living, each, a thousand^*, 11 . 252 

great y of equal mights and rights " iv. 56 

Six thousand y[ t of fear have made you 11 . 486 

desecrated shrine, the trampled ,y, 11 v. 121 

■ of ninety y's, . . 11 . 544 

Dames and heroines of the golden y u vi. 48 
in the long y's liker must they grow ; 11 vii. 263 
welcome for the y To follow. . 1. Con. 95 

who shall so forecast the y's . . In Mem. i. 5 
touch thy thousand y* of gloom : . « ii. la 

Some pleasure from thine early y's 11 iv. 10 

Time, and teach me, manyy /, 11 xiii. 13 
Thro' fuur sweet y's arose and fell, 11 xxii. 3 



POEM. LINK 

And in the long harmonious y's IuMem. xliii. 9 
And those five y's its richest field. 11 xlv. 12 

What record i not the sinless y's . 1. Ii. ji 

so much hope for y's to come, . n lviii. i + 

And o'er the number of thy y's. . 11 I- 

More ys had made melovethce more.' i> lxxx. 8 
The all-assuming months and y's . 1, lxxxiv. (y 
A friendship for they* to come. .11 .80 

The primrose of the later .y, . . n . 119 

Whatever change they* have wrought" lxxxix. 22 
The hope of unaccomplish'd y's . 11 xc. 7 

A fact within the comings; . . .. xc i. JO 

that glad y which once had been, . 1. xciv. 22 
She keeps the gift of y's before, . n xcvi. 25 
The y is dying in the night ;. . 11 cv. 

Thesis going, let him go ; 11 .7 

Ring in the thousand y's of peace. 11 . £ 8 

Thro' all the y's of April blood ; . 11 cviii. 12 
The men of rathe and riper y's. 11 cix. 2 

meets the y, and gives and takes . 11 cxv. 3 

A cry above the conquer'dy* . ■■ exxx. 7 
number'd o'er Some thrice three y's " Con. 10 

stay for ay who has gone for a week Maud, I. xvi. 
To me, her friend of they* before: 11 xix. ( '4 

Fory's, a measureless ill, fury's, for 11 II. ii. 4 , 
moodis chang'd.foritfcllata timeofy.. III. vi. 4 
Many and many a happy y. . Top. D. Maurice 40 
Thro all this tract ofy* Wearing J>ed. of Idylls 23 
I these two y's past have won it . Enid . . 554 
three sad y's ago, That night of fire ,r .633 

Her suitor in old y's before Geraint, 11 . 1125 

if you love me as in formery* 1204 

one y gone, and on returning found Vivien . 558 

this cut is fresh ; That ten y's back Elaine 

by nine y's' proof we needs must learn n 

eighty* past, eight jousts had been, 11 . £8 

Lancelot won the diamond of the y, 11 . (9 

marr'd, of more than twice hcry*, 11 . 257 

This many a y have done despite . 11 1203 

not to love again ; Not at my y's, . „ 

worship her by y's of noble deeds, Guinetere .472 

months will add thcmselvesand make thej' *," . 618 

They* will roll into the centuries 11 

ran the y's, seven happy y's (rep.) En. Arden . Bl 

teny*, Since Enoch left his hearth 1, . 356 

after all these sad uncertain y's, i> . 412 

Wait a y, a y is not so long : . . i> . 429 

Surely I shall be wiser in aj>: . n . 430 

Will you not bide your y (rep.) . " 

Msita.y.'" she ask'd. ... 11 

half-anothcr y had slipt away. 

In those far-off seven happy y« . 11 

as the y Roll'd itself round again . n 

have borne it with me all these y *, n . t .• 

partridge-breeders of a thousand^'j At liner's F. 382 

y's which arc not Time's Had blasted him .1 

the shallow cares of fifty y's . 

a dozen y* Of dust and deskwork Sea /'reams 77 

Sevcntyy* ago, my darling rep. Craudmothern, 5<> 

in a hundred y's it 'ill all be the same 11 

we had many a happy yi . . ■ -71 

And that was ten y* back, or more m . 75 

two and thirty y* were a mist . V. of Cant 

y\ have wanderd by, . 

His beauty still with his y* increased The /'/. tim 35 

Here, it is here— the close of llit ; .'. 1 

I said 'OVj that meet in t< 4 

Gone till the end of the y . in, Itindow 36 

bitten the heel of the going y. 11 -48 

Ay is life for a hundred y* . 11 114 

A y hence, a y hence.' ... 11 

?' 

swift souls that y for light. ( 7 

y to breathe thl 

A part ofstuuu ik : In Mem In 

y still in 

and y to hurry precipitously . . j8 

yeatyt'd. 

y towards William ; but the youth Don . . r, 
while still I y fut human praue. . Two JVi'.c 



476 



CONCORDANCE TO 



POEM. LINE. 

y To hear her weeping by his grave 1 I?i Mem xxxi. 3 
y to burst the folded gloom, . ir cxxi. 3 

y to make complete The tale of diamonds Elaine 91 
Enoch y to see her face again ; . En. Arden - 718 
in her heart she y incessantly . 11 . 867 

y after by the wisest of the wise . Lucretius . 263 

yearning. 

y's that can never be exprest . D.ofF. Worn. 283 

Y to mix himself with Life. ' Love thou thy /and' 56 

Gave utterance by the^ of an eye, Love and Duty 61 ! To,y us farther furlough;' 

this gray spirit y in desire . . Ulysses . 30 | Shejj/'j, or war.* 

y for the large excitement . . Locksley H. in 

Some y toward the lamps of night Two Voices 363 

barren faith, And vacant y . . In Mem. cvii. 6 

Less y for the friendship fled, , tr cxv. 15 

team Which love thee, y for thy yoke, Tithonus 40 

A nobler y never broke her rest . Coquette, ii. 2 



yew-wood. 
In ihey-w black as night, 

yield, 
y you time To make demand 
To y consent to my desire : , 
Eutjj/ not me the praise : 
to seek, to find, and not to y. 
that the coming years would y 
No branchy thicket shelter y's ; 



POEM. 

Oriana 



LINE. 

. 19 



. To the Queen 10 
. Miller's D. 138 
. StS. Stylites 182 
. Ulysses . 7c 
. Locksley H. in 
Sir Galahad 58 



A little will I y Princess, 



yell. 



38 



rings to the y of the trampled wife Maud, I 

yell'd. 
score of pugs And poodles y within, Ed. Morris 120 
they made a halt ; The horses y; . Princess, v. 240 
Y and shriek'd between her daughters Boddicea 6,72 
y as when the winds of winter . » • 77 

y and round me drove In narrow- 
ing circles till I y again . . Lucretius . 56 
yelling. 
fled Y as from a spectre, . . Enid . 1581 

yellow. 
Shot over withpurple.and green, and y.DyingSwan20 
turnings Falls, and floats adown the air Lotos-E's. 75 

yellow-banded. 
Or the y-b bees .... Elednore . 22 

yellow-ringleted. 
haled the y-r Britoness — . . Boddicea . 55 

yellow-throated. 
And^-if nestling in the nest. . Elaine . 12 

yelp (s.) 
With inward y and restless forefoot Lucretius . 

yelp (verb.) 
wild Lean-headed Eagles y alone, Princess, vii. 



45 



196 



yelp'd. 
y the cur, and yawl'd the cat, 



The Goose . 33 



yeoman. 
let the foolish y go. . . L.C.V.deVere 72 
mockery to the yeomen over ale, . Ay liner's E. 497 

yes. 
When the happy FFalters from her Maud,l.xvii. 9 

yesterday. 
And now, As tho' 'twere y, . . Gardener sD. 81 
' Where were youy ? Whose child is that ? Dora . 85 

yesternight. 
the gloom of y On the white day ; Ode to Mem. 9 

yet-loved, 
the y-l sire would make Confusion InMem.lxxxix.iS 

yet-unblazon' d. 
Returning brought the y-it shield, Elaine . 378 

yew. 
Death, walking all alone beneath ay, Love and Death 5 
darkness in the village y._ . . Two Voices . 273 
Came y's, a dismal coterie; . . Amphion . 42 
Sickfor theholliesandthe.y'jof . Princess, Pro. 185 
Old Y, which graspest at the stones In Mem. ii. 1 
Before the mouldering of a y ; . 11 lxxv. 8 

A black y gloom'd the stagnant air, The Letters 2 
oft they met among the garden y's, Elaine . 642 

found her in among the garden y's, 11 . 919 

to whom thro' those black walls of y n . 964 

Up by the wall, behind they; . En. Arden . 740 

yewtree. 
Up higher with the y by it, . . Walk, to 'the M. 9 
throve an ancient evergreen, A y . En. Arden . 737 I 



No more, dear love, for at a touch I y 
still were loth to yield herself to one, 
I love thee : come, Y thyself up : 



271 
58 
"5 
377 
217 

343 



We y all blessing to the name . In Mem. xxxvi. 3 
rarely y's To that vague fear . it xl. 13 

And will noty them for a day. . u lxxxix. 16 
that will not y each other way .11 ci. 20 

Go not, happy day, Till the maideny\j. Maud,\.xv\\.$ 
Y my boon, Till which I scarce can 

y you all I am .... Vivien 
till one could y for weariness : . it 
I will not y to give you power . tt 
since the pirate would not y her up, it 
y it to this maiden, if you will.' . Elaine 
when you y your flower of life . tt 
Pray for my soul, and y me burial. 11 1273 

y me sanctuary, nor ask Her name, 

. Guinevere . 140 



201 
222 
223 
418 
229 



to whom ye y it . 

yielded. 
perforce He y, wroth and red 
Nor tho' she liked him, y she, 
' I wish she had not y I ' 
but a dream, yet ity a dear delight Maud, III. vi. 15 



Princess, v. 
tt vii. 
Con. 



348 
61 



Had y, told her all the charm, 
y, and a heart, Love-loyal 
He laugh'd, and y readily . 
At once the costly Sahib y to her. 



Vivien . 815 

Elaine . 89 

En. A rden . 367 
Aylmer's F. 233 



yielding. 
old order changeth, y place to new M. d Arthur 240 
This, y, gave into a grassy walk . Gardener' sD. no 

y to his kindlier moods . . . Vivien . 30 

Yuiol. 

Had married Enid, Ys only child Enid . . 4 

save It may be, at Earl Y's, 11 291 

The voice of Enid, Ys daughter, it . . 327 

Y caught His purple scarf, and held, 11 . . 376 
Ys heart Danced in his bosom, tt . 504 
waited there for Y and Geraint 11 538 
Ys rusted arms Were on his princely it . . 543 
Ys nephew, after trumpet blown, it . . 551 
force was match'd till Ys cry . n . . 570 
Went Ythro' the town . . . 11 . . 693 
And howsoever patient, Khis, tt . 707 
Kgoes, and I full oft shall dream it . . 751 

Y made report Of that good mother ir . . 756 

Y with that hard message went . 11 . . 763 
being repulsed By Y and yourself, n . 1677 

yoke (s.) 
if thou needs must bear they, . Princess, vi. 188 
the light y of that Lord of love ; Aylmer's F. 708 
Which love thee, yearning for thy y, Tithouus . 40 
loosed their sweating horses from they Spec, oj Iliad? 

yoke (verb.) 
and the care That y's with empire, To the Queen 10 

yoked. 
Whose name is y with children's . Princess, v. 408 
Km all exercise of noble end, . 11 vii. 340 

yolk. 
golden y's Imbedded and injellied; Audley Ct. . 24 

York. 
lands in Kent and messuages in Y, Ed. Morris 
Y's white rose as red as Lancaster's Aylmer's F. 



127 
51 



young. 
And I was y — too y to wed : . 
made thee famous once, when y : . 



Miller's D. 141 
The Blackbird if> 



TEA r NYSOX'S WORK'S. 



477 



a sight to make an old man y. 
than should be for one so y. 
What is loathsome to the y . 
beings, he changed himself. 
Y as I am, yet would I do my best.' 
devil's leaps, and poisons half the y 
Have all his pretty y ones educated 
1 wonder he went so y. . 
' O bjy tho' thou art.y and proud, 



POEM. LINE. 

Gardener* sD. 140 
Loiksley //. 21 
Vision of \i in 157 
Enid . . 593 
Elaine . 222 

Guinevere . 518 
En Arden . 146 
Grandmother i\ 
Sailor Boy . 7 



younger. 
Lad v Psyche, y, not so wise. . Princess, iv. 297 
Lavaine, my y here. He is so full Elaine . 202 

let the.y and unskilld go by . . 11 1352 

all 1 the y ones with jubilant cries . En. Arden . 374 

youngest. 
while we waited, one, the y of us . Vivien . 265 

one, the y, hardly more than boy, En. Arden . 564 

yoitnker. 
he caught the j/ tickling trout — Walk, to the M. 25 

youth 'period of life. I 
the breathing spring Of Hope and Y. The Poet 28 
force to make me rhyme in y, . Miller's D. 193 
'Myy.'shesaid, ' was blasted with Do/ P. Worn. 103 
Who miss the brother of your y ? . ToJ.S. . 50 
May perpetual .y Keep dry ' Of old sat Freedom' 19 
Dnvemeninmanhood.asin.y, 'Love thou thyland'74 
such a distance from h'ny in grief, Gardener's D. 53 
the folded annals of my y , . . 11 . 239 

My first, last love ; the idol of my y, 11 . 271 

Nightmare of y, the spectre of . Love and Duty 13 
nourishing ay sublime . ' Locksley H. 11 

Sin against the strength of y! . 11 

That my y was half divine, . 
love ourselves In our sweet y , 
had the care of Lady Ida's y. 
Confusions of a wasted^ 
And in the places of his y 

Whose y was full of foolish noise, " lii. 

life outliving heats of y, . . ir .10 

] t is the trouble of my y . . ir lxvii. 15 
From y and babe and hoary hairs : n Ixviii. 10 
The giant labouring in his y; . 11 cxvii. 2 
Hope had never lost her y; . . 11 cxxiv. 



59 

. Vision of Sin 78 

(v. laq) Princess, \ 122 

" iii. 69 

In Mem. Pro 

xviii 



42 



Maud, I. v. 



Maud in the light of her y . 

For my dark-dawning y 

y gone out Had left in ashes : . Vivien 

many a love in loving y was mine, 11 



xix. 



to keep them mine Butj/ and love ; 
omitting gayer y For one so old, 

the sweet and sudden passion of y Elaine 

not love : but love s first Hash 111 y, 

at my years, however it hold in y. 

her love Was but the flash of.*, . 

his full tide of y Broke 

dwell in preseno- of immortal y, . 

Immortal age, beside immortal .y, 11 . 22 

youth (young man ) 
yearn'd towards William ; but the y, Dora . 
A y came riding toward a palace-gate ( tston of Sin 2 



MEM. 


LINE. 


Vivien 
Elaine 


• 398 

• 776 
. 282 


„ 


• 945 
1288 


Aylmer's 
Ttthonus 


1308 

F. 115 
. 21 



of her brethren y's of puissance . Princess, 
y who scour'd His master's armour; Enid 
A y, that following with a costrcl . 11 

There came a fair-hair'd y, . . h 

when the fair-hair'd >■ came by him 11 

' Yea, my kind lord,' said the glad y, 1. 
war On all the y, they sicken'd . Vivien 
The saintly y, the spotless lamb of Christ, n 
there is many ayXow crescent . Elaine 

youthful. 
So y and so flexile then. . Amfhton 

yow (ewe.) 
Fourscore y's upon it . . . N. Farmer 40 

Yule. 
The merry merry bells of Y. . In Mem.xxvm.io 

like the heart of a great fire at Y, Enid . . 559 

yule-log. 
The y-l sparkled keen with frost, 



36 

. 366 
1050 
1051 

. 422 

• 599 
■ 446 

• 59 



zealous. 
2 it should be All that it might be 

zenith. 
that branch'd And blossom'd in the : 

zig-car: 
z-z paths, and juts of pointed rock, 



In MemAxxxu 5 

Princess, iy. 403 
: En A rden 587 
M.ct Arthur 50 



Flowing beneath her rosc-hued =; Arabian .Vs. 140 
but that my z Unmann'd me : . Princess, li. 398 
three stars of the airy Giant's z . « v. 250 

on thro' z's of light and shadow To F. D Maurice 27 

zoned. 
asilken hood to each, And z with gold: Princess, iu 4 



THE END. 



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